具有街头智慧的董事会?分散的街头抗议如何间接影响公司治理

Corporate Boards with Street Smarts? How Diffuse Street Protests Indirectly Shape Corporate Governance

ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY · 2023
被引 23
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究美国女性大游行等街头抗议的规模如何影响当地企业后续任命女性董事的可能性,发现大规模抗议会提高任命概率,尤其当社区或公司内部与抗议目标不一致时。

Abstract

Though recent waves of large-scale street protests have not directly targeted the business sector, they can still represent a major development in a company’s external environment. Building on the literature on community embeddedness, this study extends activism-as-information theory to understand how and when companies respond to street protests that take place in their communities. We argue that for business leaders, the scale of protests serves as an information update regarding the changing relevance of the protested social issue in a community. Using data from 2017 to 2020 on Women’s March protests in the United States, we show that the scale of street protests in local communities is associated with the likelihood of subsequent female director appointments for corporations headquartered in those communities: larger-scale protests are associated with a higher likelihood of such appointments. Further, we show that this response to proximal protests is heightened for protests that occur in local communities least aligned with the protest movement and for companies least internally aligned with the protest goals. Our theory and findings extend research on social movements in markets, showing how and why organizations respond to diffuse community protests, and they enrich corporate governance research on the roles of communities and stakeholders in shaping board composition.

公司治理社会运动社区嵌入董事会构成利益相关者