Keywords
sustainability reportingfamily firms
legitimacy
stakeholders
socioemotional wealth
Global Reporting Initiative
Environmental effects of industries and plants
TD194-195
Renewable energy sources
TJ807-830
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We analyze the largely unexplored differences in sustainability reporting within family businesses using a sample of 230 non-financial Italian listed firms for the period 2004–2013. Drawing on legitimacy theory and stakeholder theory, integrated with the socio-emotional wealth (SEW) approach, we study how family control, influence and identification shape a firm’s attitude towards disclosing its social and environmental behavior. Our results suggest that family firms are more sensitive to media exposure than their non-family counterparts and that family control enhances sustainability disclosure when it is associated to a family’s direct influence on the business, by the founder’s presence on the board or by having a family CEO. In cases of indirect influence, without family involvement on the board, the level of family ownership is negatively related to sustainability reporting. On the other hand, a formal identification of the family with the firm by business name does not significantly affect social disclosure.Date
2016-12-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:b1e8ead32e954f6f868554869022c72a2071-1050
10.3390/su9010038
https://doaj.org/article/b1e8ead32e954f6f868554869022c72a