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Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms: the case of assurance on sustainability reporting

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Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms: the case of assurance on sustainability reporting. / O'Dwyer, Brendan; Owen, David; Unerman, J.
In: Accounting, Organizations and Society, Vol. 36, No. 1, 01.2011, p. 31-52.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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O'Dwyer B, Owen D, Unerman J. Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms: the case of assurance on sustainability reporting. Accounting, Organizations and Society. 2011 Jan;36(1):31-52. doi: 10.1016/j.aos.2011.01.002

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O'Dwyer, Brendan ; Owen, David ; Unerman, J. / Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms : the case of assurance on sustainability reporting. In: Accounting, Organizations and Society. 2011 ; Vol. 36, No. 1. pp. 31-52.

Bibtex

@article{2a2f93d6829d4e77ac94f888dc465e98,
title = "Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms: the case of assurance on sustainability reporting",
abstract = "Based on the development of a more refined conception of legitimacy than has been used in prior audit/assurance and sustainability accounting research, this paper analyses how the legitimation processes adopted by sustainability assurance practitioners in a large professional services firm have co-evolved with and impacted upon their attempts to develop this form of assurance practice - particularly the construction of assurance statements. The analysis reveals a complex and interdependent interplay between attempts at securing pragmatic, moral and cognitive legitimacy with three key constituencies - clients who commission the sustainability assurance services; (socially constructed) non-client users of the assurance statements; and the firm's internal Risk Department that approves the wording of assurance statements. Securing these types of legitimacy is shown to require the adoption and alignment of varying legitimation strategies according to the constituency practitioners seek to influence. Developing pragmatic legitimacy with clients depends on establishing moral legitimacy with non-client users of assurance statements while securing moral legitimacy with non-client users is contingent on acquiring pragmatic legitimacy with the firm's internal Risk Department. The practitioners' legitimation strategies are underpinned by a commitment to opening up dialogue within the assurance process which is evident in their engagement with potential users of assurance and their efforts to expand assurance statement content and encourage user influence over what is assured. This provides a counterpoint to Power's (1994, 1999) concerns about the tendency for new assurance forms to restrict debate and dialogue and reveals a rare empirical domain where Power's (2003b) call for more customised and informative narratives in assurance reporting is being heeded. {\textcopyright} 2011 Elsevier Ltd.",
author = "Brendan O'Dwyer and David Owen and J. Unerman",
year = "2011",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/j.aos.2011.01.002",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "31--52",
journal = "Accounting, Organizations and Society",
issn = "0361-3682",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Seeking legitimacy for new assurance forms

T2 - the case of assurance on sustainability reporting

AU - O'Dwyer, Brendan

AU - Owen, David

AU - Unerman, J.

PY - 2011/1

Y1 - 2011/1

N2 - Based on the development of a more refined conception of legitimacy than has been used in prior audit/assurance and sustainability accounting research, this paper analyses how the legitimation processes adopted by sustainability assurance practitioners in a large professional services firm have co-evolved with and impacted upon their attempts to develop this form of assurance practice - particularly the construction of assurance statements. The analysis reveals a complex and interdependent interplay between attempts at securing pragmatic, moral and cognitive legitimacy with three key constituencies - clients who commission the sustainability assurance services; (socially constructed) non-client users of the assurance statements; and the firm's internal Risk Department that approves the wording of assurance statements. Securing these types of legitimacy is shown to require the adoption and alignment of varying legitimation strategies according to the constituency practitioners seek to influence. Developing pragmatic legitimacy with clients depends on establishing moral legitimacy with non-client users of assurance statements while securing moral legitimacy with non-client users is contingent on acquiring pragmatic legitimacy with the firm's internal Risk Department. The practitioners' legitimation strategies are underpinned by a commitment to opening up dialogue within the assurance process which is evident in their engagement with potential users of assurance and their efforts to expand assurance statement content and encourage user influence over what is assured. This provides a counterpoint to Power's (1994, 1999) concerns about the tendency for new assurance forms to restrict debate and dialogue and reveals a rare empirical domain where Power's (2003b) call for more customised and informative narratives in assurance reporting is being heeded. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.

AB - Based on the development of a more refined conception of legitimacy than has been used in prior audit/assurance and sustainability accounting research, this paper analyses how the legitimation processes adopted by sustainability assurance practitioners in a large professional services firm have co-evolved with and impacted upon their attempts to develop this form of assurance practice - particularly the construction of assurance statements. The analysis reveals a complex and interdependent interplay between attempts at securing pragmatic, moral and cognitive legitimacy with three key constituencies - clients who commission the sustainability assurance services; (socially constructed) non-client users of the assurance statements; and the firm's internal Risk Department that approves the wording of assurance statements. Securing these types of legitimacy is shown to require the adoption and alignment of varying legitimation strategies according to the constituency practitioners seek to influence. Developing pragmatic legitimacy with clients depends on establishing moral legitimacy with non-client users of assurance statements while securing moral legitimacy with non-client users is contingent on acquiring pragmatic legitimacy with the firm's internal Risk Department. The practitioners' legitimation strategies are underpinned by a commitment to opening up dialogue within the assurance process which is evident in their engagement with potential users of assurance and their efforts to expand assurance statement content and encourage user influence over what is assured. This provides a counterpoint to Power's (1994, 1999) concerns about the tendency for new assurance forms to restrict debate and dialogue and reveals a rare empirical domain where Power's (2003b) call for more customised and informative narratives in assurance reporting is being heeded. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.

U2 - 10.1016/j.aos.2011.01.002

DO - 10.1016/j.aos.2011.01.002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 36

SP - 31

EP - 52

JO - Accounting, Organizations and Society

JF - Accounting, Organizations and Society

SN - 0361-3682

IS - 1

ER -