Thursday, November 10, 2011

Becoming an Early Adapter: Picking a Partner for the Sustainable Evolution

In this article, Kurian poses the idea that "corporate social responsibility (CSR) may be an invention of PR."  With the widespread use of the four Rs, (reduce, reuse, recycle and re-think) as well as the emergence of sustainable projects, one can note that the two ideas were publicized and may be even created by the practitioners of public relations.

This leads me to ask this question: If public relations practitioners can make up corporate social responsibility and actually have companies adopt to it, can we somehow make environmental concern a norm on the campus of Florida A&M while making students adapt to it? Maybe corporate social responsibility is taking a step. Maybe it is moving, or evolving, from the corporate world and heading to the world of public institutions like schools. This leads me to think about the survey data my group collected. Many students weren't concerned at all. This may be because the environmental movement is early in its evolution. The movement may be turning a new leaf that they just aren't familiar with yet.

We need to make the Student Green Energy Fund a part of FAMU. Kurian mentions that now it is normal to see a CSR tab or community outreach section on a corporate website. Maybe in the future this will be a norm for universities too! In relation to the green energy fund, our job is to make FAMU a part of that early adapter group.

One way we have suggested to achieve the SGEF is to partner with a larger organization on campus that is more prominent. Kurian poses the idea that this may not work because of the perception of the masses. The masses know that corporations donate money to worthy causes. The problem is that the masses also know that they can receive tax deductions and refunds because of these donations. This makes the public question the sincerity in these actions. Similarly, as Kurian says, "The corporation lies, steals and kills without hesitation... Corporate social responsibility is impossible except in so far as it is insincere."

This makes me wonder if partenring with SGA is a good idea. Students feel that they take advantage of their power and often have negative attitudes towards them. This is also the reason many students, more than 60 percent, do not participate in campus elections. The FAMU Green Coalition should keep its crisp image as a clean student organization. Its brand might be ruined if it partners with the wrong group. With these ideas in mind, I think we can come up with a fantastic way to encourage support.

Kurian, P (2005). Imperializing Spin Cycles: A postcolonial look at public relations, greenwashing and the separation of publics Science Direct19(3), 513-520. doi: S0749-3797(00)00195-1