CSR Professional? Yes, I am!: Sensemaking and sensegiving as mechanisms of professionalization in the CSR field

Shin, Hyemi, Cho, Charles and Brivot, Marion (2017) CSR Professional? Yes, I am!: Sensemaking and sensegiving as mechanisms of professionalization in the CSR field. In: University of Exeter Paper Seminar, 18 January 2017, Exeter.

[img] Text
Shin Cho Brivot_Exeter.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only

Download (1MB)

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to explore the professionalization strategies at work within the field of CSR in South Korea. We follow CSR actors and the microdynamics whereby a quasi-professional status is progressively being claimed, developed and secured. Drawing on the notions of sensemaking and sensegiving developed by Erving Goffman, we analyze the self-presentation discourses of fiftyfive individuals professionally involved in the CSR field in South Korea. This analysis allows us to identify four different types of sensemaking framings, which we label “strategic corporate giving”, “social innovation”, “risk management” and finally “sustainability transition”. Findings indicate that within each of those frames CSR quasi-professionals also engaged in different sensegiving strategies. These four different sensemaking and sensegiving mechanisms imply that individuals in less stabilized fields, where there are not only one dominant manual but several related institutional areas, choose one or two of those related institutional area(s) that they are willing to take advantage of and be constrained by. This study bring three main contributions. First, it extends our understanding of professionalization and its mechanisms by unpacking the discursive strategies at work in an emergent quasiprofessional field. Second, by mobilizing Goffman’s sensemaking and sensegiving notions, we explore the recursive interplays between micro-level inter-subjective dynamics and macro-level extra-subjective structures in this process of quasiprofessionalization. Third, this study contributes to the collective exploration of “markets for virtue” (Vogel, 2007) by focusing on an empirical context – CSR in South Korea – that has rarely been investigated before and can generate interesting insights applicable to similar national contexts.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Subjects: N100 Business studies
N200 Management studies
N400 Accounting
Department: Faculties > Business and Law > Newcastle Business School
Depositing User: Hyemi Shin
Date Deposited: 19 Jan 2017 09:49
Last Modified: 31 Jul 2021 21:45
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/29201

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics