Social and Environmental Accountability Journal
2011 - 2025
Current editor(s): Jeffrey Unerman, John Ferguson and Jan Bebbington
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Volume 36, issue 3, 2016
- Editorial pp. 167-169

- Matias Laine and Carlos Larrinaga
- The Accounting and Accountability Practices of Fairtrade International (FLO) pp. 170-187

- Homaira Semeen, Muhammad Islam and Annette Quayle
- Crisis Narratives and the Abandonment of CSR during the Financial Crisis: Notes from Systems Integrated pp. 188-202

- Ken Weir
- ‘What if Technology Worked in Harmony with Nature?’ Imagining Climate Change Through Prius Advertisements pp. 203-204

- Juergen Seufert
- Enhancing Stakeholder Interaction Through Environmental Risk Accounts pp. 204-205

- Sarah Boyar
- Sustainable Development and Industry Self-regulation: Developments in the Global Mining Sector pp. 205-206

- Abby Hilson
- Royal Dutch Shell in Nigeria: Where do Responsibilities End? pp. 206-207

- Matthew Scobie
- The Co-Construction of NGO Accountability. Aligning Imposed and Felt Accountability in NGO-Funder Accountability Relationships pp. 207-208

- Kirsty Munro
- The utopia of rules. On technology, stupidity, and the secret joys of bureaucracy pp. 209-210

- Carlos Larrinaga
- Editorial Board pp. ebi-ebi

- The Editors
Volume 36, issue 2, 2016
- Measuring and Reporting on Social Performance: From Numbers and Narratives to a Useful Reporting Framework for Social Enterprises pp. 103-123

- Belinda Luke
- The Joint Influence of Evaluation Mode and Benchmark Signal on Environmental Accounting-Relevant Decisions pp. 124-152

- Hank C. Alewine and Dan N. Stone
- Reading for Displeasure: Why Bother with Social Accounting at All? pp. 153-161

- Rob Gray
- (Re)presenting ‘Sustainable Organizations’ pp. 162-163

- Evangeline Elijido-Ten
- Rhetoric and Argument in Social and Environmental Reporting: The Dirty Laundry Case pp. 163-164

- Elisa Breuer Vasco
- Developing a Reporting and Evaluation Framework for Biodiversity pp. 164-164

- Gunnar Rimmel
- Accounting and Sustainable Development: An Exploration pp. 165-165

- Moritz von Schwedler
- Tools of Legitimacy: The Case of the Petrobras Corporate Blog pp. 165-166

- Petros Vourvachis
Volume 36, issue 1, 2016
- EU Regulation of Corporate Social and Environmental Reporting pp. 1-9

- Thomas Riise Johansen
- Mandatory Disclosure about Environmental and Employee Matters in the Reports of Italian-Listed Corporate Groups pp. 10-33

- Ericka Costa and Marisa Agostini
- Environmental Reporting Regulations and Reporting Practices pp. 34-55

- Even Fallan
- Reporting Models do not Translate Well: Failing to Regulate CSR Reporting in Spain pp. 56-75

- Mercedes Luque-Vílchez and Carlos Larrinaga
- The ‘Coalition of the Unlikely’ Driving the EU Regulatory Process of Non-Financial Reporting pp. 76-89

- David Monciardini
- A Reply to Corporate Social Responsibility and Tax Aggressiveness: A Test of Legitimacy Theory pp. 90-92

- Roman Lanis and Grant Richardson
- Environmental, Social and Governance Reporting in China pp. 92-93

- Shan Zhou
- Responsible Tax as Corporate Social Responsibility: The Case of Multinational Enterprises and Effective Tax in India pp. 94-94

- Oana Apostol
- A Genealogy of Accounting Materiality pp. 95-95

- Rebecca Bolt
- Just A Passing Fad?: The Diffusion and Decline of Environmental Reporting in the Finnish Water Sector pp. 95-97

- Caterina Pesci
- On The Government of the Living: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1979--1980 pp. 98-101

- Leonardo Rinaldi
Volume 35, issue 3, 2015
- Editorial pp. 139-141

- John Ferguson and Carlos Larrinaga
- Evolution of the New Zealand Voluntary Carbon Market: An Analysis of CarboNZero Client Disclosures pp. 142-156

- S. Jeff Birchall, Maya Murphy and Markus J. Milne
- Demand for CSR: Insights from Shareholder Proposals pp. 157-175

- Giovanna Michelon and Michelle Rodrigue
- A New Era - Extending Environmental Impact to a Broader Sustainability Agenda: The Case of Commercial Group pp. 176-193

- Suzana Grubnic, Christian Herzig, Jean-Pascal Gond and Jeremy Moon
- (Re)presenting Sustainable Organizations pp. 194-195

- Colin Higgins
- Water Management Accounting and the Wine Supply Chain: Empirical Evidence from Australia pp. 195-195

- Nicholas Pawsey
- Incorporating Citizens: Corporate Political Engagement with Climate Change in Australia pp. 196-197

- Edward Tello
- W(h)ither Ecology? The Triple Bottom Line, The Global Reporting Initiative, and Corporate Sustainability Reporting pp. 197-198

- Nick Barter
- Corporate Social Responsibility and Tax Aggressiveness: A Test of Legitimacy Theory pp. 198-200

- Even Fallan
- An Exploration of NGO and Media Efforts to Influence Workplace Practices and Associated Accountability Within Global Supply Chains pp. 200-201

- Roel Boomsma
- Can Green Sustain Growth? From the Religion to the Reality of Sustainable Prosperity pp. 202-204

- Jeremy Morrow
- Six Capitals - The Revolution Capitalism Has to Have - Or Can Accountants Save the Planet? pp. 204-205

- Delphine Gibassier
Volume 35, issue 2, 2015
- Economic Democracy: Exploring Ramifications for Social and Environmental Accountants pp. 77-85

- Jan Bebbington and David Campbell
- Employee Voice through Open-Book Accounting: The Benefits of Informational Transparency pp. 86-95

- Andrew R. Timming and Ross Brown
- Credit Unions as Cooperative Institutions: Distinctiveness, Performance and Prospects pp. 96-112

- Donal G. McKillop and John Wilson
- Social Accounting for Inequality: Applying Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century pp. 113-122

- Dale Tweedie and James Hazelton
- Drought Resettlement and Accounting pp. 123-123

- Matthew Egan
- Hybrid Accountabilities: When Western and Non-western Accountabilities Collide pp. 124-125

- Osamuyimen Egbon
- How Constructions of the Future Shape Organizational Responses: Climate Change and the Canadian Oil Sands pp. 125-126

- Anna Heikkinen
- Firm-Value Effects of Carbon Emissions and Carbon Disclosures pp. 126-127

- Shawn Ho
- Corporate Accountability and Human Rights Disclosures: A Case Study of Barrick Gold Mine in Tanzania pp. 127-128

- Barbara de Lima Voss
- The International Integrated Reporting Council: A Story of Failure; 'But Does Sustainability need Capitalism or an Integrated Report' a Commentary on 'The International Integrated Reporting Council: A Story of Failure' by Flower, J.; The International Integrated Reporting Council: A Call to Action pp. 128-129

- Michelle Rodrigue
- Disclosure on Climate Change: Analysing the UK ETS Effects pp. 129-131

- Mohamed Saeudy
- Accounting for Suffering: Calculative Practices in the Field of Disaster Relief pp. 131-132

- Bryan Bo Cheng Yan
- What Has Nature Ever Done for Us? How Money Really Does Grow on Trees; What Nature Does for Britain pp. 133-135

- Aideen O'Dochartaigh
Volume 35, issue 1, 2015
- Volume and Tone of Environmental Disclosure: A Comparative Analysis of a Corporation and its Stakeholders pp. 1-16

- Michelle Rodrigue, Charles H. Cho and Matias Laine
- Standalone Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting in China: An Exploratory Analysis of its Relation to Legitimation pp. 17-31

- Dennis M. Patten, Yi Ren and Na Zhao
- Exploring Shadow Accountability: The Case of James Hardie and Asbestos pp. 32-48

- Lee Moerman and Sandra van der Laan
- Entitlements and Time: Integrated Reporting's Double-edged Agenda pp. 49-61

- Dale Tweedie and Nonna Martinov-Bennie
- Changes to the SEAJ Reviews Editorial Team pp. 62-63

- Conny Beck and Helen Tregidga
- Governmentality in Accounting and Accountability. A Case Study of Embedding Sustainability in a Supply Chain pp. 64-65

- Oana Apostol
- Legitimizing Negative Aspects in GRI-Oriented Sustainability Reporting: A Qualitative Analysis of Corporate Disclosure Strategies pp. 65-66

- Annika Beelitz
- Environmental Management Control Systems: The Role of Contextual and Strategic Factors pp. 66-67

- Lies Bouten
- Accounting and Networks of Corruption pp. 67-68

- Conor Clune
- Evaluating Social and Environmental Issues by Integrating the Legitimacy Gap with Expectational Gaps: An Empirical Assessment of the Forest Industry pp. 68-69

- Even Fallan
- Exploring Accounting-Sustainability Hybridisation in the UK Public Sector pp. 70-70

- Sara Moggi
- Much Ado about Nothing? How Banks Respond to Climate Change pp. 71-71

- Patricia T. Strong
- Accounting for Biodiversity pp. 72-73

- Matias Laine
- This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate pp. 73-75

- Matthew Scobie