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2016 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Responsible Management Education in the Netherlands: To What Extent Have Dutch Business Schools Integrated CSR into Their MBA Programs?

Authors : Lars Moratis, Marwan Jezrawi

Published in: Social Responsibility Education Across Europe

Publisher: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

The increasing importance of CSR within the business context has led business schools to consider their essential role in this development and to positively contribute to this through responsible management education. It is unclear, however, whether business schools are preparing their students sufficiently to know how to deal with CSR issues throughout their careers effectively and to avoid irresponsible behavior as future leaders. Since comprehensive empirical data has been lacking sofar, this chapter reports on a baseline study into responsible management education in the Netherlands. In addition to a case description about the attention for CSR by the Open University The Netherlands, it presents original data about the state of responsible management education in the Netherlands. A survey was administered to general MBA program managers in the Netherlands addressing issues such as the level and way of integration of CSR into MBA programs, teaching methods used, student interest in CSR education, and the main drivers and obstacles for integrating CSR into management education. Both public and private business schools as well as research-oriented universities and universities of professional education were included in this research. Our findings indicate, among other things, that the majority of MBA programs that are offered in the Netherlands have integrated CSR into the curriculum, although most MBA programs appear to educate their students about CSR through traditional teaching approaches and dominantly use so-called saddle bag approaches to CSR integration in MBA programs.

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Footnotes
1
Since, strictly speaking, only a part of the MBA programs in the Netherlands are offered by business schools (e.g., they are also offered by faculties of business administration or business studies of universities that are not separate entities such as business schools), we have chosen to dominantly use the label ‘university’.
 
2
This is the personal experience of one of the authors of this chapter as a thesis supervisor.
 
3
It should be noted that also within the public universities, the CSR programs that are offered are first and foremost seen as ‘standalone profit centres’, which means that they are part of the commercial market offerings of these institutions instead of being part of the educational activities they develop as part of their public functions.
 
4
While management education in the Netherlands is provided through other programs than MBA programs as well (e.g., bachelor and master of science programs in Business Administration (offered by both academic universities and universities of professional education), Commercial Economics (offered by universities of professional education) and Management, Economics & Law (offered by universities of professional education) this approach was expected to provide first insights into the subject matter.
 
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Metadata
Title
Responsible Management Education in the Netherlands: To What Extent Have Dutch Business Schools Integrated CSR into Their MBA Programs?
Authors
Lars Moratis
Marwan Jezrawi
Copyright Year
2016
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-26716-6_3