4.7 Article

Corporate contributions to the Sustainable Development Goals: An empirical analysis informed by legitimacy theory

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 292, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.125962

Keywords

Corporate sustainability; Reporting; Legitimacy; Sustainability performance; Transformation; Transparency

Funding

  1. Leuphana ProScience program

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The research aims to analyze how companies address their contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to manage their legitimacy, and found that most companies legitimize their contributions by mapping the SDGs to existing activities or using them as inspiration for future activities. However, these efforts mainly indicate symbolic disclosure without substantive changes to the business as usual.
The research objective is to analyze how companies address their contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to manage their legitimacy. Reaching the SDGs by 2030 is considered vital for the well-being of humanity and the planet with multiple parties challenged to contribute. This requires changes in current routines, including the business as usual of companies, as achieving the SDGs without companies is unlikely. However, how companies address their contribution to the SDGs is unexplored. Informed by legitimacy theory, FTSE 100 reports on sustainability perfor-mance are analyzed deductively with a classification scheme, complemented by an inductive thematic analysis. Two-thirds of companies address the SDGs and legitimize their contributions by mapping the SDGs to existing activities or using them as inspiration for future activities, either for their core business or sustainability as an add-on. The resulting four legitimization strategies -conciliatory, transparency, stimulation, and transformation -largely indicate symbolic rather than substantive disclosure without changes to the business as usual. The paper contributes to literature and practice by developing a framework of four corporate legitimization strategies and evaluates these efforts critically. The paper concludes that at this point, while all four strategies might be suitable from a legitimacy perspective, if the aim is to achieve the SDGs by 2030, the dominantly symbolic legitimization strategies are insufficient. (c) 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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