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A bibliometric review of corporate environmental disclosure literature

Author

Listed:
  • Bilal
  • Ali Meftah Gerged
  • Hafiz Muhammad Arslan
  • Ali Abbas
  • Songsheng Chen
  • Shahid Manzoor

Abstract

Purpose - The study aims to identify and discuss influential aspects of corporate environmental disclosure (CED) literature, including key streams, themes, authors, keywords, journals, affiliations and countries. This review also constructs agendas for future CED research. Design/methodology/approach - Using a bibliometric review approach, the authors reviewed 560 articles on CED from 215 journals published between 1982 and 2020. Findings - The authors' insights are three-fold. First, the authors identified three core streams of CED research: “legitimization of environmental hazards via environmental disclosures,” “the role of environmental accounting in achieving corporate environmental sustainability” and “integrating environmental social and governance (ESG) reporting into the global reporting initiatives (GRI) guidelines”. Second, the authors also deployed a thematic map that classifies CED research into four themes: niche themes (e.g. institutional theory and environmental management system), motor themes (e.g. stakeholder engagement), emerging/declining themes (e.g. legitimacy theory) and basic/transversal themes (e.g. voluntary CED, environmental reporting and corporate social responsibility). Third, the authors highlighted important CED authors, keywords, journals, articles, affiliations and countries. Research limitations/implications - This study assists researchers, journal editors and consultants in the corporate sector to comprehensively understand various dimensions of CED research and practices and suggests potential emerging research areas. Although this paper appears to have been thoroughly conducted, using authors' keywords to identify themes was a key limitation. Thus, the authors call upon using a more comprehensive data mining technique that uses keywords in abstracts, titles and the whole body of papers and then identifies inclusive trends in CED literature. Originality/value - The authors contribute to the extant accounting literature by investigating the organizational-level CED, both mandatory and voluntary, using a systematic and bibliometric literature review model to summarize the key research streams, themes, authors, journals, affiliations and countries. By doing so, the authors construct a future research agenda for CED literature.

Suggested Citation

  • Bilal & Ali Meftah Gerged & Hafiz Muhammad Arslan & Ali Abbas & Songsheng Chen & Shahid Manzoor, 2023. "A bibliometric review of corporate environmental disclosure literature," Journal of Accounting Literature, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 46(2), pages 214-237, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:jalpps:jal-01-2022-0006
    DOI: 10.1108/JAL-01-2022-0006
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    Cited by:

    1. Chengyun Liu & Ziting Zhou & Kun Su & Ke Liu & Hui An, 2024. "Water risk and financial analysts' information environment: Empirical evidence from China," Business Strategy and the Environment, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 33(2), pages 1265-1304, February.

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