Voluntary Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting: A Study of Early and Late Reporter Motivations and Outcomes
Author(s) -
Alnoor Bhimani,
Hanna Silvola,
Prabhu Sivabalan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of management accounting research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.307
H-Index - 23
eISSN - 1558-8033
pISSN - 1049-2127
DOI - 10.2308/jmar-51440
Subject(s) - normative , isomorphism (crystallography) , ethos , early adopter , corporate social responsibility , meaning (existential) , public relations , business , institutional theory , positive economics , sociology , accounting , marketing , political science , economics , epistemology , social science , law , philosophy , chemistry , crystal structure , crystallography
Neo-institutional logics for the early adoption of innovations are often argued as more authentic than for late adopters. To what extent might this be so in relation to corporate social responsibility reporting (CSRR)? We specifically focus on neo-institutionalist perspectives with an emphasis on isomorphism (DiMaggio and Powell, 1983) to illustrate alternative motivations, and verify our hypotheses using a mixed methods approach (survey data and field evidence from five organizations). We find that the rationale for early reporters entails a financial pragmatism that is absent in current debates surrounding corporate social responsibility (CSR). We also show that normative and coercive isomorphism interplay among early adopters to drive their adoption decision over time, and these facilitate the generation of different strategic postures to placate key external stakeholders. This contrasts with prior studies that have mainly argued for mimetic and normative isomorphism to dominate the decision to implement CSRR amongst adopters. Finally, we argue that late reporters choose not to engage earlier as (ironically) their strategic proximity to the phenomena being reported is intrinsically close, meaning most internal and external stakeholders assume the proper functioning of the phenomena being reported, and therefore do not demand it. This rationale for mimetic isomorphism is unique and its narrative more positive than that normally ascribed to it in the prior literature. Firms are subsequently less inclined to opportunistically validate or signal their sustainability ethos using formal reporting systems, and only do so superficially to engage in practice
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