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Towards a legitimate compromise? An exploration of Integrated Reporting in the Netherlands

Koen van Bommel (Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 27 August 2014

5387

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the multiplicity of views on integrated reporting and to consider the possibility of, and impediments to, reconciling these multiple rationales (“orders of worth”) and thus gain legitimacy through a compromise. This sheds light on the understanding of integrated reporting as such, as well as shows how legitimacy struggles are resolved in practice around complex accounting practices in heterogeneous environments.

Design/methodology/approach

This explorative paper empirically applies Boltanski and Thévenot's sociology of worth (SOW) framework to analyse integrated reporting in the Dutch reporting field. Data were collected using multiple methods, including 64 semi-structured in-depth interviews with a wide range of relevant actors, and documentary analysis. Data were coded for the presence of orders of worth and legitimating compromise mechanisms.

Findings

The author's analysis suggests that integrated reporting combines the disparate domains of industrial, market, civic and green order of worth. These different logics of valuation need to be reconciled in a compromise in order for integrated reporting to become a legitimate practice. Such a compromise requires a common interest, avoidance of clarification and maintenance of ambiguity. The author's analysis suggests these mechanisms are violated though, with the risk that integrated reporting gets captured by investors and accountants, leading to local private arrangements rather than durable legitimate compromise.

Research limitations/implications

First, SOW informs the understanding of integrated reporting. It highlights in particular its fragility as fundamentally different rationales need to be reconciled, which is a challenge yet also gives rise to creative frictions. Second, the SOW framework creates the possibility for scholars to look closer at the dynamics of legitimacy and at the possible mechanisms to attain legitimacy in fragmented and heterogeneous environment.

Practical implications

The SOW framework offers tools for practitioners, in particular those working within a pluralistic context. The various mechanisms of compromise discussed in this paper provide practical guidelines for how to manage this complexity and gain or maintain legitimacy.

Originality/value

This rich empirical study combines a novel theoretical approach (the SOW framework) with an analysis of the relatively unexplored topic of integrated reporting. At the same time it introduces a conceptualisation of legitimacy that highlights communicative and constitutive dialogue and goes beyond fit and compliance.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author acknowledges the constructive comments of the special issue editors and anonymous reviewers. The author also thank participants at EGOS 2013 where an earlier version of this paper was presented. The author is also grateful to Andreas Rasche, Juliane Reinecke, Andre Spicer and Klaus Weber for their helpful suggestions. The author is further indebted to his interviewees for sharing their time and insights and gratefully acknowledge the financial assistance of Warwick Business School and the Economic and Social Research Council.

Citation

van Bommel, K. (2014), "Towards a legitimate compromise? An exploration of Integrated Reporting in the Netherlands", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 27 No. 7, pp. 1157-1189. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-04-2013-1309

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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