Corporate social performance and non‐financial reporting in the cruise industry: Paving the way towards UN Agenda 2030

This article investigates the role of accounting disciplines in assessing and fostering corporate social performance (CSP) of business organisations to meet the UN Agenda 2030. Drawing from legitimacy theory, this qualitative study analyses if and how non‐financial reporting positively affects and f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Corporate social-responsibility and environmental management 2022-11, Vol.29 (6), p.1931-1953
Hauptverfasser: Di Vaio, Assunta, Varriale, Luisa, Di Gregorio, Angelo, Adomako, Samuel
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container_end_page 1953
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1931
container_title Corporate social-responsibility and environmental management
container_volume 29
creator Di Vaio, Assunta
Varriale, Luisa
Di Gregorio, Angelo
Adomako, Samuel
description This article investigates the role of accounting disciplines in assessing and fostering corporate social performance (CSP) of business organisations to meet the UN Agenda 2030. Drawing from legitimacy theory, this qualitative study analyses if and how non‐financial reporting positively affects and fosters CSP practices and outcomes within the cruise industry. Specifically, using a case study methodology, a major cruise company has been analysed outlining its sustainable behaviour, through the manual content analysis of sustainability reports (2016–2017–2018), in achieving the sustainable development goals (SDGs) introduced by the UN Agenda 2030. The findings outline that the cruise company presents a clear sustainability and community orientation and adopts several initiatives, mostly focused on environmental and social issues, addressed to meet the 17 SDGs, where reputation and positive image have been recognised as the major antecedents in the perspective of CSP. This study contributes to the literature giving a broader and different reading of sustainability reporting as a “booster” of the CSP in meeting the SDGs and a further interesting application of the legitimacy theory, and offers managerial implications to systematise the content of non‐financial reporting by improving the quality of disclosure to achieve the SDGs, with focus on CSP processes, outcomes and ways.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/csr.2292
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source Wiley Journals; Business Source Complete
subjects Content analysis
Financial reporting
legitimacy theory
Object recognition
Qualitative analysis
Qualitative research
Sustainability
sustainability disclosure
Sustainability reporting
Sustainable development
sustainable development goals
title Corporate social performance and non‐financial reporting in the cruise industry: Paving the way towards UN Agenda 2030
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