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Accountability in collaborative settings: understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives

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Accountability in collaborative settings: understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives. / Sobkowiak, M.; Bebbington, Jan; Blasiak, Robert et al.
In: Accounting Forum, 03.01.2025.

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Sobkowiak, M., Bebbington, J., Blasiak, R., Folke, C., & Osterblom, H. (2025). Accountability in collaborative settings: understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives. Accounting Forum. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/01559982.2024.2429229

Vancouver

Sobkowiak M, Bebbington J, Blasiak R, Folke C, Osterblom H. Accountability in collaborative settings: understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives. Accounting Forum. 2025 Jan 3. Epub 2025 Jan 3. doi: 10.1080/01559982.2024.2429229

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Bibtex

@article{57f4faefddf646f5aedb6a26eba17bbb,
title = "Accountability in collaborative settings: understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives",
abstract = "As corporations have come to recognize their role in shaping the biosphere, there has been an increase in inter-corporate cooperation, whereby corporations come together to address issues of common concern. The rationale for developing a collective approach arises from a realisation that {\textquoteleft}wicked{\textquoteright} problems are beyond the capacity of any one organisation to tackle. At the same time, although inter-corporate collaborations exist in the practice landscape, little is known about their characteristics from an academic perspective. Moreover, these initiatives raise questions in terms of how collective performance might be communicated, thereby creating the possibility for accountability to be discharged. This paper seeks to understand how inter-corporate sustainability initiatives (hereafter ISIs) have been explored in the literature by using a systematic literature review (SLR) of 203 academic papers and explores how these aspects can be integrated to start the process of developing an understanding of potential accountability mechanisms for ISIs. The paper contributes to accounting literature by emphasizing the likely relevance of different ISI configurations in designing appropriate accountability approaches. It expands existing discussions around accountability-based accounting systems and highlights the importance of considering a variety of factors, including the governance approach, nature of collaboration, and ISI mechanisms and attributes, in informing accountability measures. The SLR suggests that certain aspects, such as leadership, trust, legitimacy, and outcomes, are critical in understanding ISIs and influence our ability to imagine how accountability could be sought for collective outcomes as well as participant achievements.",
keywords = "accountability, inter-corporate collaboration, sustainability initiatives",
author = "M. Sobkowiak and Jan Bebbington and Robert Blasiak and Carl Folke and Henrik Osterblom",
year = "2025",
month = jan,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1080/01559982.2024.2429229",
language = "English",
journal = "Accounting Forum",
issn = "0155-9982",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Accountability in collaborative settings

T2 - understanding inter-corporate sustainability initiatives

AU - Sobkowiak, M.

AU - Bebbington, Jan

AU - Blasiak, Robert

AU - Folke, Carl

AU - Osterblom, Henrik

PY - 2025/1/3

Y1 - 2025/1/3

N2 - As corporations have come to recognize their role in shaping the biosphere, there has been an increase in inter-corporate cooperation, whereby corporations come together to address issues of common concern. The rationale for developing a collective approach arises from a realisation that ‘wicked’ problems are beyond the capacity of any one organisation to tackle. At the same time, although inter-corporate collaborations exist in the practice landscape, little is known about their characteristics from an academic perspective. Moreover, these initiatives raise questions in terms of how collective performance might be communicated, thereby creating the possibility for accountability to be discharged. This paper seeks to understand how inter-corporate sustainability initiatives (hereafter ISIs) have been explored in the literature by using a systematic literature review (SLR) of 203 academic papers and explores how these aspects can be integrated to start the process of developing an understanding of potential accountability mechanisms for ISIs. The paper contributes to accounting literature by emphasizing the likely relevance of different ISI configurations in designing appropriate accountability approaches. It expands existing discussions around accountability-based accounting systems and highlights the importance of considering a variety of factors, including the governance approach, nature of collaboration, and ISI mechanisms and attributes, in informing accountability measures. The SLR suggests that certain aspects, such as leadership, trust, legitimacy, and outcomes, are critical in understanding ISIs and influence our ability to imagine how accountability could be sought for collective outcomes as well as participant achievements.

AB - As corporations have come to recognize their role in shaping the biosphere, there has been an increase in inter-corporate cooperation, whereby corporations come together to address issues of common concern. The rationale for developing a collective approach arises from a realisation that ‘wicked’ problems are beyond the capacity of any one organisation to tackle. At the same time, although inter-corporate collaborations exist in the practice landscape, little is known about their characteristics from an academic perspective. Moreover, these initiatives raise questions in terms of how collective performance might be communicated, thereby creating the possibility for accountability to be discharged. This paper seeks to understand how inter-corporate sustainability initiatives (hereafter ISIs) have been explored in the literature by using a systematic literature review (SLR) of 203 academic papers and explores how these aspects can be integrated to start the process of developing an understanding of potential accountability mechanisms for ISIs. The paper contributes to accounting literature by emphasizing the likely relevance of different ISI configurations in designing appropriate accountability approaches. It expands existing discussions around accountability-based accounting systems and highlights the importance of considering a variety of factors, including the governance approach, nature of collaboration, and ISI mechanisms and attributes, in informing accountability measures. The SLR suggests that certain aspects, such as leadership, trust, legitimacy, and outcomes, are critical in understanding ISIs and influence our ability to imagine how accountability could be sought for collective outcomes as well as participant achievements.

KW - accountability

KW - inter-corporate collaboration

KW - sustainability initiatives

U2 - 10.1080/01559982.2024.2429229

DO - 10.1080/01559982.2024.2429229

M3 - Journal article

JO - Accounting Forum

JF - Accounting Forum

SN - 0155-9982

ER -