Making sense of integrity: Civil society’s influence on international operating firms in collective action against corruption

Keywords

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Issue Date

2025-06-30

Language

en

Document type

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Title

ISSN

Volume

Issue

Startpage

Endpage

DOI

Abstract

This study investigates the influence of civil society actors on international operating firms in making sense and responding to collective anti-corruption initiatives within global supply chains. By employing a longitudinal qualitative case study of the International Collective Action Conference (ICAC), the research utilizes a sensemaking lens along with the Gioia methodology to capture the evolution over time in the context of global supply chains. The study identifies three core sensemaking mechanisms: framing integrity, institutional anchoring, and ethical norm-setting. Through these mechanisms, civil society actors shape corporate compliance behaviour, reframe integrity as a shared social responsibility, and bridge the gap between soft and hard law. The findings show civil society’s role has evolved from advocacy to co-regulation, co-creating institutional pathways that embed collective action in global supply chains. This research contributes to governance, institutional, and sensemaking theory by demonstrating this role in the global anti-corruption landscape.

Description

Citation

Supervisor

Faculty

Faculteit der Managementwetenschappen