Climate Change Accounting and Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- An illusion and a buzzword;
- (2)
- A concept with multiple meanings, including environmental, social, eco-efficiency, etc., issues;
- (3)
- A broad concept including information about corporate sustainability measurement and management;
- (4)
- A stakeholder engagement process for the development of measurement and management tools related to the economic, social, and environmental aspects and their mutual links.
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- Understand its current status;
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- Identify gaps to be filled;
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- Challenge scholars to increase their work on relevant areas for their future sustainability accounting research.
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- Shows the different perspectives addressed by climate change accounting and reporting research;
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- Points out new research areas in which sustainability accounting and reporting should be beneficial;
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- Identifies some perspectives of development of the accounting discipline.
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- In fact, “The margins of accounting change as the boundaries of accounting are redrawn. The margins are fluid and mobile, rather than static. What is on the margins at one point in time can become central or taken-for-granted, relatively fixed and durable, at a later date. Moreover, the margins of accounting vary from one national setting to another” [7]. In this context, accounting and reporting for SDGs, and more in detail to climate change-related purposes, have only become the focus of research in the accounting discipline recently.
2. Research Background
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- SDG no. 6 (clean water and sanitation), e.g., [25,26]. Ref. [25] focused on the intersection between accounting and human rights. Within the latter, the author questioned if the access to information can be considered as a human right, focusing specifically on environmental information related to water sources. Ref. [26] focused on the reporting of sustainability information to public water companies’ stakeholders.
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- SDGs no. 5 (gender equality), SDG no. 10 (reduced inequalities), and 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions), e.g., [27,28,29,30]. Among this literature, it is worth mentioning [28], containing an introductory analysis of the potential role of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) for the application of relevant human rights norms, and [30], dealing with social accounting research related to economic inequality, and calling for a deep involvement of social accountants in public debates about the future of resource distribution.
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- SDGs no. 14 and no. 15 (life below the water/life on land), e.g., [31,32,33,34,35]. Among this literature, it is worth mentioning [32], dealing with the potential role of environmental accounting in the reconstruction of the knowledge of the social, economic, and environmental risks of salmon farming and in the choice of adopting organic production methods. Ref. [34] extended the research stream of biodiversity accounting, trying to verify if Jones’ natural inventory model is applicable to a specific local context.
3. Materials and Methods
- (1)
- Selection of research questions, bibliographic database, and search terms. During this phase, the authors also selected a tool to perform science mapping analysis;
- (2)
- Definition and use of review criteria for the inclusion/exclusion of the relevant literature;
- (3)
- Development and application of a methodological review protocol;
- (4)
- Synthesis of the findings.
3.1. Selection of Research Questions, Science Mapping Analysis Tool, Bibliographic Database, and Search Terms
- (a)
- What is the knowledge base of climate change accounting/reporting and what is its intellectual structure (RQ1)?
- (b)
- What is the research front (or conceptual structure) of this research field (RQ2)?
- (c)
- What is the social network structure of the scientific community writing about this topic (RQ3)?
- (d)
- What lessons can be learned from the literature analyzed about the current state and the future developments of the climate change accounting and reporting-related literature (RQ4)?
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- ((“account *” OR “report *”) AND (“global reporting initiative” OR “GRI”));
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- ((“account *” OR “report *”) AND (“social *” OR “environment *” OR “sustainab *” OR “CSR” OR “responsib *” OR “TBL” OR “triple” OR “integr *”));
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- ((“account *” OR “report *”) AND (* financial));
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- ((“account *” OR “report *”) AND (“carbon” OR “divestment” OR “Paris agreement” OR “multigenerational benefit” OR “climate change” OR “consequential” OR “natural disaster” OR “ecological”).
3.2. Definition and Use of Review Criteria for the Inclusion/Exclusion of the Relevant Literature
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- Document type: only articles (with the exclusion of presentations, book reviews, comments, and patents);
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- Languages: only English, in order to avoid a language bias [36];
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- Research areas: environmental sciences, ecology, business economics, operations research management science, energy fuels, social science’s other topics, water resources;
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- Web of Science categories: environmental sciences, ecology, energy fuels, engineering environmental, environmental studies, management, water resources, business finance, business, social sciences interdisciplinary, green sustainable science technology, operations research management science, development studies, and ethics;
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- Timespan: 1999–2018. The authors used 1999, as the starting year of the analysis since in this period the first sustainability reports and similar reporting tools were published as a result of the issuing of the first GRI guidelines [7];
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- Citation Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A&HCI, CPCI-S, CPCI-SSH, ESCI.
3.3. Development and Application of a Methodological Review Protocol
- (1)
- In the first part there were the bibliographic data of each article falling within the final sample (i.e., author(s)’ names and affiliations, year and title of publication, journal’s name, keywords and abstracts);
- (2)
- In the second part there was the coding scheme, divided into the following criteria: (A) jurisdiction, (B) location, (C) focus of the article, (D) research methods, (E) academic or practitioner author(s).
4. Results
- (1)
- the “biblioAlanalysis” function, which calculated the bibliometric measures displayed in Section 4.1;
- (2)
- the functions “summary”and “plot”, which summarized the main results that emerged from the bibliometric analysis (described in Section 4.2);
- (3)
- the “citations” function (described in Section 4.3).
4.1. Main Information Derived from the Collection of Selected Documents
4.2. Main Results Derived from the Bibliometric Analyses
4.3. Information about Citations
- (1)
- Kolk, Levy and Pinske, 2008 [Appendix A], dealing with the institutionalization of carbon disclosure as a corporate response to emerging climate change information needs.
- (2)
- Lozano and Huisingh, 2001 [Appendix A], focusing on sustainability reporting and on the guidelines and standards addressing sustainability issues;
- (3)
- Barrett, 2013 [Appendix A], containing a case study about consumption-based GHG emission accounting in UK;
- (4)
- Bebbington and Larrinaga-Gonzalez, 2008 [Appendix A], focusing on the problems connected with the valuation of pollution allowances and their identification as assets and liabilities;
- (5)
- Brandao, Levasseur, Kirschbaum, Weidema, Jorgensen, Hauschild, Pennington, and Chomkhamsri, 2013 [Appendix A], dealing with life cycle assessment (LCA) and carbon footprinting (CF) as tools for the environmental assessment of products. It analyzes some methods for accounting the potential climate impacts of carbon sequestration.
4.4. Network Analysis
- (a)
- Co-citation: this is the case in which two articles are both cited in a third article;
- (b)
- Co-words: this type of analysis helps researchers to depict the conceptual structure of a framework through a word co-occurrence network in order to map and classify words extracted from titles, keywords, or abstracts of a given bibliographic collection;
- (c)
- Collaboration: i.e., networks whose nodes are the authors and whose links are the co-authorships.
4.5. Qualitative Analysis
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- No. 9 authors classifiable as “accounting scholars”, since their (academic or professional) role, research interests, research areas, and scientific/professional background clearly referred to accounting-related subjects;
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- No. 6 authors not classifiable as “accounting scholars”, since no clear references to accounting-related subjects were found in their curricula. In most cases, their research interests referred to “carbon accounting” or “GHG accounting”, but their scientific background and/or their academic/professional roles were not related to typical accounting subjects. Some of them are scholars of atmospheric physics, environmental biology, climate change policy, and politics.
5. Discussion
- The concepts of “assessment” and “change” were the main motor themes;
- The concept of “carbon” was within niche themes and motor themes, while “greenhouse” lay between motor and basic/transversal themes;
- The concepts of “reporting” and “accounting” were the main basic and transversal themes;
- The concepts of “climate”, “environmental”, and “companies” were the main emerging or declining themes;
- The concepts of “corporate” and “case” were the main highly developed and isolated themes.
6. Conclusions
7. Future Research Directions
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- A greater concentration should be invested on the concrete effects produced by climate change- related practices on the sustainability performances of firms;
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- A broader focus of accounting scholars on all the 17 SDGs instead of one part of them (e.g., carbon emissions, other GHG emissions, etc.) would be useful;
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- A greater attention toward climate- elated risk management and its concrete effects on the risks of firms is urgently needed;
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- A broader attention should be given to climate change management practices (including management accounting), which seems, at the moment, to be of less importance in the climate change-related accounting literature in comparison with reporting-related aspects. In fact, reporting could be driven by various motivations (e.g., greenwashing, window dressing, industry/legislative/stakeholder pressures, etc.) [47], not always coherent with the real achievement of the SDGs. A greater focus of the research community on management decisions and actions to counteract climate change, would be helpful to promote the understanding and development of such practices. The analyzed literature seemed, on the contrary, to focus mainly on reporting-related aspects (as shown by the great number of articles about sustainability reporting, both in the strict and in the broad sense). Even if disclosure is an important aspect to focus upon, it is not the main problem. The authors deem that the most urgent problem to be addressed is the management of climate change-related aspects, with specific reference to strategic and operational planning, accounting, and control of the actions implemented by the management of firms to counter climate change problems. These considerations are similar to those proposed by Gibson [77], as she stated that “reporting […] is not the real problem in addressing atmospheric pollution, but that the economic philosophy which attempts to address ecological problems in economic terms is the main culprit”.
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- A growth of publications about climate change-related aspects, not only in typical academic accounting journals, but also in more interdisciplinary journals;
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- A greater collaboration among authors, both within the accounting discipline and with scholars of other scientific areas;
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- A greater collaboration between academic scholars, practitioners, and policy makers.
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- The implementation and modification of existing and creation of new managerial tools to counteract the impacts of firms on sustainability and climate change;
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- The study of effective results of managerial actions designed to help companies to dramatically reduce their impact on unsustainability and climate change;
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- Analyses of business cases (e.g., case studies, field studies, single best practices, benchmarking among best practices, etc.) that could help the managers of firms to become involved and committed to engaging their colleagues, employees, and customers in achieving sustainability-related objectives;
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- Stimulating raising awareness among business managers, other accounting scholars, and students about the needs to address climate change-related problems, not only for opportunistic reasons (e.g., window dressing), but also because this is one of the main problems that individuals, public institutions, and companies (both large corporations and small businesses) should face now to achieve a better and more sustainable future for everyone.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. The 85 Articles Analyzed
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- Barrett, J.; Peters, G.; Wiedmann, T.; Scott, K.; Lenzen, M.; Roelich, K.; Le Quere, C. Consumption-based ghg emission accounting: A UK case study. Clim. Policy 2013, 13, 451–470.
- Bebbington, J.; Larrinaga-Gonzalez, C. Carbon trading: Accounting and reporting issues. Eur. Account. Rev. 2008, 17, 697–717.
- Ben-Amar, W.; Chang, M.; McIlkenny, P. Board gender diversity and corporate response to sustainability initiatives: Evidence from the carbon disclosure project. J. Bus. Ethics 2017, 142, 369–383.
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- Birdsey, R.A. Carbon accounting rules and guidelines for the United States forest sector. J. Environ. Qual. 2006, 35, 1518–1524.
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- Burritt, R.L.; Tingey-Holyoak, J. Forging cleaner production: The importance of academic-practitioner links for successful sustainability embedded carbon accounting. J. Clean. Prod. 2012, 36, 39–47.
- Bustamante, M.C.; Silva, J.S.O.; Cantinho, R.Z.; Shimbo, J.Z.; Oliveira, P.V.C.; Santos, M.M.O.; Ometto, J.P.H.B.; Cruz, M.R.; Mello, T.R.B.; Godiva, D.; et al. Engagement of scientific community and transparency in C accounting: The Brazilian case for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from land use, land-use change and forestry. Environ. Res. Lett. 2018, 13, 55005.
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- Gusti, M.; Jonas, M. Terrestrial full carbon account for Russia: Revised uncertainty estimates and their role in a bottom-up/top-down accounting exercise. Clim. Chang. 2010, 103, 159–174.
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- Kalu, J.U.; Buang, A.; Aliagha, G.U. Determinants of voluntary carbon disclosure in the corporate real estate sector of Malaysia. J. Environ. Manag. 2016, 182, 519–524.
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- Liptow, C.; Janssen, M.; Tillman, A. Accounting for effects of carbon flows in LCA of biomass-based products exploration and evaluation of a selection of existing methods. Int. J. Life Cycle Assess. 2018, 23, 2110–2125.
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- Lozano, R.; Huisingh, D. Inter-linking issues and dimensions in sustainability reporting. J. Clean. Prod. 2011, 19, 99–107.
- Martire, S.; Mirabella, N.; Sala, S. Widening the perspective in greenhouse gas emissions accounting: The way forward for supporting climate and energy policies at municipal level. J. Clean. Prod. 2018, 176, 842–851.
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Sections | Questions | Answers: Open/Closed (Codified) |
---|---|---|
Bibliographic data | ||
Author(s) | Who is/are the author(s) of the publication? | Open |
Year | In which year was the work published? | Open |
Title | What is the title of the publication? | Open |
Authors’ affiliation | What is the university affiliation of the author(s)? | Open |
Type of publication | What kind of publication? | Open |
Journal name | If it is a journal: what is the journal’s name? | Open |
Research framework | ||
A. Jurisdiction | What is the context of the publication? | A1. Supranational/international comparative |
A2. National | ||
A3. Local government | ||
A4. Public Business Enterprise | ||
A5. Private company | ||
A6. Specific economic sector | ||
A7. One organization | ||
A8. Other | ||
B. Location | Which is the specific location of the publication? | B1. Europe |
B2. North America | ||
B3. South America | ||
B4. Australasia | ||
B5. Asia/China | ||
B6. Africa | ||
B7. Other (e.g., more locations, nowhere in particular) | ||
C. Focus of the article | On which research field the article is focused? | C1. External reporting |
C2. Auditing | ||
C3. Accounting | ||
C4. Governance | ||
C5. Management control/strategy | ||
C6. Performance measurement | ||
C7. Budgeting | ||
C8. Other | ||
D. Research methods | Which research method is used in the publication? | D1. Case/field study/interviews |
D2. Content analysis/historical analysis | ||
D3. Survey/questionnaire/other empirical | ||
D4. Commentary/normative/policy | ||
D5. Theoretical literature review/empirical | ||
E. Academic or practitioner author(s) | Which is the institutional background of the author(s)? | E1. Only academic(s) |
E2. Only practitioner(s) | ||
E3. Academic(s) and practitioner(s) |
% | |
---|---|
Description | Results |
Documents | 85 |
Sources (Journals, Books, etc.) | 28 |
Keywords Plus (ID) | 268 |
Author’s Keywords (DE) | 275 |
Period | 1999–2018 |
Average citations per documents | 30.48 |
Authors | 233 |
Author Appearances | 249 |
Authors of single-authored documents | 9 |
Authors of multi-authored documents | 224 |
Single-authored documents | 10 |
Documents per Author | 0.36 |
Authors per Document | 2.74 |
Co-Authors per Documents | 2.93 |
Collaboration Index | 2.99 |
Document types | |
ARTICLE | 83 |
ARTICLE; PROCEEDINGS PAPER | 2 |
Authors | Articles | Authors—Fractionalized | Articles—Fractionalized |
---|---|---|---|
Schaltegger S. | 3 | Brander M. | 2.0 |
Ascui F. | 2 | Mozner Z.V. | 1.5 |
Ben amar W. | 2 | Schaltegger S. | 1.1 |
Brander M. | 2 | Alvarez I.G. | 1.0 |
Burritt R.L. | 2 | Ascui F. | 1.0 |
Cowie A.L. | 2 | Birdsey R.A. | 1.0 |
Csutora M. | 2 | Comyns B. | 1.0 |
Gallego alvarez I. | 2 | Csutora M. | 1.0 |
Garcia sanchez I.M. | 2 | Gillenwater M. | 1.0 |
Gillett N.P. | 2 | Haripriya G.S. | 1.0 |
Kirschbaum M.U.F. | 2 | Hasselmann K. | 1.0 |
Lodhia S. | 2 | Lee K.H. | 1.0 |
Lovell H. | 2 | Lodhia S. | 1.0 |
Mcilkenny P. | 2 | Lovell H. | 1.0 |
Mozner Z.V. | 2 | Ben amar W. | 0.8 |
Region | Freq | Region | Freq |
---|---|---|---|
UK | 28 | Finland | 5 |
Australia | 27 | Greece | 5 |
USA | 18 | Netherlands | 5 |
Germany | 15 | Austria | 4 |
Canada | 14 | Denmark | 4 |
France | 12 | Hungary | 4 |
China | 8 | New Zealand | 4 |
Brazil | 7 | Norway | 4 |
Spain | 7 | Italy | 3 |
Sweden | 7 | Argentina | 2 |
Keywords Plus (ID) | Occ. | Authors Keywords (DE) | Occ. | Titles | Occ. | Abstracts | Occ. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Climate change | 16 | Climate change | 27 | Accounting | 47 | Carbon | 229 |
Emissions | 15 | Carbon accounting | 14 | Carbon | 41 | Climate | 196 |
Companies | 11 | Greenhouse gas emissions | 6 | Climate | 22 | Accounting | 173 |
Environmental disclosures | 8 | Ghg emissions | 5 | Greenhouse | 16 | Emissions | 172 |
Greenhouse gas emissions | 8 | Sustainability | 5 | Change | 15 | Change | 159 |
Performance | 8 | Sustainable development | 5 | Gas | 15 | Reporting | 99 |
Legitimacy | 7 | Disclosure | 4 | Reporting | 15 | Ghg | 86 |
Strategies | 7 | Global warming | 4 | Corporate | 13 | Paper | 72 |
Co2 | 6 | Greenhouse gas | 4 | Emissions | 13 | Disclosure | 70 |
Management | 6 | Kyoto protocol | 4 | Disclosure | 12 | Environmental | 70 |
Sustainability | 6 | Sustainability reporting | 4 | Assessment | 7 | Companies | 67 |
Determinants | 5 | Carbon | 3 | Companies | 7 | Greenhouse | 57 |
Impact | 5 | Carbon cycle | 3 | Emissions | 7 | Firms | 54 |
Sequestration | 5 | Carbon disclosure | 3 | Ghg | 7 | Gas | 52 |
Social responsibility | 5 | Carbon stocks | 3 | Management | 7 | Management | 50 |
Corporate social responsibility | 4 | Climate change mitigation | 3 | Performance | 7 | Global | 49 |
Energy | 4 | Emissions | 3 | Sustainability | 7 | Analysis | 46 |
Financial performance | 4 | Environmental accounting | 3 | Case | 6 | Corporate | 43 |
Governance | 4 | Environmental reporting | 3 | Energy | 6 | Study | 43 |
International trade | 4 | G.h.g. accounting | 3 | Environmental | 6 | Methods | 41 |
Paper | Total Cit. (TC) | TC per Year |
---|---|---|
Kolk and Pinske, 2008, European Accounting Review | 241 | 21.9 |
Lozano and Huisingh, 2011, Journal of Cleaner Production | 196 | 24.5 |
Barrett, 2013, Climate Policy | 123 | 20.5 |
Bebbington and Larrinaga-Gonzalez, 2008, European Accounting Review | 110 | 10.0 |
Brandao et al., 2013, International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment | 108 | 18.0 |
Rankin, Windsor and Wahyuni, 2011, Accounting, Auditing, and Accountability journal | 86 | 10.7 |
Schaltegger and Csutora, 2012 Journal of Cleaner Production | 84 | 12.0 |
Williams and Schaefer, 2013, Business Strategy and the Environment | 78 | 13.0 |
Prado-Lorenzo, Rodriguez Dominguez, Gallego Alvarez and Garcia Sanchez, 2009, Management Decision | 75 | 7.5 |
Burritt, Schaltegger and Zvezdov, 2011, Australian Accounting Review | 67 | 8.4 |
Gentil, Christensen and Aoustin, 2009, Waste Management and Research | 64 | 6.4 |
Pellegrino and Lodhia, 2012 Journal of Cleaner Production | 58 | 8.3 |
Ascui and Lovell, 2011, Accounting, Auditing, and Accountability Journal | 53 | 6.6 |
Haddock Fraser and Tourelle, 2010, Business Strategy and the Environment | 49 | 5.4 |
Solomon, Solomon, Norton and Joseph, 2011, Accounting, Auditing, and Accountability Journal | 48 | 6.0 |
Lee, 2012, Journal of Cleaner Production | 48 | 6.8 |
Gillett and Matthews, 2010, Environmental Research Letters | 44 | 4.9 |
Milne and Grubnic, 2011, Accounting, Auditing, and Accountability Journal | 42 | 5.2 |
Whittaker, McManus and Smith, 2013, Environmental Modelling and Software | 40 | 6.7 |
Sullivan and Gouldson, 2012, Journal of Cleaner Production | 39 | 5.6 |
A. Jurisdiction | Articles | % |
A1. Supranational/international comparative | 4 | 4.71% |
A2. National | 6 | 7.06% |
A3. Local government | 6 | 7.06% |
A4. Public Business Enterprise | 3 | 3.53% |
A5. Private company | 25 | 29.41% |
A6. Specific economic sector | 12 | 14.12% |
A7. One organization | 0 | 0.00 |
A8. Other | 29 | 34.12% |
Tot. | 85 | 100% |
B. Location | Articles | % |
B1. Europe | 19 | 22.35% |
B2. North America; | 5 | 5.88% |
B3. South America; | 3 | 3.52% |
B4. Australasia; | 4 | 4.70% |
B5 Asia/China; | 8 | 9.41% |
B6. Africa; | 0 | 0 |
B7. Other. | 46 | 54.11% |
Tot. | 85 | 100% |
C. Focus of the Article | Articles | % |
C1. External reporting | 22 | 25.88% |
C2. Auditing | 0 | 0.00% |
C3. Accounting | 23 | 27.06% |
C4. Governance | 0 | 0.00% |
C5. Management control/strategy | 8 | 9.41% |
C6. Performance measurement | 6 | 7,06% |
C7. Budgeting | 8 | 9.41% |
C8. Other | 18 | 21.18% |
Tot. | 85 | 100% |
D. Research Method | Articles | % |
D1. Case/field study/interviews; | 38 | 44.70% |
D2. Content analysis/historical analysis; | 7 | 8.23% |
D3. Survey/questionnaire/other empirical; | 12 | 14.11% |
D4. Commentary/normative/policy; | 22 | 25.88% |
D5. Theoretical: literature review/empirical | 6 | 7.05% |
Tot. | 85 | 100% |
E. Academics/Practitioners | Articles | % |
E1. Only academic(s) | 69 | 81.17% |
E2. Only practitioner(s) | 11 | 12.94% |
E3. Academic(s) and practitioner(s) | 5 | 5.88% |
Tot. | 85 | 100% |
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Share and Cite
Gulluscio, C.; Puntillo, P.; Luciani, V.; Huisingh, D. Climate Change Accounting and Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5455. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135455
Gulluscio C, Puntillo P, Luciani V, Huisingh D. Climate Change Accounting and Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability. 2020; 12(13):5455. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135455
Chicago/Turabian StyleGulluscio, Carmela, Pina Puntillo, Valerio Luciani, and Donald Huisingh. 2020. "Climate Change Accounting and Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review" Sustainability 12, no. 13: 5455. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135455
APA StyleGulluscio, C., Puntillo, P., Luciani, V., & Huisingh, D. (2020). Climate Change Accounting and Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review. Sustainability, 12(13), 5455. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135455