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Corporate sustainability reporting and information infrastructure

Indrit Troshani (Adelaide Business School, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia)
Nick Rowbottom (Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 13 December 2023

428

Abstract

Purpose

Information infrastructures can enable or constrain how companies pursue their visions of sustainability reporting and help address the urgent need to understand how corporate activity affects sustainability outcomes and how socio-ecological challenges affect corporate activity. The paper examines the relationship between sustainability reporting information infrastructures and sustainability reporting practice.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper mobilises a socio-technical perspective and the conception of infrastructure, the socio-technical arrangement of technical artifacts and social routines, to engage with a qualitative dataset comprised of interview and documentary evidence on the development and construction of sustainability reporting information.

Findings

The results detail how sustainability reporting information infrastructures are used by companies and depict the difficulties faced in generating reliable sustainability data. The findings illustrate the challenges and measures undertaken by entities to embed automation and integration, and to enhance sustainability data quality. The findings provide insight into how infrastructures constrain and support sustainability reporting practices.

Originality/value

The paper explains how infrastructures shape sustainability reporting practices, and how infrastructures are shaped by regulatory demands and costs. Companies have developed “uneven” infrastructures supporting legislative requirements, whilst infrastructures supporting non-legislative sustainability reporting remain underdeveloped. Consequently, infrastructures supporting specific legislation have developed along unitary pathways and are often poorly integrated with infrastructures supporting other sustainability reporting areas. Infrastructures developed around legislative requirements are not necessarily constrained by financial reporting norms and do not preclude specific sustainability reporting visions. On the contrary, due to regulation, infrastructure supporting disclosures that offer an “inside out” perspective on sustainability reporting is often comparatively well developed.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This project was funded by the AFAANZ Research Grants Program. The authors acknowledge the invaluable contribution of the individuals who participated in the interviews for this study. The authors also thank the anonymous AAAJ reviewers and the participants of the AFAANZ Conference 2023, UWA Business School Philip Brown Seminar Series and Adelaide Business School Accounting Discipline Research Day for their valuable, constructive comments on earlier versions of the manuscript.

Citation

Troshani, I. and Rowbottom, N. (2023), "Corporate sustainability reporting and information infrastructure", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-01-2023-6244

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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