Introduction
Partnership is not the first word that comes to mind when one
thinks about business-NGO relations. Over the past three decades, most
relationships between the private sector and civil society have been founded
upon conflict.1 In different sectors and geographical contexts, this
pattern of business-NGO relations started to change in the early 1990s with the
emergence of formal sustainable development partnerships between these
long-standing adversaries. Although most of these business-NGO partnerships to
date have appeared in the North, many have significant implications for the
South - particularly those that promote international business and trading
standards. Furthermore, there is some indication that Southern-based companies
and NGOs are beginning to collaborate, albeit to a much lesser extent than their
Northern counterparts.
1 Alongside business-NGO confrontation,
various NGOs have accepted corporate donations for specific projects or causes.
While some writers have characterized these activities as
partnerships (Forrester, 1990; Waddock, 1988), others have tended to
view them primarily as corporate sponsorship agreements (Murphy and Bendell,
1997). Recent research suggests that greater attention is being given to the
mutual benefits for business and NGOs of these agreements (Waddell,
1998).
This paper is divided into two parts. part 1 offers a global
overview of the changing nature of business-NGO relations on sustainable
development. Our purpose here is to examine why and how business-NGO relations
are changing in the 1990s. We summarize the current spectrum of business-NGO
relations and consider how the strategic responses of business and NGOs to
sustainable development have evolved over the years. In order to illustrate how
business-NGO relations in both the North and South are developing in practice,
three case studies are presented on protest and partnership initiatives in the
forest products, oil and sporting goods industries. This is followed by review
of various theoretical perspectives on business-NGO relations from a broad
literature on conflict and partnership. Given that this is an emerging area of
study, part 1 of the paper concludes with preliminary thoughts on the
preconditions, processes and outcomes of more collaborative relations between
business and NGOs.
Part 2 presents a theory to explain the expanding role of NGOs
in the promotion of corporate responsibility for sustainable development. We
consider the potential for the wider replication of NGO-driven corporate
environmentalism in developing countries. This is done by placing the
initiatives described above within the context of global processes, including
the globalization of business, trade and finance, advances in communications
technologies and new governance challenges. This leads us to develop a theory of
how corporations are regulated for social and environmental goals in a
globalizing economy. We call this civil
regulation.