Corporate social responsibility is an action of organisations
that will, as it were, seem to draw mixed reaction from individuals, its
acceptance and rejection from people depending on what side of the divide one
is.
While on one side, an argument can be propounded based on the solvency and
financial outlook of the organisation and basing it as a platform to put social
responsibility in the lowest rungs of its priorities, others would argue that
as long as such organisation is situated in a particular community or locality
it behooves on them to be concerned about the welfare of the place, regardless
of the level and shade of their impact on the community.
Be that as it may, the idea of corporate social
responsibility is a laudable and agreeable one, the act of giving back to the
society, or being touched by the infirmities or deficiencies of the community
where the business enterprise is located.
It will be surprising to discover how
far-reaching a simple positive outlook can give to an organisation, and as well
how the flipside can look like, and how bad it can look when what it supposed
to be done by a company gets shelved, under whatever guise.
No one needs any
introduction to the UNEP report which puts the time frame for the remediation
operation in Ogoniland where several profit-making companies have been
operating since the 1950s, at over 10 years, neither is it any news that the
pillaging of the national resources in that axis stems directly from a failure
on the part of organisations who ought to have known and or done better.
The Nigerian
society generally is reeling under the hard-rained punches of a deteriorating
educational sector, the fallouts of which have become more hydra-headed than
expected.
Year after year, dismal outings at school certificate examinations,
exam malpractice ( which goes awry even despite the external help in most
cases), churning out of questionable quality graduates, production of
zombie-like individuals as opposed to enlightened people which is supposed to
be the aim of education, lean vocabulary, apologetic reading and writing skills
among others, as well as poor reading culture, stare us in the face with no
hope in sight.
Thankfully, the
story of corporate social responsibility in Nigeria is not an entirely gloomy
one. There are companies who really know what it is to leave a community better
than they met it, especially as it borders on education in Nigeria.
- By Ogbonna Nnaemeka Henry
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