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[21522820 - Accounting, Economics, and Law_ A Convivium] A Country-Comparative Analysis of the Transposition of the EU Non-Financial Directive_ An Institutional Approach.pdf (2.38 MB)

A Country-Comparative Analysis of the Transposition of the EU Non-Financial Directive: An Institutional Approach

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-01, 09:48 authored by S Aureli, F Salvatori, E Magnaghi
CSR practices and reporting vary across countries and companies. Accouting studies using institutional theory show that even where there are coercive pressures to converge, local practices and traditions are other types of pressures that play a role in maintaining divergence. Similarly, legal studies indicate that harmonisation attempts made by the European Union are usually challenged by States attempting to maintain the status quo of the local context, and this may also apply to CSR reporting harmonization. This research investigates whether or not the institutional pressure toward non-financial reporting harmonization represented by the Directive/2014/95/EU led to convergent behaviours between Member States, at least at the transposition stage. Transposition laws in Member States where CSR has historically played a limited role (i. e. Romania and Bulgaria) are compared with those issued by countries where CSR traditions are much more well developed (France, Belgium and the UK). The analysis focuses on how both mandatory and discretionary requirements have been transposed at a national level. The transposition outcome is analysed in the face of economic-, government- A nd society-related factors of each country and results show that on several occasions, divergence is catalysed by differences in national business systems. This is aligned with the results of previous studies (e. g. Jamali and Neville, 2011), which argue that historical, cultural, economic and political local contexts mould the CSR conceptualisation existing in a given country, and therefore the convergence of different CSR practices is only apparent.

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Citation

Accounting, Economics, and Law: A Convivium, eISSN 2152-2820, ISSN 2194-6051, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/ael-2018-0047

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Accounting, Economics and Law: A Convivium

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

issn

2194-6051

eissn

2152-2820

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-03-24

Publisher version

https://www.degruyter.com/view/journals/ael/ahead-of-print/article-10.1515-ael-2018-0047/article-10.1515-ael-2018-0047.xml

Language

en

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