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The production of normativity

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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>28/02/2012
<mark>Journal</mark>Accounting, Organizations and Society
Issue number2
Volume37
Number of pages17
Pages (from-to)78-94
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date16/02/12
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

This paper contributes to understandings of the production of normativity in corporate reporting regimes. Although the accounting literature recognizes that a range of actors participate in the regulatory process, it continues to embrace dichotomous explanations of regulatory success based in the distinction between law and non law, with law emanating from a binding system of rules, codified through state legislation and enforced by a coercive Westphalian state. Following this understanding there are calls for further regulation of reporting regimes in the literature. This paper demonstrates how a constructivist perspective can provide new insights to existing debates over regulation. More specifically, this theoretical perspective is applied to explore the production of normativity in two reporting regimes addressing environmental issues. One (the Spanish case study) was characterized by formal law enacted by the state which nonetheless lacked normativity. The other (the UK case study) was characterized by informal law induced by non-governmental organizations which appeared to acquire normativity. The problematization of regulatory authority and legality offered by regime theory, constructivism and understandings of the processes by which norm cascades are generated reveals that, the internal legitimacy of the law is crucial in the construction of normativity and that while this was found in the UK case study, it was lacking in the Spanish case. These findings provide a more subtle set of considerations for understanding the role of regulation in reporting.