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Examining the accounts of oil spills crises in Nigeria through sensegiving and defensive behaviours

Osamuyimen Egbon (Essex Business School, University of Essex, Colchester, UK)
Chijoke Oscar Mgbame (Faculty of Business and Law, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 18 August 2020

Issue publication date: 4 November 2020

779

Abstract

Purpose

The paper examines how oil multinational companies (MNCs) in Nigeria framed accounts to dissociate themselves from causing oil spills.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors utilised data from relevant corporate reports, external accounts and interviews, and used sensegiving with defensive behaviours theoretical framing to explore corporate narratives aimed at altering stakeholders' perceptions.

Findings

The corporations gave sense to their audience by invoking scapegoating blame avoidance narrative in attributing the cause of most oil spills in Nigeria to outsiders (sabotage), despite potentially misclassifying the sabotage-corrosion dichotomy. Corporate stance was reinforced through justifying narrative, which suggested that multi-stakeholders jointly determined the causes of oil spills, thus portraying corporate accounts as transparent, credible and objective.

Research limitations/implications

The socio-political dynamics in an empirical setting affect corporate accounts and how those accounts appear persuasive, implying that such contextual factors merit consideration when evaluating corporate accounts. For example, despite contradictions in corporate accounts, corporate attribution of oil spills to external factors appeared persuasive due to the inherently complicated socio-political dynamics.

Practical implications

With compensation to oil spills' victims only legally permitted for non-sabotage-induced spills alongside the burden of proof on the victims, the MNCs are incentivised to attribute most oil spills to sabotage. On policy implication, accountability would be best served when the MNCs are tasked both with the burden of proof and a responsibility to demonstrate their transparency in preventing oil spills, including those caused by sabotage.

Originality/value

Crisis situations generate multiple and competing perspectives, but sensegiving and defensive behaviours lenses enrich our understanding of how crisis-ridden companies frame narratives to alter stakeholders' perceptions. Accounts-giving therefore partly satisfies accountability demands, and acts as sensegiving signals aimed at reframing/redefining existing perceptions.

Keywords

Citation

Egbon, O. and Mgbame, C.O. (2020), "Examining the accounts of oil spills crises in Nigeria through sensegiving and defensive behaviours", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 33 No. 8, pp. 2053-2076. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-12-2018-3794

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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