Social Responsibility Project Report
Social Responsibility Project Report
Social Responsibility Project Report
of Christ University
Submitted By :
CHRIST UNIVERSITY
Bangalore
2010 – 2011
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DECLARATION
I further declare that this has not previously formed the basis of the award of any
degree, diploma or other similar title of recognition.
Place:________________________
Date:_________________________
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CERTIFICATE
3
CERTIFICATE
4
CERTIFICATE
5
GUIDE CERTIFICATE
Place: Bangalore
Date:
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
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We would like to express our sincere gratitude to all those who have been helpful
in the preparation of this project report. We wish to express our deep gratitude
especially to our Class Co-Cordinator Dr. Leena James , for her skillful measures and
her guidance throughout .
We would like to thank Dr. (Fr). Thomas .C. Mathew, Vice Chancellor and Dr. Jain
Mathew, HOD, for their encouragement and the chance which they gave us to explore
the sorrows we never bothered about.
Last but not the least , we would like to thank our Parents and Friends for
their constant help and support, their suggestions , compliments and comments which
has guided us through this report and made us see the world in a more practical manner
.
Without everyone’s participation , this project would not have been executed.
THANK YOU !!
INDEX
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Table of Content Pg. Nos.
Introduction
Introduction to the SRP 9
Objectives 45
achieved/Recommendations
Bibliography
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
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Social responsibility is an ethical ideology or theory that an entity, be it
an organization or individual, has an obligation to act to benefit society at large. This
responsibility can be passive, by avoiding engaging in socially harmful acts, or active, by
performing activities that directly advance social goals.
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to common guidance on concepts, definitions and methods of evaluation." (ISO, 2009)
The standard describes itself as a guide for dialogue and language, not a constraining or
certifiable management standard.
Smart business decisions are not just a matter of counting up short-term dollars and
cents. Wise decision-makers look down the road at the impact today’s choices will have
tomorrow: on people, on the community, and on the opinions of customers.
ASQ was awarded the administration of the U.S. Technical Advisory Group (TAG) on
Social Responsibility by the American National Standards Institute. The U.S. TAG is the
U.S. member of an international working group chartered with developing
an International Standard on Social Responsibility. ASQ’s involvement is a direct
extension of its existing leadership role in standards development.
ASQ believes that being “socially responsible” means that people and organizations must
behave ethically and with sensitivity toward social, cultural, economic and environmental
issues. Striving for social responsibility helps individuals, organizations and governments
have a positive impact on development, business and society with a positive contribution
to bottom-line results.
In recent years many consumers have been upset by widely publicized examples of
fraud by executives and harmful products produced by some companies. As a result
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consumers have become more conscious of whom they are doing business with and
which products they should buy. Many companies who are looking for long-term
profitability are looking for ways to become more socially responsible.
Likewise, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) states: “In the wake
of increasing globalization, we have become increasingly conscious not only of what we
buy, but also how the goods and services we buy have been produced. Environmentally
harmful production, child labor, dangerous working environments and other inhumane
conditions are examples of issues being brought into the open. All companies and
organizations aiming at long-term profitability and credibility are starting to realize that
they must act in accordance with norms of right and wrong.”
People and organizations don't often understand the value of participation in standards
activities in the beginning, but once involved, they see great benefits. Some of the
benefits include:
Competitive Intelligence: As a member of the TAG, your company will see the
drafts and related documents before the general public has access as well as have
access to information about the standard throughout the development lifecycle. At
meetings, experts give updates about both the U.S. and international viewpoints
on social responsibility.
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- Hellen Keller
The practice of CSR is subject to much debate and criticism. Proponents argue that there
is a strong business case for CSR, in that corporations benefit in multiple ways by
operating with a perspective broader and longer than their own immediate, short-term
profits. Critics argue that CSR distracts from the fundamental economic role of
businesses; others argue that it is nothing more than superficial window-dressing;
others yet argue that it is an attempt to pre-empt the role of governments as a
watchdog over powerful multinational corporations. Corporate Social Responsibility has
been redefined throughout the years. However, it essentially is titled to aid to an
organization's mission as well as a guide to what the company stands for and will uphold
to its consumers.
Every company now believe that corporate social responsibility is very important. It
doesn’t only help the employees, customers, stakeholders, etc. But the company too.A
few companies and there social activities are listed below:
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Wipro: Wipro Cares is an initiative by the Wiproites, their family members and friends
to contribute in the areas of education, community and social development. Wipro Cares
philosophy is to utilize the collective wisdom of volunteers to bring long term benefits
and satisfaction to the community, as we believe that providing funds alone will not help
the community.
This is a unique corporate experiment to channelise the contributions of the Wiproites
matched by Wipro, and the desires of Wiproites to make meaningful contributions to
society, on a continuous basis.
Wipro Cares contributes through two pronged strategy: providing rehabilitation to
survivors of natural calamities and enhancing learning abilities of children from the
under privileged sections of the society.
Tata: CSR has been part of the Tata Group ever since the days of Jamshetji Tata.
Even while he was busy setting up textile ventures, he always thought of his workers'
welfare and requirements of the country. From granting scholarships for further studies
abroad in 1892 to supporting Gandhiji's campaign for racial equality in South Africa to
giving the country its first science centre, hospital and atomic research centre to
providing relief and rehabilitation to natural disaster affected places.
Over the years, the Tata philosophy to 'Give back what you get' has been followed by all
their enterprises across India. As result every year, the Tata Group's contribution to
society has been phenomenal. In the fiscal year 2004 Tata Steel alone spent Rs 45 crore
on social services.
Different Tata companies have been actively involved in various social work. Like Tata
Consultancy Services runs an adult literacy programme, Titan has employed 169
disabled people in blue collar workforce at Hosur, Telco is fighting against Leprosy at
Jamshedpur, Tata Chemicals runs a rural development programme at Okhamandal and
Babrala, Tata Tea's education programme and Tata Relief Committee (TRC) which works
to provide relief at disaster affected areas.
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INDIVIDUAL SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Just as it is said that work begins at home the same way before entering the business
world and practicing corporate social responsibility we need to believe in Individual
Social Responsibility.
Socially responsible individuals show “community-mindedness” in their responses to
school, local, national, and global issues and events. This attitude is the basis of a
functioning and flourishing democratic society. It helps in the following spheres:
Contributing to the classroom and school community
sharing responsibility for their social and physical environment
participating and contributing to the class and to small groups
Solving problem in peaceful ways
managing conflict appropriately, including presenting views and arguments
respectfully, and considering others’ views
using effective problem-solving steps and strategies
Valuing diversity and diversifying human rights
treating others fairly and respectfully; showing a sense of ethics
recognizing and defending human rights
Exercising democratic rights and responsibilities
knowing and acting on rights and responsibilities (local, national,global)
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articulating and working toward a preferred future for the community, nation, and
planet—a sense of idealism
The above stated mission statement of Christ College tries to inculcate its students
with holistic and social development in today’s changing global world. This Social
Responsibility Project has enlightened
us with social responsibility and ethics. Every one amongst us has put hard work in
this project to know the importance of social service in life.
We also are very grateful to the members of the trust and the other volonteers
who helped inculcate the spirit of social responsibility within us. This whole project
was a knowledgeable and a memorable experience.
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ARTICLES ON CSR
An Article from Business Respect, Issue Number 171, dated 9 Nov 2010
By Mallen Baker
Marc Bolland, the new chief executive of leading UK sustainability champion Marks &
Spencer, launched his new strategy today. In so doing, he reversed certain things that
had been started by his predecessor, Stuart Rose. Certain sub-brands. Positioning in
regard to foreign expansion. One thing he didn't change, he mentioned pretty much in
passing, was the company's commitment to Plan A - its sustainability programme.
Every new CEO comes into the job with the intention to be a new broom, making their
mark early as someone that can lead the business to greater heights. How does a head
of sustainability or CSR ensure that the company's commitment to social responsibility is
a beneficiary, not a casualty, of such a clean sweep?
Of course, a lot depends on the character and conviction of the person concerned. If
they come in believing that CSR is a communist plot to force businesses to sell their
shareholders short - well, at best you're reorientating your approach to play the long
game. At worst, time to dust off the resume. Conversely, if you suddenly find you've
acquired a committed and convinced champion, the following action points become
easier. A LOT easier.
Very rarely is a new CEO going to slam on all the brakes and believe that the way
forward is to completely reinvent the organisation. Even when a company's systems are
seriously broken, the CEO is going to be looking out for what works that they can build
upon. Make sure that one of the things they see is that commitment to sustainability.
So maybe the old CEO didn't see sustainability in a strategic way. Maybe the vision for
how the company will be successful in the future doesn't quite match the scale of the
challenges you know actually lie ahead.
But at least you should be planting seeds in each of the business units, trying to get
them to recognise and move on their most immediate issues. If, when the new CEO
arrives they look across the business and see good things happening in all departments
on sustainability, they might just be open to the argument that since it is such a
widespread corporate asset - one way forward might just be to utilise it better. And
show what's being done more effectively to the customer.
And, of course, if it's an internal appointment that director currently at the head of the
company's fastest growing product line might just become the new CEO. So begin the
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work of winning over all the top executives BEFORE they get to the top job. It will be
much easier than starting from scratch at the same time as everyone else is queueing
up for some face time with them.
New leaders don't emerge as a blank slate onto which anything could be written. They
have a history - a record of achievement (and a certain amount of political game-
playing) that ultimately took them to the top slot. As soon as you know who the new
boss is going to be, you need to find out a little bit about their track record.
Were they involved with dealing with CSR issues in their previous role? If yes, which
ones? What was their style in that role? How did they work with their team? What were
they trying to achieve?
Leaders usually go to a new company and do pretty much what they did at their
previous company that they believed worked. It may not be identical, but it will be
similar.
The aim is to find the point of strongest agreement, so that when you are first briefing
your new broom on what you do, you can make it sound effective from the beginning.
3. Identify the quick wins that can pay benefits INSIDE the business
No CEO is going to be approving bold and ambitious new plans or ideas in that early
period, especially if it involves product or customer (unless they're ideas that are tried
and tested in their last role). But equally, you need to be able to show that this is a key
element that needs to be factored into those discussions.
So your short term objectives are two-fold. First, show that you can provide the CEO
with some easy wins internally because of the company's sustainability programme. If
you can show how much the firm's employees value its commitment to sustainability,
and have something that is nearing fruition, then getting the CEO to launch / champion
something is a great thing to be able to offer.
Secondly, whilst giving early wins and earning some space in the diary for that first 100
days, you should be outlining how momentum is gaining ground so much across the
company but that this could be a much greater asset with the customer than it currently
is.
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If business decisions were primarily logical and focused on which strategy made best
sense for a particular company in a certain market - well, no new CEO would change a
thing. Because the strategy that had been set
But of course new CEOs change strategy pretty universally. It is about choice and
preference, and - let's be honest - a host of other things that are not necessarily rational
in a purely business sense.
A new CEO wants to build an effective business, because that's what will define the
ultimate judgement on performance. But they might also want things that make them
look or feel powerful, or compassionate, or clever. They will want things that show they
are decisive and in control, or open and listening. They will want to feel welcomed and
supported, even if their official position is that it's not important to them.
Great salesmen have understood for decades that you don't sell a product or service
to a company, you sell it
to an individual who happens to be the buyer. If they like you, if they feel you're there
to make them look good to their boss, or to their extended peer group, they are more
likely to buy from you.
Ideally, when you know that a change is approaching - but certainly very soon after it
has taken place - get some smart customer research that looks at attitudes relating to
the most pertinent issues to your products and brand.
If you can show that customers expect certain standards from you - that they believe
you are socially responsible and that makes them more loyal or, in the unfortunate case
that's not what they say, why they feel disloyal - then you have a powerful tool.
Show why it is a benefit to the business to understand its customers as citizens, not just
as consumers. Highlight some of the risk areas where a social responsibility issue might
lead customers to turn away. Highlight the opportunity areas where you can build of
more lasting, solid relationship with customers by meeting them on their values, not just
their material wants.
REVIEW
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Every new CEO comes into the job with the intention to be a new broom , making their
MARK , but their views on CSR is whats beneficiary or their casualty is whats important :
1. Every CEO will not start from scratch in a new business , even if the
organization is a sick unit . he would rather build up on the strong parts .
2. Every leader will have a track record of their achievement ; find those and
his work experience related to CSR in his history .
3. Identify the quick returns. Show the new CEO the feasibility of new ideas
with respect to CSR. Show your worth within the first 100 days .
4. Understand that everthing is just not about strategy and logic. You need to
be effective , powerful and influential. Thus define their commitment to CSR.
5. Get the customers on side in selling to the CEO. If the customers believe
they are loyal to you and that you are socially responsible , it’s the most
powerful tool .
An Article from Business Respect, Issue Number 170, dated 21 Oct 2010
By Mallen Baker
The growing profile around integrated reporting is a good thing. It will take us into places on sustainability reporting
we probably wouldn't have gotten to otherwise. But there's some wishful thinking going on that probably won't be
part of the reality.
Let's just recap. We currently have financial reporting. Well established. Clear audience. Clear set of rules. For what it
captures (an incomplete picture) it captures well.
And we have CSR / Sustainability reporting. Newly arrived and evolving. Multiple audiences. Vaguely expressed and
debatable rules. It captures something important, but not yet well enough.
And now we have a move for integrated reporting. Bringing the two together.
Now the smarter commentators are making clear even at this early stage that it is not enough simply to bring the two
documents together. That's not the point.
It's about joining up the information given to help people understand the company. Investors need to know about all
the non-financial aspects that affect the long term prospects for the company. If they understand these things, it will
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help them to interpret the figures better. It will help them to make informed predictions about future performance.
And that's the holy grail.
But it's also about helping give other stakeholders a clear picture about the whole company. And that's the tricky bit,
because ideally these communications will take the form that those stakeholders can use - not the form of a one-off
annual report with lots of numbers in it.
Therefore, the advocates of integrated reporting urge tailored communications aimed at the needs of specific
stakeholders. Reporting should be seen as an ongoing communication process, not just a one-off once, or even four
times, per year.
I agree with these advocates. If I work with any company on reporting (and I won't work with many) then it is
because they want to look seriously at how they communicate with - particularly direct - stakeholders.
But I don't believe that's the way it's going to happen.
Why? Because it takes a lot more time and focus. It takes real empathy and creativity. It requires you to know what
the message is for employees, what for customers, what for suppliers, what for local communities. It is like doing four
reports in four different languages whereas before you did one in your own language.
And those stakeholders are not demanding that you do it. Just like nobody was asking for an iPhone until they
saw one. You have to see it first to know that you want it.
More likely, it will happen exactly the way we're all saying it shouldn't. Companies will just merge reports. The good
ones might produce a short brochure aimed at other stakeholders, but they will focus on one-off reports, and they will
bring them together.
That will still be a good thing. I do see this situation as preferable to the current status quo. Reports that pretend to
address the needs of all stakeholders are not sustainable because they are always vulnerable to the charge that they
are launched into a vacuum of indifference.
Of course, there is still everything to play for. Standards get shaped by what people do, not by what theorists
imagine. The early wave of companies embracing integrated reporting will largely have the ability to define it. That is
the opportunity and responsibility.
REVIEW
The growing profile around integrated reporting is a good thing , but not
everything is going to be real. Its not easy to mix the 2 documents , that is ,
FINANCIAL REPORTING and CSR .
Its not just about the reports , its about joining up the rinformation to help
people understand a company better. The companie’s target is the stakeholders
and they will only realize that these INTEGRATED reports exist if they SEE it .
But atleast they will get the idea what they are dealing with . reports like these are
not sustainable , because they are proposing INDIFFERENCE directly. But still
standards get set by what people do and not by what theorists imagine. Thus this
integrated reporting can definitely be a responsibility and opportunity in the near
future .
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An Article from Business Respect, Issue Number 169, dated 26 Aug 2010
By Mallen Baker
The Wall Street Journal recently carried a piece by Aneel Karnani, associate professor of strategy at the University of
Michigan's Stephen M Ross School of Business. Karnani was the author some years ago of a thoughtful and trenchant
critique of the 'Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid' work of CK Prahalad, which I wrote about at the time. Now he
has turned his attention to an attack against corporate social responsibility generally.
Unlike his previous critique, the CSR arguments draw upon well-trod ground. The summary goes something like this.
* Executives owe a single duty in their jobs - to maximise returns for shareholders.
* Where the interests of company and society are aligned, then maximising profits can work to the benefit of society.
But it isn't CSR.
* Where the interests of company and society are opposed, then executives have no business looking to the benefit of
society, because it's against the interest of their shareholders.
* It is the job of governments to worry about society. They should introduce the laws, taxes and other incentives to
make sure that companies can operate without having to worry about such things.
This line of argument is simply the most recent expression of the rationale that goes back to Milton Friedman. It has
the illusion of being based on mathematical certainty - where there is no such thing - and carries a value judgement
that we have a duty to question.
First, the maths. People that argue that the duty of CEOs is to maximise profits for shareholders imply that it is
possible to know in advance how this is to be done. At the very least, they carry the implication that it is all about the
cash - and any dilemma or problem can be resolved by calculating how it will impact the bottom line in the short
term.
You would think that - post financial crisis, post BP oil spill - nobody would use such arguments with a straight face.
But never underestimate the resilience of old ideas even in the face of new realities.
How does one make profits? By and large by providing goods and services that customers want and prefer, with the
agreement of society. The best CEOs describe this task in terms of getting the right people and looking after them,
finding the best products that meet customer needs in new ways, and doing so in a way that governments, their
employees and customers feel good about in terms of the impact on society.
That is not the only way to make short term profits, of course. And that is the point. There is a choice.
Auto makers in the US for years fended off legislation to improve energy efficiency standards, and were supported in
so doing because of customer indifference to fuel efficiency during a time of cheap oil.
Companies in other countries - notably Japan - took a different approach. Rather than ONLY asking 'what does the
customer want today?' - which they did, of course - they also asked where society, and the science of climate change,
was taking us into the future. They created the vehicles that would begin to meet those needs before the customer
had actually got there.
Had US companies had more of a care to the environmental impact of the vehicles they might have
survived in better shape. As it is, they went to the brink.
The fact is that businesses only do well so long as they provide things that people want. Those that see opportunities
to make their products serve their customers well and benefit society will generally do well if they execute effectively.
Profit maximisation as a strategy has been historically poor in actually delivering profit. Ask the banks.
The argument that says that the role of the executive is to maximise profits regardless of the consequences depends
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upon a view of business as standing apart from society. This is just not true, and neither should it be.
Businesses will do well in a healthy society, with a thriving economy and a robust natural environment. These are life
support systems for the business, they are not unnecessary distractions. Few businesses will thrive as little islands of
prosperity alone in a sea of deprivation.
This is why, through history, businesses have often supported education. They understood easily and intuitively that if
people were generally better educated, it would pay dividends for them when they were recruiting into the workforce.
And when Hurricane Katrina ripped through New Orleans, Wal-Mart should have sat on its hands and
nursed its profits, not mobilised its logistical network to the benefit of the country on the basis that it had a better
position to do so than did the federal government.
Such a position is to deny that companies are a part of society, and that therefore they have no role as corporate
citizens. Without being silly about it, it is time to challenge the absence of values behind such a position. We create
our own reality. If we want businesses that have values, we can have that. It is our choice, as a society. The law of
'profit maximisation' is not as immutable as the laws of physics.
It may not be the primary role of a business to alleviate poverty, as Karnani says, but it benefits business if poverty
is minimised. Henry Ford understood this when he paid his workers more, seeing the logic that this would make them
able to afford to buy his cars.
Of course, that led to the first shareholders' action against Ford in 1919 that disputed his right to pay workers more,
because this reduced profits. The case (Dodge vs Ford) was won - and serves as the origin of the logic over profit
maximisation in the first place.
I have seen no shareholders attacks on, for instance, Marks & Spencer for adopting a highly ambitious 'Plan A'
programme prompted by climate change. The company's board reviewed Al Gore's presentation on An
Inconvenient Truth, and came to the conclusion that business in the next decades would have to evolve radically to
meet the new demands that would emerge from our fast-changing world.
On the one hand, you could say they went far beyond their brief. But they have found a way to make real progress
whilst continuing to make profits - indeed many of the things they do add to the profits. But that was not clear before
they took the commitment. The commitment came first. They found the way to make it work to the benefit of the
business.
REVIEW
2.Where interests of the company and the society are aligned , then
maximizing profits can work to the benefit to the society. But this isn’t CSR .
3.If the interests of the company and the society are opposed , then corporate
donot give any importance to CSR .
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4.It’s the job of the government to take care of the society , not the corporates.
An Article from Business Respect, Issue Number 168, dated 2 Aug 2010
By Mallen Baker
It used to be all about blame. Company X uses suppliers that have abusive working conditions, or child labour. They
are cynically turning a blind eye to evil practices to benefit their bottom line.
The company executives probably never once had a discussion that said "just as well the world doesn't know that our
suppliers exploit children. That will help us to deliver extra value to our shareholders".
Instead, they just didn't know - and they didn't know that they were supposed to know.
But the world changes - and in the internet age it has developed a consistent knack for letting you know what you are
supposed to know. As a result, plenty of companies began trying to control the ethics within their supply chain. Codes
of conduct. Factory audits. All that. After all, they didn't own those factories - now that they understood they couldn't
cast off all responsibility for them, they had to find some way of controlling them.
And that was right - but it was only the next step on the journey.
Increasingly now many of those companies - and particularly those in the fashion industry - are coming to terms with
the realisation that it is industry purchasing practices that create many of the problems.
Fashion is an exciting whirlwind of 'the latest thing'. But late decision making (in order to catch the very very latest
trend), shorter time demands generally, and changes to orders or cancellations - all these factors make it far more
difficult for supplier factories to stay in compliance with ethical codes. Add to that unstable relationships and extreme
downward pressure on prices and you have a set of circumstances where the unintended consequence of buying
behaviour guarantees non compliance
Time and again, it simply means putting the people that make decisions in touch with the consequences of those
decisions. It has been too easy in the past for fashion designers and buyers to develop such a one-way focus on the
fashion elements to miss the realities of how the clothes then actually get produced.
Then there is the process of getting feedback. If you see your suppliers as partners, rather than scoundrels that will
rip you off at the first opportunity and must therefore be played off against each other, then you can get better
insights into how your own process works. Because the people on the ground know where the problems are better
than you do.
Levi Strauss again: "When we've asked for feedback from our suppliers, we've discovered that sometimes
the best insights actually come from the people working in the factories."
This is why stakeholder engagement is important. It is often overcomplicated. But it is one mechanism for companies
better understanding what are the consequences of their decisions.
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Most people will insist on believing that irresponsible corporate behaviour comes from bad people at the top aiming to
make a profit at any cost. But the fashion companies have come to the realisation that many of the best practices
help to improve quality and drive down costs, as well as achieving social benefit.
REVIEW
The company executives never once discus “our suppliers exploit children”. They just
don’t know ……. And don’t know that they were supposed to know. They are cynically
turning a blind eye to evil practices to benefit their bottom line.
9 out of 10 times , irresponsible and unethical behavior comes from bad system
design , where perverse incentives are created to do the wrong thing. But the world is
changing , and as a result , a lot of companies are taking due interest in CSR …
conducting factory audits , etc. to keep their status and be a little bit responsible
towards the society .
An Article from Business Respect, Issue Number 166, dated 10 May 2010
By Mallen Baker
We have a lot of sophisticated tools out there now for spotting socially responsible companies. We have indices, and
awards, and quality standards - you name it. Between them, they look at every management process you can think
of, and cover every issue that might affect a company. But what if all that information gets in the way, rather than
helps
In his book 'Blink', Malcolm Gladwell tells the story of the statue that didn't look right.
An art dealer sold the J.Paul Getty Museum a marble statue, apparently dating from the sixth century BC. The
museum was cautious. It studied whether the statue was stylistically consistent. It tested the material it was made of
and ensured it was the correct age. It analysed it using an electron microscope, electron microprobe, mass
spectrometry, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray fluorescence.
The statue came through with flying colours. It even had a layer of calcite on the surface, which could only appear
after thousands of years, showing that it ws genuinely old, not a modern fake.
One day, an expert on Greek sculpture Evelyn Harrison was taken to see the statue. As the cloth was removed and
she laid eyes on it for the first time, she immediately declared it to be a fake. She couldn't explain why she thought
this.
Because the human brain is very good at coming to subconscious conclusions about complex matters. In the right
circumstances, the intuitive 'gut feel' can be more accurate than all the tests you can devise.
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REVIEW
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It was our first day to the organization.
We started off at 11:00 a.m. sharp . We were introduced to the children there.
First, they were a little shy to communicate with us. Then the warden gave a
helping hand and made them as well as us feel comfortable. We were little
hesitant as we did not know the local language, but we were surprised to see
that the children knew how to communicate ,very slightly though , in English which
made the conversation a little easy . We shook hands with them and shared our
profiles . they were using a lot of hand gestures because a few of them couldnot talk
and this was something different that the three of us had noticed . They had a very
good way of communicating through their hands and other features and their body
language said a lot which they couldnot speak .
Around 12:00 noon – 12:30 p.m., they were called to have their lunch. We saw
how the handicapped children were having their food. The ones who were
physically challenged in the case of their hands and eyes, they were fed by
the sisters there. We asked the sisters if we could feed them . The sisters
kindly offered the plate to us to feed them. We could see the smiles on their
faces. We could never imagine that doing something so small can bring so
much happiness around. We could see the children smiling and having fun. We
too were having a lot of fun. They are truly the special children of GOD. After
lunch, we played some games with them like ludo, etc.
I t was already 3:00 p.m., it was their afternoon sleeping time. The children did
not feel like sleeping as we were around but they had to go to bed as they
were asked to and it was a routine . We decided to stay with them till they would
go off to sleep. We were telling them stories so that they could sleep. Around
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4:15 p.m. there was a silence in the room and the children were calmly taking
their afternoon nap.
We thanked the warden for letting us spend such a wonderful time with the
children and were waiting for another exciting day ahead .
That day we did not teach them but were just with them and
sharing our thoughts. It was lunch time again so they were called for
lunch. It was a special lunch. There were cakes and soft drinks along with
the food. After the delicious lunch there was a talent show by the
children there. We were surprised to see the talents these children
possessed. A girl named Nirmala who was blind, she was the nightingale.
Though we did not understand the song as it was a south Indian song,
she sang beautifully.
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and a piece of chalk on a small black-board. We were shocked to see
that boy doing his master-piece. There were many more singing and
dancing. We were so glad to have shared such beautiful moments with
them and we will always cherish these moments.
It was 4:00 p.m. and we thought of moving as the children were tired .
They went for their afternoon nap then and we headed towards home.
As usual we were with the children. That day a girl named gita was
playing ludo then suddenly by mistake a boy pushed a desk and the
desk fell on her foot. It was really bad. She was crying. Her toe was
bleeding. They soon took her to the hospital. Abhinav carried her to the
van. And then the nurses took her to the hospital. It was really sad.
For lunch when they were called. The children happily had the lunch as
they were unaware of the depth of the situation which took place in
the morning with gita. After lunch we had put the children off to
bed and waited for gita to return from the hospital. After half an hour
she returned safely and her foot was plastered. We took her to her
bed and gave her some food. She was calm and had her food.
Then we put her off to bed. We had a conversation with the warden
and then she said that she had to take injection and she was crying
but everything was fine later on. Then we moved towards home with a
silent prayer for gita.
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It was the fifth day.
That day they did not sleep in the afternoon. We were all together
and enjoying the quality time we spent with them.
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This was our first experience with an organisation like this, and we have had a really
amazing and wonderful time. Initially when the Social responsibility project was given to
us, it felt like a just another assignment which will take away a major part of our time.
But on the first day of working in the NGO itself our opinions totally changed.
Reading and playing with the small kids there made me feel a great sense of pleasure.
They were so innocent and so dedicated to studying and learning which most of us
waste when we get the opportunities . The morals and values instilled in them werevery
good . The thing which made us want to teach them was their eagerness to learn and
their respect and fondness for anyone who taught them. The kids really touched our
hearts. They were always happy learning, and never cribbed about their sorrows which
were probably more than anyone present in this room at the moment . When a girl was
asked, what’s the best part about the place , she said that she liked it that whenever she
did something wrong she was punished for it because it gave her the feeling that people
cared because at home there was no one to see what she is doing and so no one
corrected her either.
There not only the children but even the volunteers were very friendly and caring. They
make you feel at home. The efforts of the nurses were absolutely astonishing. It amazed
us to see the people who were handicapped living without any regrets or expectations
from the world. They were innocent. They welcomed us as if we were celebrities and
made sure that we didn’t have any problems.
To conclude, we would just like to say that this experience will always be remembered.
We learnt a lot of things from the kids PATIENCE being one of the major ones .It made
us realise the importance of helping others and also that we should be grateful for
whatever we have.
CONCLUSION
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Non Governmental Organizations or NGOs perform multifarious jobs for the development
of the people and society. They are non-profit voluntary groups organized at the local,
national or international level. Non-governmenetal organizations either campaign or
advocate sensitive issues, work on capacity building programmes, concentarte on social
research, or provide significant networking opportunities. NGOs are not directly involved
in the structure of the government but at the same time they cannot work without the
support or help from the government. NGOs bring up issues and concerns of the people
to the government and policy makers.
In India there are several types of NGOs performing a particular job or jobs. The sectors
have been wide spread across the country especially in rural and remote areas. The
types of NGOs in India include volunteer sector, civic society, grassroots organizations,
transnational social movement organizations, private voluntary organizations, self-help
groups (SSG) and many other related organizations. NGOs cover areas that include
welfare of street children, women and old people, youth, slum dwellers, child labourers,
sex workers, and landless workers.
Every individual should take out some time from their hectic schedule for helping the
under privileged people.
Working with this particular NGO has made our eyes open to the world where
everyone is not priveledged. Every child is not as lucky as we are to have 2 eyes , 2 legs
, 2 hands , etc. but still they are happy and living their lives with satisfaction . some
children are not as clever as we are or not as intelligent . After working here , we can
see people struggling and et very innocent to the world beyond their set boundaries. We
need to appreciate this and move forward keeping in mind that WE CAN MAKE A
DIFFERENCE AND HELP THE SOCIETY TO BE A BETTER PLACE TO LIVE IN .
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