Juliet Roper
University of Waikato
49 Papers
235 Citations
Juliet Roper is an academic researcher from University of Waikato. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corporate social responsibility & Sustainability. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 49 publications.
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Papers
Boundaryless Careers: Bringing Back Boundaries:
TL;DR: Boundaryless career theories are increasingly prominent in career studies and management studies, and provide a new "status quo" concerning modern careers as mentioned in this paper, however, inaccurate labelling, loose definitions, overemphasis on personal agency, normalization of boundaryless careers, and poor empirical support for the claimed dominance of boundary-less careers.
444
•Book
The debate over corporate social responsibility
Steve May,George Cheney,Juliet Roper +2 more
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: The debate over Corporate Social Responsibility updates and broadens the discussion of these questions by bringing together in one volume a variety of practical and theoretical perspectives on corporate social responsibility as mentioned in this paper, including contributions from the fields of communication, business, law, sociology, political science, economics, accounting, and environmental studies.
402
The meanings of social entrepreneurship today
Juliet Roper,George Cheney +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the development of the concept of social entrepreneurship and its motivations, its promises and its implications, and stress the diversity of economic, political and social phenomena associated in one way or another with the term social entrepreneurship while also emphasising the broad appeal of the term.
224
A Software-Assisted Qualitative Content Analysis of News Articles: Example and Reflections
TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative content analysis of 230 newspaper articles, conducted to determine international media perceptions of New Zealand's environmental performance in connection with climate change and carbon emissions, is presented.
Environmental risk, sustainability discourses, and public relations:
TL;DR: The role of public relations professionals in such discursive struggles, and the implications for organizations and public relations in the long term are discussed in this article, where they explore the resulting struggle through analysis of discursive influences in the development of environmental policy in New Zealand.
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