| Chapter 5 | ||
| Table 1. | Literature Review Selection Criteria. | 54 |
| Chapter 6 | ||
| Table 1. | Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria. | 72 |
| Table 2. | Top Journal Outlets by Number of Articles. | 74 |
| Table 3. | Thematic Categorization of the Dataset. | 77 |
| Chapter 7 | ||
| Table 1. | Codes Used in the Thematic Analysis. | 106 |
| Table 2. | Characterization of the Sample. | 109 |
| Chapter 8 | ||
| Table 1. | Content Analysis Categories. | 130 |
| Table 2. | Types of Organizations Initiating Campaigns. | 133 |
| Table 3. | SDG Coverage of Campaigns. | 134 |
| Table 4. | The Stakeholders With the Highest Level of Engagement. | 134 |
| Table 5. | The Stakeholders With the Lowest Level of Engagement. | 135 |
| Table 6. | Stakeholder Engagement Strategies. | 135 |
| Table 7. | Level of Objectives Used in the Campaigns. | 136 |
| Table 8. | Measurement Methods of the Campaigns. | 136 |
| Chapter 9 | ||
| Table 1. | AI Ethical Violations by Industry – Europe. | 156 |
| Table 2. | Nature of the AI Ethical Issue – Europe. | 157 |
| Table 3. | Media Trigger – Europe. | 157 |
| Table 4. | Distribution of Corporate Response Strategies. | 158 |
| Table 5. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Denial Posture. | 159 |
| Table 6. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Rebuilding Posture. | 160 |
| Table 7. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Bolstering Posture. | 160 |
| Chapter 10 | ||
| Table 1. | Accessibility of Information on Halal Offers by Food Retailers on Different Channels/Platforms. | 175 |
| Table 2. | Accessibility of Information on Sharia-Based Banking Services on Different Channels/Platforms. | 178 |
| Chapter 11 | ||
| Table 1. | Number of Facebook Posts by Social Actors. | 197 |
| Table 2. | Social Mediators as Hubs – Top 10 In-Degree Nodes (Generated Using NodeXL Pro). | 199 |
| Table 3. | Social Mediators as Bridges – Top 10 Betweenness Centrality Nodes (Generated Using NodeXL Pro). | 199 |
| Table 1. | Literature Review Selection Criteria. | 54 |
| Table 1. | Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria. | 72 |
| Table 2. | Top Journal Outlets by Number of Articles. | 74 |
| Table 3. | Thematic Categorization of the Dataset. | 77 |
| Table 1. | Codes Used in the Thematic Analysis. | 106 |
| Table 2. | Characterization of the Sample. | 109 |
| Table 1. | Content Analysis Categories. | 130 |
| Table 2. | Types of Organizations Initiating Campaigns. | 133 |
| Table 3. | SDG Coverage of Campaigns. | 134 |
| Table 4. | The Stakeholders With the Highest Level of Engagement. | 134 |
| Table 5. | The Stakeholders With the Lowest Level of Engagement. | 135 |
| Table 6. | Stakeholder Engagement Strategies. | 135 |
| Table 7. | Level of Objectives Used in the Campaigns. | 136 |
| Table 8. | Measurement Methods of the Campaigns. | 136 |
| Table 1. | AI Ethical Violations by Industry – Europe. | 156 |
| Table 2. | Nature of the AI Ethical Issue – Europe. | 157 |
| Table 3. | Media Trigger – Europe. | 157 |
| Table 4. | Distribution of Corporate Response Strategies. | 158 |
| Table 5. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Denial Posture. | 159 |
| Table 6. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Rebuilding Posture. | 160 |
| Table 7. | Multinomial Regression – Strategic Silence vs Bolstering Posture. | 160 |
| Table 1. | Accessibility of Information on Halal Offers by Food Retailers on Different Channels/Platforms. | 175 |
| Table 2. | Accessibility of Information on Sharia-Based Banking Services on Different Channels/Platforms. | 178 |
| Table 1. | Number of Facebook Posts by Social Actors. | 197 |
| Table 2. | Social Mediators as Hubs – Top 10 In-Degree Nodes (Generated Using NodeXL Pro). | 199 |
| Table 3. | Social Mediators as Bridges – Top 10 Betweenness Centrality Nodes (Generated Using NodeXL Pro). | 199 |
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