Abstract

This critical approach study examines the social and environmental disclosure (SED) between Sustainability Reporting (SR) and Integrated Reporting (IR) among European companies. This paper argues that IR abandons sustainability and might overlap with the functions of SR. The research questions are to examine the integration level of SED within SR and IR and look for the patterns and motifs from reviewing both reports. Applying the critical text analysis method, the GRI G3 guidelines were used to examine a sample of ten European companies. This method is applicable as it does not have rigid procedures to follow (Merkl-Davies et al., 2013). The reports for the selected companies must incorporate fully applied IR without producing any more SR in order to analyse the validity of the data. This study has discovered that there is less integration of SED in IR than SR. The analyses continued by reading and reviewing all reports to identify patterns and motifs. Company strategy and regulatory requirements, reporting style, the crucial issues of the materiality and the development of new sections in the reports were all explored. It is apparent that the IR approach is more towards the primary groups (investors) rather than other stakeholders, society and the environment as a whole. Hence, IR is only a mirror of sustainability for business strategy. Therefore, IR needs to engage reports with other stakeholders to sustain long-term growth.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Research Background and MotivationReporting on sustainability has developed significantly in the past three decades (Stubbs and Higgins, 2014)

  • This shows that the practice of corporate sustainability disclosure has increased dramatically as the Global Reporting (GRI) produces according to stakeholder demand and raises awareness of the potential of disclosure towards organisation goals

  • As both Global Reporting (GRI) – Sustainability Reporting (SR) and IIRC – Integrated Reporting (IR) represent significant social and environmental disclosure (SED), this study compares the results from conducting critical text analysis and measuring the extent of reporting

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Research Background and MotivationReporting on sustainability has developed significantly in the past three decades (Stubbs and Higgins, 2014). Notwithstanding the important and late development in SR, the most recent confirmation concluded that almost all the world’s largest 250 companies report on Corporate Responsibility (CR) and that ‘Reporting is the norm across all these sectors, with at least 62 percent of companies in every sector producing a CR report’ (GRI, 2015). This shows that the practice of corporate sustainability disclosure has increased dramatically as the GRI produces according to stakeholder demand and raises awareness of the potential of disclosure towards organisation goals

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