In his encyclical Laudato Si', Pope Francis critiques the failure of legal and political systems to address our planetary crisis, noting that "international negotiations cannot make significant progress due to positions taken by countries which place their national interests above the global common good" (LS 169). This paper proposes a legal framework directly inspired by the encyclical's core concept of Integral Ecology. As Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) regulations become more prevalent worldwide, while many laws on CSR exist, they are often symbolic and fail to challenge the dominant economic mindset. This article examines the 'enforcement gap" because of not integrating the principle of Laudato Si'—that "everything is connected"—into the very structure of the law. This contribution transforms the encyclical's call for ecological rationality into a concrete legal principle for designing effective and enforceable CSR laws. We suggest a structure based on three pillars that directly align with Laudato Si': 1. Substantive Obligations for Collective Benefit: Corporations must prove their contribution to social and environmental systems. 2. Specialized Regulatory Authorities: These bodies, comprised of diverse specialists, can evaluate the complex effects of systems. 3. A Legal Voice for Our Sister, Mother Earth, through legal mechanisms like the "Rights of Nature," giving legal expression to the idea that nature has intrinsic value, or creating a NGO that preserve the 'Rights of Nature'. This paper ultimately calls for a new generation of corporate law, that aligns legal standards with the physical and ethical reality of our interconnected world.