<p>Practicing business with a conscience leaves no sector untouched. It trickles into how we treat our employees; approach our work in general; address stakeholders; engage in accounting, financial, and production management practices; implement and manage information technology; communicate on a direct and indirect basis; and market what we stand for. Business has encountered an interesting evolution in the first two decades of the twenty-first century, with social media as a catalyst aiding greater understanding and improvement regarding the critical value of soft skills, workplace diversity, change readiness, moral responsibility, sustainable awareness, and a general socially responsible mindset. This amalgamate spirit of business as we envision it in both the near and far future has found its way in all segments of business education, research, and practice. </p><p>Adhering to the global trend of increased responsibility and evoking a constructive change in the narrative of business, this Research Companion serves as a critical reference work for business scholars and practitioners in various settings. It brings together contributing scholars from multiple business areas, from a variety of cultures and locations of the world, in order to achieve the compilation of a reference work that will find an expansive appeal. Including insights from the broad business spectrum ranging from internal managerial practices to strategic applications, including international sensitivity, this volume highlights the urgency for increased awareness in business decision-making on all fronts. </p><p>It will be of great value to researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields of corporate social responsibility, business ethics, leadership, organizational studies, and entrepreneurship.</p> <p><strong>PART I Leadership and Organizational Behavior With a Conscience</strong> 1. Conscious Leadership: Considering Internal and External Stakeholders <i>Joan Marques</i> 2. Responsible Leadership Under Oneness: Conscious Parts and Conscientious Wholes <i>Alex Fong And Duysal Aşkun </i>3. Inspiring Soft Skills as a Conscious Choice <i>Debra J. Dean </i>4. Business Without Conscience <i>Clive R. Boddy, Benedict Sheehy, And Brendon Murphy </i>5. A Human-Centered Approach to Artificial Intelligence in the Workplace <i>Alentina Vardanyan </i>6. Nurturing Workplace Diversity With a Conscience: A Path Toward Inclusion and Excellence for African Americans <i>Shona G. Smith And Ariane Froidevaux </i>7. Advancing Workplace Diversity: Weathering the Storm to Create a Path Toward Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion <i>Lisa T. Toler </i>8. An Eastern Approach to Moral Development <i>Ravi Subramaniam </i>9. The Role of Religious Common Good Traditions in Fostering Humanistic Leadership <i>George Gotsis And Aikaterini Grimani </i>10. Light and Shadow: A Biblical Juxtaposition of Toxic and Ethical Leadership <i>Joseph Dominick Martinez, Meghan N. Rivers, and W. David Winner </i><b>PART II Strategic and International Management With a Conscience</b> 11. Conscious Value Creation in Global Value Chains <i>Anoosha Makka </i>12. Finding Unity in Diversity: Conscience in Business Literature and Practice <i>Christiane Molina </i>13. Responsible Innovation Principles <i>Isaac Wanasika </i>14. Disentangling the Professional and Political in the (Post) Modern Workplace <i>Sean M. Eddington and Caitlyn M. Jarvis</i> 15. Segmenting Mixed Markets: A Model and Evidence From Microfinance <i>Sarah Wolfolds </i>16. How Mexican Companies Contribute to Human Development <i>Anabella Dávila </i>17. Advancing Socially Responsible Strategies Through Earned Social Media <i>Catalin G. Pavel and R. Greg Bell </i>18. Supporting Business Ethics and Sustainability: A Relational Perspective on Conscience <i>Sheldene K. Simola </i>19. Exploring Business Conscience <i>Thomas Anyanje Senaji, Victor Senji Anyanje, and Jacqueline Rose Anyango</i> 20. Open Collaboration and Digital Technologies in the Context of Environmental Innovations <i>Luis Francisco Miranda, Vanessa Pertuz, Claudio Cruz Cázares, and Minna Saunila </i>21. Adult-Learning Motivations, Hindrances, and Aspirational HRD Effectiveness Based on Cooperative Learning Models <i>Meghan N. Rivers and W. David Winner </i>22. Reflective Teaching in the Virtual Workplace in Higher Education: The Strategy for the Development of Conscious Lean Educational Leadership in India <i>Moitreyee Paul And Lalatendu Kesari Jena </i><b>PART III Corporate Social Responsibility and Social Entrepreneurship </b>23. Internal and External Qualities Needed to Transition From Social Entrepreneurship to System Entrepreneurship <i>Pamela Kay Caldwell And Oluseye David Akintunde </i>24. Stakeholder Protection and Valuation Effects <i>Koushikee Dutta And J. Kirk Ring </i>25. Calculation, Responsiveness, and Conscience in CSR and Social Entrepreneurship <i>Duane Windsor </i>26. Caregiving Weighing on the Conscience of Business: Organizational Caregiving for the Family Caregiver <i>Brian Murray </i>27. Managing the Commercial-Social Paradox With Different Forms of Organizing <i>Susanna L. M. Chui And Nazha Gali </i>28. Nature, Life, and Economy: The Quest for Conscience Business Practice <i>Anannya Deb Roy And Goutam Saha </i>29. The Effects of Credence Goods and Country Development on the CSP–CFP Relationship Through Revenue Mediation <i>Renee Pesor, Kristiina Esop, Alar Kein, and Mari Kooskora </i>30. When Positive Psychology and CSR Collide: Emerging and Prospective Research in Positive CSR <i>Austin Chia and Margaret L. Kern </i>31. Narratives of Sustainable Life: In Pursuit of Conscience Business <i>Sharmistha Banerjee, Nagma Sahi Ansari, and Anannya Deb Roy </i>32. When Business Means Inclusion: Social Cooperatives in Poland—Their Essence, Ethos, and Practices <i>Edyta Janus And Agnieszka Smrokowska-Reichmann </i>33. Strategic and International Management With Conscience: A Case of Kenya/Africa <i>Anne W. Njagi, Catherine Wanza Maingi, and Kennedy Muema Musyoka </i>34. The Sensemaking of Confucian Entrepreneur on the Ambidexterity of Business <i>Xuanwei Cao </i>35. Where Business Ethics and Social Responsibility Merge <i>Joan Marques </i><b>Index</b></p>