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Social Critique of Corporate Reporting
A01=David Crowther
academic accounting research
Author_David Crowther
Category=KFFH
Category=KJMV
Category=KJR
Classical Liberal Paradigm
Common Language
Corporate Reporting
Crowther 1996b
Dominant Coalition
Double Entry
Double Entry Bookkeeping
Environmental Accounting
environmental disclosure
Environmental Issues
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_non-fiction
Kwik Save
Mclibel Case
Organisational Existence
Pearson Product Moment Correlation Test
Performance Evaluation Matrix
performance measurement
Performance Reporting System
Plc Annual Report
qualitative analysis
semiotic analysis of financial reporting
Semiotic Stage
stakeholder theory
sustainability accounting
Total Shareholder Returns
TSR
UK Business
UK Food Retailing
UK Legislation
United Biscuits
Vice Versa
Wider Stakeholder Community
Product details
- ISBN 9781138271715
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 28 Nov 2016
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
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In the critically acclaimed first edition of A Social Critique of Corporate Reporting, David Crowther examined the perceived dialectic around traditional and environmental reporting to show it to be a false dialectic. Corporate reporting continues to change rapidly to incorporate more detail and especially environmental and social information. At the same time the mechanism for reporting has changed and the internet now enables more information to be provided to an ever wider range of stakeholders and interest groups. The perceived conflict between financial performance representing the needs of investors and other dimensions of performance representing the needs of other stakeholders still however continues to exist. In this updated edition, this perceived conflict is re-examined along with the wider purposes of corporate reporting. These are examined in the context of web based reporting and a greater concern for all stakeholders. The conclusion is that, although recent developments have produced changes, the essential conflict is still professed to exist, but remains a largely imaginary one. The analysis in this book makes use of both statistics and semiotics and in so doing develops a semiology of corporate reporting that offers an alternative to other research that is largely based on econometrics. Researchers, higher level students and others with an interest in or responsibility for corporate reporting, corporate social responsibility, accounting research, or semiotics will find this book essential reading.
David Crowther is Professor of Corporate Social Responsibility and Head of the Centre for Research into Organisational Governance at De Montfort University, UK. He is also Chair of the Social Responsibility Research Network (www.socialresponsibility.biz), a worldwide network with over 600 members, organizer of the series of International Conferences on Corporate Social Responsibility (now in its 12th year) and editor of Social Responsibility Journal. He has published over 40 books and has contributed over 350 articles to academic, business and professional journals and to edited book collections. He has also spoken widely at conferences and seminars and acted as a consultant to a wide range of government, professional and commercial organisations. Professor Crowther's research is into corporate social responsibility with a particular emphasis on the relationship between social, environmental and financial performance.
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