Sponsored
False Profits of Ethical Capital - (Progress in Political Economy) by Claire Parfitt (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- False profits of ethical capital is a thought-provoking approach to understanding stakeholder capitalism.
- About the Author: Claire Parfitt is a Lecturer in Political Economy at The University of Sydney
- 208 Pages
- Political Science, Political Economy
- Series Name: Progress in Political Economy
Description
About the Book
This book is a timely study of an important political economic phenomenon: ESG investing and stakeholder capitalism. This book encourages new ways of thinking about corporate responsibility and how to contest it.Book Synopsis
False profits of ethical capital is a thought-provoking approach to understanding stakeholder capitalism. Rather than focusing on the inadequacies of corporate responsibility, sustainable investment and consumer politics, this book grapples with the technical and rhetorical functions of ethical capital for profit and accumulation. It provides a unique and eclectic analysis of the political dynamics between finance, capital and labour, offering a refreshing perspective on struggles interlocking social, ecological and economic crises, and suggesting new ways of thinking about sustainability politics.From the Back Cover
'A rich contribution to social science [which] incisively interrogates the prophecy that better management of environmental, social and governance risks (ESG) can build a more equitable, stable and sustainable capitalism. A must read for students and scholars, proponents and opponents of ethical capital.' Darius Wójcik, National University of Singapore
False profits of ethical capital is a timely study of an important political economic phenomenon: ESG investing and stakeholder capitalism. Moving beyond observations of the inadequacies of responsible business as a vehicle for social change, this book argues that ESG investing and related corporate responsibility practices facilitate profit through speculation on ethics.
Ethical capital is framed as a process through which political challenges to capital accumulation on social and environmental grounds are transformed into opportunities for profit. A speculative moral economy prevails, in which it is assumed that business can do well and do good at the same time, belying the conflicts between different 'stakeholders'. The practices of stakeholder capitalism aim to neutralise the ethical dilemmas presented by overlapping social, ecological and economic crises, and in the process, alienate ethics from the human being and transform them, via financial calculus, into metrics that inform value relations. These processes manifest in ESG investing, sustainability reporting and corporate branding exercises.
False profits exposes the contradictions that are concealed by sustainability politics, and suggests an alternative frame for thinking through the strategic challenges of contesting ethical capital.
Review Quotes
'A rich contribution to social science from the winner of the 2022 doctoral dissertation prize of the Global Network on Financial Geography (FinGeo), who incisively interrogates the prophecy that better management of environmental, social, and governance risks (ESG) can build a more equitable, stable, and sustainable capitalism. A must read for students and scholars, proponents and opponents of ethical capital.'
Professor Darius Wojcik, Professor of Financial Geography, National University of Singapore
About the Author
Claire Parfitt is a Lecturer in Political Economy at The University of Sydney