CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’

Recent discussions at accounting conferences and workshops suggest that academics are ‘deeply divided’ on the role and purpose of corporate social responsibility (CSR) accounting. This ‘rift’ has been created by moves from mainstream accounting researchers to contribute to a body of evidence that is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Charles H. Cho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bucharest University of Economic Studies 2020-12-01
Series:Contabilitate şi Informatică de Gestiune
Subjects:
Online Access:http://online-cig.ase.ro/jcig/art/19_4_1.pdf
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spelling doaj-b3aa35883c2a4a808ddf696e56f7a5022020-12-27T14:28:16ZengBucharest University of Economic StudiesContabilitate şi Informatică de Gestiune1583-43871583-43872020-12-0119462665010.24818/jamis.2020.04001CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’Charles H. Cho0Schulich School of Business, York University, CanadaRecent discussions at accounting conferences and workshops suggest that academics are ‘deeply divided’ on the role and purpose of corporate social responsibility (CSR) accounting. This ‘rift’ has been created by moves from mainstream accounting researchers to contribute to a body of evidence that is almost 50 years old without—many believe—being cognizant, or even respectful, of the work that has gone before. The existing work by CSR accounting scholars puts sustainability of the planet at its core, rejecting narrow or instrumental approaches to the fundamental issues; in contrast, more recent ‘capital market-based’ work takes investor-centric, or market-driven approaches to ‘sustainability’ and CSR. While there are calls for greater understanding of, and empathy for, each other’s views and perspectives, this essay identifies some particular pain-points, and calls for new wave researchers—those who recently ‘(re)discovered’ CSR accounting research—to ‘step up (to their plate)’ or simply ‘stay in their own lane (or, out of the game)’.http://online-cig.ase.ro/jcig/art/19_4_1.pdfcorporate social responsibility (csr)csr accounting researchsustainabilitycsearbibliographymainstream‘new wave’
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charles H. Cho
spellingShingle Charles H. Cho
CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
Contabilitate şi Informatică de Gestiune
corporate social responsibility (csr)
csr accounting research
sustainability
csear
bibliography
mainstream
‘new wave’
author_facet Charles H. Cho
author_sort Charles H. Cho
title CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
title_short CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
title_full CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
title_fullStr CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
title_full_unstemmed CSR accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
title_sort csr accounting ‘new wave’ researchers: ‘step up to the plate’… or ‘stay out of the game’
publisher Bucharest University of Economic Studies
series Contabilitate şi Informatică de Gestiune
issn 1583-4387
1583-4387
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Recent discussions at accounting conferences and workshops suggest that academics are ‘deeply divided’ on the role and purpose of corporate social responsibility (CSR) accounting. This ‘rift’ has been created by moves from mainstream accounting researchers to contribute to a body of evidence that is almost 50 years old without—many believe—being cognizant, or even respectful, of the work that has gone before. The existing work by CSR accounting scholars puts sustainability of the planet at its core, rejecting narrow or instrumental approaches to the fundamental issues; in contrast, more recent ‘capital market-based’ work takes investor-centric, or market-driven approaches to ‘sustainability’ and CSR. While there are calls for greater understanding of, and empathy for, each other’s views and perspectives, this essay identifies some particular pain-points, and calls for new wave researchers—those who recently ‘(re)discovered’ CSR accounting research—to ‘step up (to their plate)’ or simply ‘stay in their own lane (or, out of the game)’.
topic corporate social responsibility (csr)
csr accounting research
sustainability
csear
bibliography
mainstream
‘new wave’
url http://online-cig.ase.ro/jcig/art/19_4_1.pdf
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