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For the greater good: business networks and business social responsibility to communities

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Business networks (co-operative arrangements between independent business organizations) may be the signature organizational form of the contemporary global economy. Many policy-makers and local leaders advocate business network membership as an alternative development strategy for regional economic vitality. The extant literature on business networks has focused on their association with business success. However, little is known about their impact on other aspects of community life. The purpose of this paper is to elaborate the role of network membership on one non-economic dimension of the business community interface. We examined the relationship between business network membership and business social responsibility to communities, defined as the provision of leadership and support for community betterment projects. Data were gathered from telephone interviews with a random sample of 460 non-metro small business operators in the USA. Independent t -tests and ordinary least squares regression analyses controlling for theoretically important variables were conducted. Findings show that networked businesses provide more leadership and support for their communities than non-networked businesses. However, networked businesses were no more likely than non-networked businesses to use local suppliers of goods and services.

Keywords: backward linkages; impact on community; networks; social responsibility

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Department of Sociology, Iowa State University, 204 East Hall, Ames IA 50011, USA 2: Department of Textiles and Clothing, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 203 Home Economics Bldg, Lincoln, NE, USA 3: Department of Sociology, University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, Pine Bluff, Arkansas, USA

Publication date: 01 July 2006

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