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Journal ArticleDOI

Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting: A Content Analysis in Family and Non-family Firms

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined how family influence on a business organization affects CSR reporting and found that family firms disseminate a greater variety of CSR reports, are less compliant with CSR standards and place emphasis on different CSR topics.
Abstract
Family firms are ubiquitous and play a crucial role across all world economies, but how they differ in the disclosure of social and environmental actions from non-family firms has been largely overlooked in the literature. Advancing the discourse on corporate social responsibility reporting, we examine how family influence on a business organization affects CSR reporting. The arguments developed here draw on institutional theory, using a rich body of empirical evidence gathered through a content analysis of the CSR reports of 98 large- and medium-sized Italian firms. The grounded theory analysis informs and contextualizes several differences in the type and content of corporate social responsibility reports of family and non-family firms. Our findings show that in comparison to non-family firms, family firms disseminate a greater variety of CSR reports, are less compliant with CSR standards and place emphasis on different CSR topics. We, thus, contribute to the family business and corporate social responsibility reporting literatures in several ways, offering implications for practice and outlining promising avenues for future research.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Corporate social responsibility disclosure and market value: Family versus nonfamily firms

TL;DR: This paper investigated the role of family involvement in the relationship between corporate social responsibility reporting and firm market value using a longitudinal archival data set in the French context and found that family firms report less information on their CSR duties than do non-family firms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying Worldviews on Corporate Sustainability: A Content Analysis of Corporate Sustainability Reports

TL;DR: In this paper, a content analysis of corporate sustainability reports is performed to understand the corporate message conveyed regarding what sustainability or corporate social responsibility is and how to enact it, and the most dominant corporate sustainability worldview is focused on the business case for sustainability, a position anchored in the weak sustainability paradigm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Family firms and practices of sustainability: A contingency view

TL;DR: In this paper, a set of moderating factors that may serve to arbitrate under just which conditions family firms are most apt to pursue positive practices of sustainability is proposed. But the authors do not discuss the impact of these factors on the sustainability of the family firm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Corporate Social Responsibility Report Narratives and Analyst Forecast Accuracy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a disclosure score based on the tone, readability, length, and the numerical and horizon content of CSR report narratives, and examined the relationship between the CSR disclosure scores and analyst forecasts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Issues in the Family Enterprise

TL;DR: A review of 35 articles, as well as those included in this special issue, suggest that family businesses are more attuned and attentive to social issues and stakeholders than nonfamily business.
References
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Book

Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research

TL;DR: The Discovery of Grounded Theory as mentioned in this paper is a book about the discovery of grounded theories from data, both substantive and formal, which is a major task confronting sociologists and is understandable to both experts and laymen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Building theories from case study research

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the process of inducting theory using case studies from specifying the research questions to reaching closure, which is a process similar to hypothesis-testing research.
Book ChapterDOI

The iron cage revisited institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that rational actors make their organizations increasingly similar as they try to change them, and describe three isomorphic processes-coercive, mimetic, and normative.
Book

Content analysis: an introduction to its methodology

TL;DR: History Conceptual Foundations Uses and Kinds of Inference The Logic of Content Analysis Designs Unitizing Sampling Recording Data Languages Constructs for Inference Analytical Techniques The Use of Computers Reliability Validity A Practical Guide
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