Pursuing a communitarian ethic for corporate governance to strengthen health promotion: A scoping review

  • Judith King Health Systems Trust
  • Bernhard Gaede University of KwaZulu-Natal
  • Noluthando Ndlovu Health Systems Trust

Abstract

The magnitude of South Africa’s diet-related non-communicable disease burden calls for scrutiny of sugar-sweetened beverage manufacturers’ business ethics in terms of the commercial determinants of health. We gathered and analysed relevant literature from five electronic databases to determine whether a communitarian ethic can strengthen corporate governance in support of public health. Twenty-nine of 648 results were selected for data extraction and analysis. Six thematic categories were identified: the reciprocal nature of the corporation in society; perspectives on ‘corporate citizenship’; integrative approaches to corporate sustainability; critiques of Corporate Social Responsibility; legal regulation to engender communitarian consciousness; and the social contract perspective. We found that in tackling the human and economic toll of South Africa’s obesogenic environment, a diverse range of theoretical and practical perspectives supports the concept that a communitarian ethic for corporate governance can normalise accountability for population health as a human right.

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Author Biographies

Judith King, Health Systems Trust
PhD candidate UKZN
Bernhard Gaede, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban
Noluthando Ndlovu, Health Systems Trust
Senior Researcher at Health Systems Trust, Durban
Published
2024-12-04
Section
Articles