1. Sustainability, Popular and Integrated Reporting in the Public Sector: A Fad and Fashion Perspective
- Author
-
Lucia Biondi and Enrico Bracci
- Subjects
Sustainability accounting ,lcsh:TJ807-830 ,Geography, Planning and Development ,lcsh:Renewable energy sources ,Socio-culturale ,Context (language use) ,sustainability accounting ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,managerial fashion ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Sustainability reporting ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,Public accountability ,citizens ,public sector ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,lcsh:Environmental effects of industries and plants ,05 social sciences ,Public sector ,Novelty ,Ambientale ,Integrated reporting ,Public relations ,0506 political science ,lcsh:TD194-195 ,Accountability ,Sustainability ,business ,050203 business & management - Abstract
This paper provides a comparative analysis of different public accountability means used in the public sector - namely sustainability reporting, popular financial reporting and integrated reporting - in order to highlight their similarities and differences, and reflect on their development, with specific reference to the Italian context. In particular, we speculate about the practical and research implications of their emergence, through the lenses of accountability and managerial fad and fashion literature. The main novelty of the paper is that it is one of the first studies providing a comparative analysis of the three reporting tools debated both in practice and in research. We argue about their diffusion patterns, the commonalities and differences, which suggests different stages of evolution, different actors and forces at play. We provide some preliminary evidence on the risk that accountability innovations may end up just in a fad and fashion uptake, creating inefficiencies and not achieving the aims they are intended for. We also show how the available frameworks and standards have more in common than not, and that there is a risk of creating only new labels, without real innovation or improvement of public accountability.
- Published
- 2018