Reassessing Moral Legitimacy in Times of Instability

The presence of conflicting cues about what is legitimate provided by various stakeholders, begs the question of how the legitimacy of contested institutionalized practices is justified. Recent critique of tax minimization strategies exemplifies this difficulty: on one hand, practitioners need to in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of management studies 2024-05, Vol.61 (3), p.857-887
Hauptverfasser: Anesa, Mattia, Spee, Andreas Paul, Gillespie, Nicole, Petani, Fabio James
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container_title Journal of management studies
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creator Anesa, Mattia
Spee, Andreas Paul
Gillespie, Nicole
Petani, Fabio James
description The presence of conflicting cues about what is legitimate provided by various stakeholders, begs the question of how the legitimacy of contested institutionalized practices is justified. Recent critique of tax minimization strategies exemplifies this difficulty: on one hand, practitioners need to increase shareholders' profits; on the other, a growing number of stakeholders push for ‘fairer’ corporate tax payments. Conducted during a time of public criticism of Australian corporate tax strategies, our study draws on justifications of corporate tax minimization strategies by senior tax practitioners and corporate submissions to a Senate Inquiry on corporate tax avoidance. The study explores how legitimacy judgements come under pressure by conflicting cues. Through the application of Boltanski and Thévenot's (2006) Economies of Worth (EW) framework, we advance legitimacy scholarship by clarifying what constitutes situated judgements in times of instability. Our work puts forward the concept of perceived forecasted consensus as a guide for individuals in making situated legitimacy judgements in times of instability.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects corporate tax minimization
Corporate taxes
Criticism
Cues
economies of worth
institutional plurality
justifications
Legislatures
Legitimacy
legitimacy judgements
Minimization
moral legitimacy
Payments
Profits
Stability
Stakeholders
Stockholders
Tax avoidance
Taxation
title Reassessing Moral Legitimacy in Times of Instability
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