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Intellectual capital disclosure: a structured literature review

Benedetta Cuozzo (Department of Economics and Law, Universita degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Cassino, Italy)
John Dumay (Department of Accounting and Corporate Governance, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia)
Matteo Palmaccio (Department of Economics and Law, Universita degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Cassino, Italy)
Rosa Lombardi (Department of Law and Economics of Productive Activities, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy)

Journal of Intellectual Capital

ISSN: 1469-1930

Article publication date: 9 January 2017

4541

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to provide an up-to-the-minute literature review of intellectual capital disclosure (ICD) to: identify the major themes developed within this research stream; investigate the evolution of the theory; and derive insights to guide future research agendas for the benefit of researchers and ICD users.

Design/methodology/approach

Research articles from ten relevant journals for the 17-year period between 2000 and 2017 are categorised and analysed in a structured literature review (Massaro et al., 2016) to answer these three research questions. This study adds to a data set established by Guthrie et al. (2012) and presents the results in a consistent and comparable manner across the studies.

Findings

A lack of significant innovation in the evolution of ICD indicates that this research stream may have been a victim of its own success (Dumay and Guthrie, 2017). Stuck in overview mode, studies continue to fixate on general issues, largely drawing their analysis from the corporate reports of publicly listed companies in Europe. Very few studies examine ICD in the USA and beyond, nor do they drill down to organisational level to examine ICD in practice.

Practical implications

We academics need to leave our ivory towers and base future research on how organisations, in different contexts, using different languages, harness intangible assets to create value. Without discouraging content analysis from corporate reports, we need to be more innovative in searching for IC from the rich variety of media resources modern corporate communication channels offer, and recognise that, while we are all working towards the same thing, we may not be using the same language to get there.

Originality/value

Despite extending previous work, this study highlights some of the new insights revealed from ICD research, especially over the last two years. The findings regarding differing use of terminology across continents, a general decline in published research due to lack of interest or new ground to cover, and zero evidence for a “groundswell” of IC disclosures by listed companies should motivate further reading in many researchers.

Keywords

Citation

Cuozzo, B., Dumay, J., Palmaccio, M. and Lombardi, R. (2017), "Intellectual capital disclosure: a structured literature review", Journal of Intellectual Capital, Vol. 18 No. 1, pp. 9-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/JIC-10-2016-0104

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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