scholarly journals Disclosure de Sustentabilidade e Governança Corporativa: Análise das Publicações em Periódicos Nacionais / Sustainability Disclosure and Corporate Governance: An Analysis of Publications in Brazilian Journals

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (12) ◽  
pp. 114396-114413
Author(s):  
Vanessa Silva Pereira ◽  
Mara Águida Porfírio Moura ◽  
Kelsen Arcângelo Ferreira E Silva
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 12316
Author(s):  
Alessio M. Pacces

EU securities regulation has established a taxonomy of environmentally sustainable activities. This article discusses, from a law and economics standpoint, the potential of this taxonomy to support sustainable corporate governance. Corporate governance can be an efficient way to channel investor preferences towards sustainability because the concentration of institutional shareholding has lowered the transaction costs of shareholder action. However, there is a principal-agent problem between institutional investors and their beneficiaries, which depends on greenwashing and undermines sustainable corporate governance. This article argues that introducing environmental sustainability into EU mandatory disclosure aligns the institutional investors’ incentives with the interest of their beneficiaries and may foster the efficient inclusion of sustainability in corporate governance. The argument is threefold. Firstly, the EU taxonomy may curb greenwashing by standardizing the disclosure of environmental sustainability. Secondly, this information may become salient for the beneficiaries as the same standards define the sustainability preferences to be considered in recommending and marketing financial products. Thirdly, sustainability disclosure prompts institutional investors to compete for sustainability-minded beneficiaries. Being unable to avoid unsustainable companies altogether, institutional investors are expected to cater to beneficiaries’ preferences for environmental sustainability using voice instead of an exit.


2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 477-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanna Michelon ◽  
Antonio Parbonetti

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Ronald Tauviek Andi Kasim ◽  
Djokosantoso Moeljono ◽  
Jangkung Handoyo Mulyo

The main purpose of the company’s operation today is to maximize the value of the company. Corporate value is not only influenced by economic performance, but can come from performance derived from social activities. But in reality, it eventually leads to a conflict of interest that occurs within the company, so that necessary to implement mechanisms to reduce the conflict. The purpose of this research to provide evidence to determine effect of intellectual capital, corporate sustainability disclosure, and corporate governance to corporate values with company size and leverage as control variables. This research can provide benefits as knowledge related to how wide the company pursues intellectual capital, corporate social responsibility, and corporate governance in increasing the value of the company. This research samples is focused on state owned enterprises listed in Indonesia Stock Exchange for period 2013 – 2016 with total 48 data used in this research. This research use multiple regression to test the hypothesis. The result of this research is intellectual capital and corporate sustainability disclosure have positively influence towards corporate values. Corporate governance has no influence towards corporate values. For control variables, company size has no influence towards corporate values and leverage has negatively influence towards corporate values.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 47-60
Author(s):  
Victoria Stanciu ◽  
Carmen Valentina Rădulescu ◽  
Dumitru Alexandru Bodislav ◽  
Sorin Burlacu ◽  
Ovidiu Cristian Andrei Buzoianu

This paper examines the corporate governance and sustainability disclosure and investigates the existing anchor between sustainability disclosure and corporate governance in Romanian companies. The topic provides a generous field of study because of the novelty of sustainable reporting for the Romanian companies and need for robust, consolidated corporate governance. The study’s sample includes listed and non-listed companies operating in the oil, transportation, chemistry and pharmaceutical industries. Annual reports, comply-or-explain declarations and stand-alone sustainability reports of the companies were analyzed on a time frame of three years aiming at measure the quality of sustainability disclosures and investigate the correlations between board governance and sustainability disclosure. The study emphasized that the companies opted mainly to integrate sustainable reporting in the annual management report. The independent reports on sustainability are more rigorous and better aligned to the Romanian framework, then the information integrated into the annual management reports. Improved disclosure is needed on the main risks with severe impacts, policies regarding specific aspects of sustainability, key performance indicators relevant to particular businesses. The sustainability reporting is more focus on soft disclosure items. Companies with larger board size and a higher number of board meetings registered higher disclosure in sustainability reporting. Robust corporate governance is imperative for Romanian companies because they are facing drastic changes in all aspects of their activity. A new rethink approach is needed from the sustainability perspective aiming at reshaping the entire processes starting with a long-term strategy, business models, risk and data management and processing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (16) ◽  
pp. 6686
Author(s):  
Hang Thi Thuy Pham ◽  
Sung-Chang Jung ◽  
Su-Yol Lee

Emerging economies have increasingly paid attention to sustainability issues in the business circle. However, few studies have explored what facilitates sustainability information disclosure. This study examines how corporate governance mechanisms, particularly government ownership, affect sustainability disclosure in an emerging economy—Vietnam. By combining related research streams, including stakeholder theory, institutional perspective, and principal–agent theory, we present a hypothesis on the effect of corporate governance on sustainability reporting. The logistic regression analysis and analysis of variance on 2678 Vietnamese sample firm-years from 2010 through 2016 indicate that government ownership is negatively associated with voluntary environmental and social information disclosure. Additionally, they demonstrate that ownership concentration tends to lower non-financial information disclosure, while individual largest shareholder has a positive effect. These findings provide managers and policymakers with theoretical and practical implications to encourage firms in emerging Asian economies such as Vietnam to adopt sustainability activities and disclose social information.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 2611 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seong Bae ◽  
Md. Masud ◽  
Jong Kim

There is a dearth of research on corporate governance and total sustainability disclosure (economic, environmental, and social) in developing, particularly South Asian, countries. This is unique cross-country research on South Asian countries’ corporate governance elements and total sustainability disclosure practices. The study considers a set of insightful theories, namely, the signaling and agency theories of understanding the motives and drivers of sustainability reporting. Based on data from the Global Reporting Initiative database, the study analyzes Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. We have collected annual report and sustainability reports from the GRI database for the period between 2009 and 2016. Based on the signaling and agency theories, the study investigates how board and shareholding structures convey signals to the market and different stakeholders. Our empirical results find that total sustainability disclosure has a positive and significant relationship with foreign shareholding, institutional shareholding, board independence, and board size. On the other hand, we document that director shareholding is negatively but significantly associated with total sustainability disclosure. Therefore, we conclude that corporate governance elements have very strong influential power to send positive signals to the market that lead to reduced information asymmetry and ensuring honest signals from different stakeholders.


2009 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rapiah Mohammed ◽  
Kasumalinda Alwi ◽  
Che Zuriana Muhammad Jamil

This paper advances previous research of sustainability disclosure by focusing on information disclosed in the companies‟ web site rather than through annual reports.  Despite looking at the listed companies in general, this study attempts to consider the practice of disclosing sustainability information in the Malaysian Shari‟ah-Compliant listed companies, which represented 87% of the total listed securities or 64.3% of the market capitalization on Bursa Malaysia web site. This study used Islamicity Disclosure Index consists of Shari‟ah Compliance Indicator,<br />Corporate Governance Index and Social/Environmental Index, and the data is analysed using a content analysis. The results of the study suggest that the sustainability disclosure by Malaysian Shari‟ah-compliant listed companies fall significantly on corporate governance index themes, followed by social/environmental index themes. However, Malaysian  Shari‟ah-compliant listed companies did not clearly disclose the items under Shari‟ah compliance index. Contrary to our expectation, most of the companies disclose the items measured in the annual reports linked to<br />the companies‟ web site and are thus not fully in the web site.<br /><br />


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 151
Author(s):  
Amrie Firmansyah ◽  
Pramuji Handra Jadi ◽  
Wahyudi Febrian ◽  
Eta Fasita

<em>Positive responses from investors indicate the company's success in providing information to the public. It reflects the stock prices increase in the capital market. Information that is responded to positively provides investor confidence that it contains decision-making usefulness, and managers can ensure its sustainability in the future. This study aims to examine the association of carbon emissions disclosure with firm value in Indonesia. In addition, this study also examines the role of corporate governance in the association between carbon emissions disclosure and firm value. This study employs secondary data sourced from financial statements available at <a href="http://www.idnfinancials.com">www.idnfinancials.com</a> and stock price data from <a href="http://www.finance.yahoo.com">www.finance.yahoo.com</a>. The sample employed in this study is a manufacturing company from 2016 to 2019. By using purposive sampling, the sample obtained in the study is 260 observations. The data were analyzed using multiple linear regression for panel data. This study concludes that the carbon emissions disclosure is negatively associated with firm value. In addition, corporate governance has not succeeded in strengthening the positive effect of carbon emission disclosures on firm value. This study suggests that the Indonesia Financial Services Authority (OJK) should re-examine the regulation on sustainability disclosure, which includes carbon emissions, which is one of the current dynamic issues in the world. In addition, companies need to improve the quality of disclosure of information related to sustainability to the public.</em>


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