Pretorius, JoelienOloumou, Yannick Rodrigue Dieu2015-05-192024-05-032015-05-192024-05-032013https://hdl.handle.net/10566/12817Magister Administrationis - MAdminThis study explores the relationship between companies and society with regards to companies’ social responsibilities. A number of concepts such as Corporate Citizenship (CC), Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Corporate Social Investment (CSI), articulate the role of companies in society. While these concepts are often used interchangeably, the main argument advanced in this study is that the concept of CC has more political currency than other concepts as CC confers duties and rights to companies in communities where they operate. In developing countries, CC is concerned with the role played by companies in administering the socio-economic rights of people living in communities where they operate. The study seeks to provide an overview of corporations’ obligations towards the socio-economic rights of people through CC, proposing the use of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as a way to find a normative framework for CC.enSustainable developmentCorporate citizenshipMillennium development goalsCorporate citizenship and the millennium development goals: the case of South African Breweries in the Western CapeThesisUniversity of the Western Cape