holders become a supporting factor for CSR to be part
of the CPA (Rehbein et al., 2018).
First, individual factors consist of top leadership
characteristics, corporate structural characteristics of
CSR and CPA departments, and interactions between
these departments, and the presence of agents of so-
cial change in the company (Wickert and De Bakker,
2018). In individual factors, there are many individ-
uals, from CEOs, CSR managers to outside affairs
managers or public affairs managers who might have
an impact on the formation of corporate social and
political responses. However, (Aguinis and Glavas,
2012) note that at the individual level there is a lack of
information about individuals doing CSR. Most of the
discussion of previous researchers emphasized how
attitudes to protect, moral development, and commit-
ment to social problems enhance corporate CSR. Sim-
ilar research (Wickert and De Bakker, 2018) focuses
on social issues and seeks to understand the obsta-
cles faced by CSR managers in implementing CSR.
However, most research focuses on the role the CEO
plays in determining trade-offs between sharehold-
ers and stakeholder priorities. Similar research (Mel-
lahi et al., 2016) argues that the focus on top man-
agement is very important to understand the types
of non-market strategies developed by the company.
Previous research suggests that the flow of research
that emerges in responsible leadership can be a pos-
sible source of understanding top management deci-
sions. (Doh and Quigley, 2014), for example, focus
on how top management can develop a more inclusive
approach with regard to various stakeholders, while
(Strand, 2014) explores why the company’s sustain-
ability position is placed on the top management team
and whether this affects the organization. This can
represent a CSR problem at the company’s leadership
level and can facilitate alignment with CPA activities
that are also strategic (Hadani and Schuler, 2013).
Second, company resources & capability factors
Enterprise level factors such as company mission,
company values, shareholder ownership, structure
and governance, concessions and financial visibility
(Aguinis and Glavas, 2012). Similar research deals
with additional empirical studies and a review of the
literature examining resources in CSR corporate gov-
ernance (De Villiers et al., 2011) (Jamali and Karam,
2018) also examined for a comprehensive review of
this literature (Walls et al., 2012). With respect to
CPA, (Lux et al. 2011) based on previous analysis
provides an overview of the specific factors of the
company that shape the company’s political invest-
ment, such as company size, company diversification,
and government sales. Based on previous CPA and
CSR research, it is possible that the company’s re-
sources and capabilities have a significant role in driv-
ing company decisions in implementing CPA. The au-
thor previously found that it is important to integrate
several drivers that CSR is part of implementing the
CPA. For example, including company mission and
values, corporate strategy, financial resources, visibil-
ity, and social and political exposure all seem to be
important in supporting motivation to support CSR as
part of CPA (Mellahi et al., 2016).
Third, institutional environmental factors, compa-
nies will be motivated to make CSR as part of the
CPA determined by the environmental characteristics
of the country of origin of the company. Institutional
factors are determined from the social interactions
of the company’s home country to create incentives
and barriers to the development of corporate social
or political policies (Dorobantu et al., 2017)(Mantere
et al., 2009)(Mellahi et al., 2016)(Windsor, 2007).
But some research on institutions on CSR and CPA
has developed separately. In relation to CSR, there
is a broad debate about institutional factors that dis-
cuss the types of social policies, practices and report-
ing that are applied by companies (Jackson and Apos-
tolakou, 2010) (Marano and Kostova, 2016)(Mat-
ten and Moon, 2008)(Rathert, 2016). Similar re-
search has been carried out to understand the rela-
tionship between institutional factors and the possi-
bility that companies will form political connections
(Dorobantu et al., 2017) find that companies are more
likely to form political ties when they do business in
countries where governance is more corrupt and prop-
erty rights protected the weak in the country. Given
that institutional factors influence corporate decisions
regarding CSR in CPAs, it is likely that the politi-
cal and social institutional arrangements of the home
countries will affect work and influence the imple-
mentation of CSR as part of the CPA (Dorobantu
et al., 2017).
Riau Province is a province that has been estab-
lished as a plantation company. And from 210 com-
panies in Riau province based on the results of the
study, it was found that there were three factors that
influence CSR as part of the CPA, first individual fac-
tors: this factor can support CPA activities determined
by the background of stockholders and company lead-
ership background, the greater the shareholder’s role
and company leaders in the government, the greater
the activity of company activities that can be done. for
example if the company has a leader or shareholder
who has a background that comes from a general or a
holder of power, the implementation of company ac-
tivities will run well, both for licensing and company
security. the second factor, is the company factor con-
sisting of company mission, company size and cor-
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