In the last decade, political pressure from international organisms has contributed to the divulgation and the adoption of social accountability practices. This research examines, using an inductive method, the state of the art of best social reporting practices carried out by Italian listed companies, by scoring and assessing the different maturity levels in application of the principles required by the main reporting models mentioned and by exploring the indicators disclosed in CSR reports. We analyse CSR reporting by Italian companies making up the FTSE ECPI Leaders Index of the Italian Stock Exchange. The findings show an overall good level of disclosure. The data confirms the results of previous studies as it highlights the escalation in sustainability reporting: both the quantity and quality of sustainability information are increasing. However, the results may raise doubts that companies consider CSR as a “fashion”. In fact, one of the criticisms levelled against CSR is that information is self-gathered and self-reported. More mandatory rules may improve transparency, however these may compromise the CSR concept, so it is necessary to further investigate the findings.
Scoring CSR Reporting in Listed Companies: Evidence from Italian Best Practices / E. Gori; S. Fissi; A. Romolini. - In: CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY & ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 1535-3958. - STAMPA. - 21:(2014), pp. 65-81. [10.1002/csr.1299]
Scoring CSR Reporting in Listed Companies: Evidence from Italian Best Practices
GORI, ELENA;FISSI, SILVIA;ROMOLINI, ALBERTO
2014
Abstract
In the last decade, political pressure from international organisms has contributed to the divulgation and the adoption of social accountability practices. This research examines, using an inductive method, the state of the art of best social reporting practices carried out by Italian listed companies, by scoring and assessing the different maturity levels in application of the principles required by the main reporting models mentioned and by exploring the indicators disclosed in CSR reports. We analyse CSR reporting by Italian companies making up the FTSE ECPI Leaders Index of the Italian Stock Exchange. The findings show an overall good level of disclosure. The data confirms the results of previous studies as it highlights the escalation in sustainability reporting: both the quantity and quality of sustainability information are increasing. However, the results may raise doubts that companies consider CSR as a “fashion”. In fact, one of the criticisms levelled against CSR is that information is self-gathered and self-reported. More mandatory rules may improve transparency, however these may compromise the CSR concept, so it is necessary to further investigate the findings.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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