Saturday, October 5, 2019

Is integrated reporting transformative?

CITATION
Rodríguez-Gutiérrez, P., Correa, C., & Larrinaga, C. (2019). Is integrated reporting transformative? Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal10(3), 617–644

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ABSTRACT
Purpose – This paper aims to generate insights about the transformative potential of integrated
reporting by exploring organisational adoption of non-financial reporting design archetypes available in the field.

Design/methodology/approach – Drawing on the concept of design archetype, this study conducts an
exploratory interpretative based on qualitative semi-structured interviews and documentary analysis. The study is based on the Spanish integrated reporting field.

Findings – This study reveals that IIRC framework lacks the transformative potential to become an
environmental disturbance for corporate reporting practice. It explains how organisations, in their attempt to seek coherence with underlying interpretative schemes, change their structural arrangements (structure, processes and systems) to adopt sustainability and integrated reporting design archetypes available in the field. Though organisational differences are portrayed, the transition from a sustainability-reporting archetype to an integrated-reporting archetype does not seemto be easily achieved.

Research limitations/implications – Due to its exploratory nature, further investigation of the
transformative potential of integrated reporting is needed to address intra-organisational factors such as internal stakeholder interests, organisational values, individual or collective agency to embed interpretative schemes into structural arrangements, and technical and managerial capabilities enabling action.

Practical implications – Findings inform practitioners and policymakers about the hindrances to
integrated reporting implementation to be considered for prospective regulation and standardisation.

Social implications – The study reflects on the difficulties for both mainstreaming sustainability to
influence decision-making and developing reporting archetypes coherent with integrated thinking.

Originality/value – By focusing on archetype design, the paper provides insights to assess the
transformative potential of integrated reporting.


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