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Titre : Company codes of conduct and international standards : an analytical comparaison. Part II of II Oil and gas, Mining Type de document : document électronique Editeur : The World Bank Group Année de publication : March 2004 Collection : Corporate Social Responsability Practice Importance : 435 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Banque mondiale Tags : Sociétés transnationales Codes de conduite Secteurs industriels Energie Résumé : In brief, to support ongoing technical assistance, the World Bank Group’s Investment Climate Department commissioned a series of research analyses to determine the content of CSR codes of conduct in targeted industry sectors and the extent to which that content is derived from internationally recognized standards. After codes were identified and researched, they were assessed to determine whether there are emerging trends in the industry sectors with regard to broad CSR categories of labor and human rights, environmental standards, and social and community impacts. Each of these broad categories was then divided into a number of “sub-categories,” reflected on the attached matrices, which were drawn from similar sub-categories developed by the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) in the GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines En ligne : http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPSD/Resources/Angola/Angola_CompanyCodesof [...] Company codes of conduct and international standards : an analytical comparaison. Part II of II Oil and gas, Mining [document électronique] . - [S.l.] : The World Bank Group, March 2004 . - 435 p. - (Corporate Social Responsability Practice) .
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Banque mondiale Tags : Sociétés transnationales Codes de conduite Secteurs industriels Energie Résumé : In brief, to support ongoing technical assistance, the World Bank Group’s Investment Climate Department commissioned a series of research analyses to determine the content of CSR codes of conduct in targeted industry sectors and the extent to which that content is derived from internationally recognized standards. After codes were identified and researched, they were assessed to determine whether there are emerging trends in the industry sectors with regard to broad CSR categories of labor and human rights, environmental standards, and social and community impacts. Each of these broad categories was then divided into a number of “sub-categories,” reflected on the attached matrices, which were drawn from similar sub-categories developed by the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) in the GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines En ligne : http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPSD/Resources/Angola/Angola_CompanyCodesof [...]