A new paper by Matteo Corciolani, Federica Nieri and Annamaria Tuan has been published in Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management.
“Does involvement in corporate social irresponsibility affect the linguistic features of corporate social responsibility reports?”
Abstract: Companies publish corporate social responsibility (CSR) reports to inform their stakeholders of their CSR efforts. However, the literature has shown that these reports can be used as a way to offset companies’ involvement in corporate social irresponsibility (CSIR). By relying on a cognitive‐linguistic perspective, we investigate whether firms respond to their own irresponsible business conduct by changing their CSR reports’ linguistic features and, if so, how. We use a sample of 135 large corporations headquartered in developed countries between 1995 and 2014. An analysis of their CSR reports reveals that the more a firm is involved in irresponsible business conduct, the more likely it is to use narrative (instead of analytical) and deceptive (instead of authentic) language. Moreover, we show that these two trends are particularly evident for highly internationalised firms.
To download the paper click here
The Keynesian Working Group is happy to announce a call for papers to the YSI…
The 2024 Hukum Chandra Memorial Prize selection committee unanimously agreed to award Dr. Nicola Salvati,…
The Regional Science Association International (RSAI) chose the Paper "Quality of government and women's political…
Giulia Rossello and Arianna Martinelli have published their article "Breach of academic values and misconduct:…
This edited compilation invites authors involved in empirical research on business, human rights and/or the…
Research Topic: Human rights violations by companies are at the heart of the European Directive…