Integrated Reporting and Corporate Governance: Boards, Long-Term Value Creation, and the New Accountability
β Scribed by Laura Girella
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 119
- Series
- Routledge Focus on Accounting and Auditing
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Corporate governance and corporate reporting are closely linked to each other, and their respective evolutionary patterns are mutually influencing. Along with the recent expansion of company disclosure, a growing attention is being paid to corporate governance determinants and mechanisms underpinning the decision to voluntarily adopt non-financial disclosure formats, such as integrated reporting. At institutional level, several national corporate governance codes have been changed towards the recognition and inclusion of this innovative, non-financial language. In academic research, the influence of corporate governance variables vis-Γ -vis the choice to embrace such reporting practices has been subject to a long scrutiny. However, only a little inquiry has so far analysed the influence of corporate governance factors on integrated reporting adoption, quality, and credibility. Accordingly, the aim of the book is to investigate if, and to what extent, corporate board composition and characteristics can affect, at the same time, the decision to voluntarily adopt integrated reporting by companies as well as their financial performance. The study carries out an empirical analysis of the professional features of board members at the time of their decision to implement integrated reporting as a new form of company accountability. The work provides innovative insights into the articulated relationships between the quantitative and qualitative composition of corporate boards and the latterβs choice to uptake this advanced form of reporting to represent the wider value creation processes of their organisations.
β¦ Table of Contents
Dedication
Contents
List of illustrations
Foreword
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Corporate governance and integrated reporting: an international perspective
3 Corporate governance and voluntary disclosure: a review of the literature
4 From theory to practice: board characteristics, financial performance, and the adoption of integrated reporting
5 Boards, reporting, and long-term value creation: towards an integrated view
Appendix 1 List of organisations in the main sample and in the control sample
Appendix 2 Analysis of residuals
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
''Who owns the modern company? And how should owners behave? Rolf H. Carlsson brings a fresh eye and historical depth to the issue of ownership, management and value creation that every firm and its owners must consider.''Frances Cairncross, Management Editor, The Economist''Rolf H. Carlsson gives a
"Who owns the modern company? And how should owners behave? Rolf H. Carlsson brings a fresh eye and historical depth to the issue of ownership, management and value creation that every firm and its owners must consider."Frances Cairncross, Management Editor, The Economist"Rolf H. Carlsson gives a va
<p>Is it possible for an investment to be good for a firm's profitability without also being good for the environment, employees, or community? Bolton connects these seemingly disparate ideas to show how to incorporate economic costs, benefits, cash flows, and risks into the evaluation of any type o