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Article
The "Good Corporate Citizen" Beyond BCE
Alberta Law Review (2021)
  • Li Wen Lin, Allard School of Law at the University of British Columbia
Abstract
In its landmark corporate law decision of BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders, the Supreme Court of Canada expressly referenced “good corporate citizen” when commenting on the best interests of the corporation. The court’s reference to good corporate citizenship is often viewed as salient yet ambiguous. As the court did not provide any substantive legal analysis of the term, legal scholars and practitioners can only speculate on its intended meaning. This article provides an empirical study on the historical development and usage of good corporate citizenship when referenced in judicial cases. The empirical findings show that Canadian courts have invoked the notion for decades and in a variety of contexts. The meaning of good corporate citizenship varies from context to context and does not necessarily dovetail with corporate social responsibility as commonly perceived. Good corporate citizenship as a legal concept carries some practical yet controversial consequences in the environmental sentencing context. Importantly, the oft-acclaimed corporate governance paradigm shift since BCE seems more symbolic than substantive in judicial practices. The Canadian experience also provides insights into the global emergence of explicit corporate social responsibility legislation and stakeholder-oriented corporate governance.
Keywords
  • corporate social responsibility,
  • corporate governance,
  • fiduciary duty,
  • corporate philanthropy,
  • legal compliance
Publication Date
Spring February 1, 2021
Citation Information
Li Wen Lin. "The "Good Corporate Citizen" Beyond BCE" Alberta Law Review (2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/li-wen-lin/9/