4.3 Article

Stakeholder Relevance for Reporting: Explanatory Factors of Carbon Disclosure

Journal

BUSINESS & SOCIETY
Volume 55, Issue 3, Pages 361-397

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0007650315575119

Keywords

carbon disclosure; carbon performance; climate change; stakeholder theory; corporate social responsibility (CSR); sustainability reporting

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Although stakeholder theory is widely accepted in environmental disclosure research, empirical evidence about the role of stakeholders in firms' disclosure is still scarce. The authors address this issue for a setting of carbon disclosure. Our international sample comprises the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) Global 500, S&P 500, and FTSE 350 reports from 2008 to 2011, resulting in a total of 1,120 firms with 3,631 firm-year observations. The authors apply Tobit regressions to analyze the relationship between carbon disclosure and the relevance of the following stakeholder groups: government, general public, media, employees, and customers. Our results confirm that in addition to carbon performance, all stakeholders are associated with carbon disclosure. Only one stakeholder group (government) acts as a moderator for the relationship between carbon performance and carbon disclosure. Furthermore, the authors find that carbon performance but not the affiliation to a carbon-intensive industry acts as a moderator between stakeholder relevance and carbon disclosure.

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