Quello che conta - A Socio-Legal Analysis of Accounting for Sustainable Companies
(2013)- Abstract
- During more than three decades, corporate non-financial and sustainability reporting has been widely conceived as a voluntary practice, a matter of going beyond the requirements of the law. Therefore, it has been traditionally overlooked by legal and socio-legal scholars. However, during the last decade things have rapidly changed. We are currently witnessing the emergence of a
mix of mandatory and voluntary regulatory approaches to Corporate Sustainability Accounting (CSA) and the integration of some elements of non-financial reporting into accounting standards.
What explains these changes in CSA regulation within the EU arena, at different levels of regulation and through varying modes of governance? More... (More) - During more than three decades, corporate non-financial and sustainability reporting has been widely conceived as a voluntary practice, a matter of going beyond the requirements of the law. Therefore, it has been traditionally overlooked by legal and socio-legal scholars. However, during the last decade things have rapidly changed. We are currently witnessing the emergence of a
mix of mandatory and voluntary regulatory approaches to Corporate Sustainability Accounting (CSA) and the integration of some elements of non-financial reporting into accounting standards.
What explains these changes in CSA regulation within the EU arena, at different levels of regulation and through varying modes of governance? More specifically, which political and socioeconomic actors are driving the current emergence of CSA regulation? What are their interests? How are these different actors organizing and mobilizing themselves? How and why do they
succeed in creating regulatory changes? This research has been based on three main sources of data: documents analysis; literature
review; in-depth élite interviews (26). It has also been strengthened by a participant observation of five months at the EU Commission, collaborating to the legal drafting and Impact Assessment of
the new EU directive on non-financial reporting. The criteria for designing the fieldwork have been based on the idea of mapping the position of six groups of actors interested in shaping the emergence of CSA regulation. The groups of actors considered are: managers of large corporations; organized labour; civil society and NGOs; institutional investors; public authorities; and
professional experts (accountants; financial analysts; lawyers). The analytical framework deployed by this study is a Bourdieusian reflexive socio-legal approach (see Madsen and Dezalay 2002;
Madsen 2011), used as an over-arching research strategy in conjunction with the existing literature (see Gourevitch and Shinn 2005; Graz 2006; Crouch 2011; Streeck 2011). The study claims that the struggles for regulating CSA should be seen as a lens for analyzing
broader changes in the field of European corporate governance regulation and in the relation between business and society. A main finding of the Doctoral Thesis, something that has been
argued for throughout the study, is that the accounting field has developed a historically specific relation of structural homology with the economic field. Therefore, Chapter 3 argues that the
emergence of ‘social accounting’ regulation, in the 1970s, mirrored contemporaneous debates about ‘industrial democracy’. Similarly, the ‘financialisation’ of the 1990s and 2000s has mirrored the structuration of accounting standards narrowly focused only on financial information. Today, the emergence of ‘sustainability accounting’ regulation in Europe reflects and constructs the political
attempt to build a regime of capital accumulation aimed at creating longer-term and ‘sustainable’ growth.
More specifically, drawing on interviews with key informants and documents analysis, the study argues that financial turbulences and corporate scandals at the beginning of the 2000s fostered the inception of a European ‘transparency coalition’ (see Gourevitch and Shinn 2005) led b y investors and including NGOs and part of the trade unions, which drove a series of reforms in the
areas of corporate governance and corporate responsibility. The 2008 financial crisis worked as a catalyst for strengthening this regulatory trend and for fostering a stronger role of the state in its
regulatory role. Therefore, we are also witnessing the integration of corporate sustainability in company law and corporate governance regulation and the convergence of financial and non financial aspects in the regulation of corporate reporting. However, it is too early to say whether this
coalition will overcome the opposition of managers, who favour a voluntary approach and are lobbying against mandatory non-financial reporting. The study also questions the potential of the
‘transparency coalition’ to build a new regime of governance of the economy, not just corporate governance.
The dissertation consists of six chapters. Chapter 1 introduces objectives, questions and key concepts. It contains a preliminary conceptualization of the field of research and the research
questions. Chapter 2 has been focused on the critical review of the literature and of existing explanations of the emergence of CSA regulation. Furthermore, it presents the socio-legal reflexive
methodological and epistemological approach that has been adopted to explain the emergence of this new multi-level regulatory framework. In Chapter 3, the reader can find a summary of the long term development of non-financial reporting during over four decades, starting from the 1970s’ (see also Annex I). Chapters 4 and 5 narrow down the empirical research, focusing on a more limited
periodisation (mid-1990s to 2011) and on the case study of the struggles for shaping an EU-level regulatory framework for non-financial reporting. The aim of Chapter 4 and 5 has been to
empirically strengthen the broader analysis outlined in Chapter 3, on the basis of the data collected during the fieldwork. Chapter 6 concludes summarising the key arguments and offering some
reflections on future researches. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4216218
- author
- Monciardini, David LU
- supervisor
-
- Håkan Hydén LU
- opponent
-
- Prof Zambon, Stefano
- Prof Salento, Angelo
- Prof Mares, Radu
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Thesis
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Industrial management, Environmental aspects, Environmental management, Social accounting, Sociological jurisprudence, Sustainable development
- pages
- 233 pages
- publisher
- Department of Sociology of Law, Lund University
- defense location
- Università degli studi di Milano
- defense date
- 2013-07-24 12:30:00
- ISBN
- 91-7267-358-3
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- additional info
- The “Renato Treves” International PhD Programme in Law and Society started in 2004 and over the years students from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Italy, Mexico, China, Sweden and Taiwan have been admitted in the Programme. It is organised by a consortium of European universities, which includes the University of Milan, as the central and administrative base, the University of Lund, Antwerp, the Basque Country, and the International Institute for the Sociology of Law (IISL) of Oñati. Held periodically in the form of English-language seminars at the various universities belonging to the consortium, the courses are designed to train individuals to be experts in socio-legal researches. Students spend periods at the various centres, where they conduct their respective research projects. All the partner universities contribute to organising the body of lecturers. Moreover, Oñati’s IISL contributes organising a Master in Sociology of Law, which is an integral part of the Treves Programme. Responsibility for the programme is vested in the Academic Board, which expresses an annual appraisal on the progresses achieved by the PhD students and a final appraisal of their Thesis, on the basis their potential for publication.
- id
- cd4ccbf2-ac7a-4698-9ad8-1558454516ab (old id 4216218)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 13:23:58
- date last changed
- 2020-03-19 10:20:42
@phdthesis{cd4ccbf2-ac7a-4698-9ad8-1558454516ab, abstract = {{During more than three decades, corporate non-financial and sustainability reporting has been widely conceived as a voluntary practice, a matter of going beyond the requirements of the law. Therefore, it has been traditionally overlooked by legal and socio-legal scholars. However, during the last decade things have rapidly changed. We are currently witnessing the emergence of a <br/><br> mix of mandatory and voluntary regulatory approaches to Corporate Sustainability Accounting (CSA) and the integration of some elements of non-financial reporting into accounting standards. <br/><br> What explains these changes in CSA regulation within the EU arena, at different levels of regulation and through varying modes of governance? More specifically, which political and socioeconomic actors are driving the current emergence of CSA regulation? What are their interests? How are these different actors organizing and mobilizing themselves? How and why do they <br/><br> succeed in creating regulatory changes? This research has been based on three main sources of data: documents analysis; literature <br/><br> review; in-depth élite interviews (26). It has also been strengthened by a participant observation of five months at the EU Commission, collaborating to the legal drafting and Impact Assessment of <br/><br> the new EU directive on non-financial reporting. The criteria for designing the fieldwork have been based on the idea of mapping the position of six groups of actors interested in shaping the emergence of CSA regulation. The groups of actors considered are: managers of large corporations; organized labour; civil society and NGOs; institutional investors; public authorities; and <br/><br> professional experts (accountants; financial analysts; lawyers). The analytical framework deployed by this study is a Bourdieusian reflexive socio-legal approach (see Madsen and Dezalay 2002; <br/><br> Madsen 2011), used as an over-arching research strategy in conjunction with the existing literature (see Gourevitch and Shinn 2005; Graz 2006; Crouch 2011; Streeck 2011). The study claims that the struggles for regulating CSA should be seen as a lens for analyzing <br/><br> broader changes in the field of European corporate governance regulation and in the relation between business and society. A main finding of the Doctoral Thesis, something that has been <br/><br> argued for throughout the study, is that the accounting field has developed a historically specific relation of structural homology with the economic field. Therefore, Chapter 3 argues that the<br/><br> emergence of ‘social accounting’ regulation, in the 1970s, mirrored contemporaneous debates about ‘industrial democracy’. Similarly, the ‘financialisation’ of the 1990s and 2000s has mirrored the structuration of accounting standards narrowly focused only on financial information. Today, the emergence of ‘sustainability accounting’ regulation in Europe reflects and constructs the political <br/><br> attempt to build a regime of capital accumulation aimed at creating longer-term and ‘sustainable’ growth.<br/><br> More specifically, drawing on interviews with key informants and documents analysis, the study argues that financial turbulences and corporate scandals at the beginning of the 2000s fostered the inception of a European ‘transparency coalition’ (see Gourevitch and Shinn 2005) led b y investors and including NGOs and part of the trade unions, which drove a series of reforms in the <br/><br> areas of corporate governance and corporate responsibility. The 2008 financial crisis worked as a catalyst for strengthening this regulatory trend and for fostering a stronger role of the state in its <br/><br> regulatory role. Therefore, we are also witnessing the integration of corporate sustainability in company law and corporate governance regulation and the convergence of financial and non financial aspects in the regulation of corporate reporting. However, it is too early to say whether this <br/><br> coalition will overcome the opposition of managers, who favour a voluntary approach and are lobbying against mandatory non-financial reporting. The study also questions the potential of the <br/><br> ‘transparency coalition’ to build a new regime of governance of the economy, not just corporate governance. <br/><br> The dissertation consists of six chapters. Chapter 1 introduces objectives, questions and key concepts. It contains a preliminary conceptualization of the field of research and the research <br/><br> questions. Chapter 2 has been focused on the critical review of the literature and of existing explanations of the emergence of CSA regulation. Furthermore, it presents the socio-legal reflexive <br/><br> methodological and epistemological approach that has been adopted to explain the emergence of this new multi-level regulatory framework. In Chapter 3, the reader can find a summary of the long term development of non-financial reporting during over four decades, starting from the 1970s’ (see also Annex I). Chapters 4 and 5 narrow down the empirical research, focusing on a more limited <br/><br> periodisation (mid-1990s to 2011) and on the case study of the struggles for shaping an EU-level regulatory framework for non-financial reporting. The aim of Chapter 4 and 5 has been to <br/><br> empirically strengthen the broader analysis outlined in Chapter 3, on the basis of the data collected during the fieldwork. Chapter 6 concludes summarising the key arguments and offering some <br/><br> reflections on future researches.}}, author = {{Monciardini, David}}, isbn = {{91-7267-358-3}}, keywords = {{Industrial management; Environmental aspects; Environmental management; Social accounting; Sociological jurisprudence; Sustainable development}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Department of Sociology of Law, Lund University}}, title = {{Quello che conta - A Socio-Legal Analysis of Accounting for Sustainable Companies}}, year = {{2013}}, }