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Accounting in the Anthropocene: a roadmap for stewardship

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Accounting in the Anthropocene: a roadmap for stewardship. / Bebbington, Jan; Rubin, Andy.
In: Accounting and Business Research, Vol. 52, No. 5, 31.10.2022, p. 582-596.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bebbington, J & Rubin, A 2022, 'Accounting in the Anthropocene: a roadmap for stewardship', Accounting and Business Research, vol. 52, no. 5, pp. 582-596. https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.2022.2079780

APA

Vancouver

Bebbington J, Rubin A. Accounting in the Anthropocene: a roadmap for stewardship. Accounting and Business Research. 2022 Oct 31;52(5):582-596. Epub 2022 Aug 4. doi: 10.1080/00014788.2022.2079780

Author

Bebbington, Jan ; Rubin, Andy. / Accounting in the Anthropocene : a roadmap for stewardship. In: Accounting and Business Research. 2022 ; Vol. 52, No. 5. pp. 582-596.

Bibtex

@article{9b3b8dd5ea784c72aa7460ea001b8604,
title = "Accounting in the Anthropocene: a roadmap for stewardship",
abstract = "Stewardship is a concept that has historically underpinned the practice of accounting, with a focus on the stewardship of financial resources. As times change, so too do the elements of organisational performance that might be subject to stewardship demands. Critically for this paper, a roadmap for organisational stewardship in the Anthropocene is developed. In brief, the Anthropocene is a term used to describe how human actions drive earth systems functioning, generating effects (for example) on the climate system as well as on the diversity of living creatures. Given these effects, an enlarged understanding of stewardship emerges that focuses on corporate purpose that takes account of wider than financial ambitions and effects as well as on governance processes that can support a broader perspective. The paper also highlights that achieving stewardship for {\textquoteleft}wicked problems{\textquoteright} that emerge from complex adaptive systems (with emergent elements and tipping points) might be best addressed by coalitions of organisations collaborating to achieve systems effects. Such an approach also suggests that accounting data gathering and tracing of organisational impact will require greater spatial capabilities than have previously been the case. Accounting for stewardship in the Anthropocene, therefore, represents a significant advance to current accounting practice.",
keywords = "Stewardship, Anthropocene, environmental accounting, socio-ecological accounting",
author = "Jan Bebbington and Andy Rubin",
year = "2022",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/00014788.2022.2079780",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "582--596",
journal = "Accounting and Business Research",
issn = "0001-4788",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Accounting in the Anthropocene

T2 - a roadmap for stewardship

AU - Bebbington, Jan

AU - Rubin, Andy

PY - 2022/10/31

Y1 - 2022/10/31

N2 - Stewardship is a concept that has historically underpinned the practice of accounting, with a focus on the stewardship of financial resources. As times change, so too do the elements of organisational performance that might be subject to stewardship demands. Critically for this paper, a roadmap for organisational stewardship in the Anthropocene is developed. In brief, the Anthropocene is a term used to describe how human actions drive earth systems functioning, generating effects (for example) on the climate system as well as on the diversity of living creatures. Given these effects, an enlarged understanding of stewardship emerges that focuses on corporate purpose that takes account of wider than financial ambitions and effects as well as on governance processes that can support a broader perspective. The paper also highlights that achieving stewardship for ‘wicked problems’ that emerge from complex adaptive systems (with emergent elements and tipping points) might be best addressed by coalitions of organisations collaborating to achieve systems effects. Such an approach also suggests that accounting data gathering and tracing of organisational impact will require greater spatial capabilities than have previously been the case. Accounting for stewardship in the Anthropocene, therefore, represents a significant advance to current accounting practice.

AB - Stewardship is a concept that has historically underpinned the practice of accounting, with a focus on the stewardship of financial resources. As times change, so too do the elements of organisational performance that might be subject to stewardship demands. Critically for this paper, a roadmap for organisational stewardship in the Anthropocene is developed. In brief, the Anthropocene is a term used to describe how human actions drive earth systems functioning, generating effects (for example) on the climate system as well as on the diversity of living creatures. Given these effects, an enlarged understanding of stewardship emerges that focuses on corporate purpose that takes account of wider than financial ambitions and effects as well as on governance processes that can support a broader perspective. The paper also highlights that achieving stewardship for ‘wicked problems’ that emerge from complex adaptive systems (with emergent elements and tipping points) might be best addressed by coalitions of organisations collaborating to achieve systems effects. Such an approach also suggests that accounting data gathering and tracing of organisational impact will require greater spatial capabilities than have previously been the case. Accounting for stewardship in the Anthropocene, therefore, represents a significant advance to current accounting practice.

KW - Stewardship

KW - Anthropocene

KW - environmental accounting

KW - socio-ecological accounting

U2 - 10.1080/00014788.2022.2079780

DO - 10.1080/00014788.2022.2079780

M3 - Journal article

VL - 52

SP - 582

EP - 596

JO - Accounting and Business Research

JF - Accounting and Business Research

SN - 0001-4788

IS - 5

ER -