<p><strong>"Many of the world’s leading organizations create social value and simultaneously aim at reducing their environmental footprint. Metrics and measurements can become transformation enablers, when they make people more aware of what works and where progress has been achieved. Drawing on numerous disciplinary fields and real-life case studies, this anthology, Measuring and Controlling Susdtainability, provides a thought-after compilation of how to put this in practice. The editors and authors have done a superb job!" </strong>— <em>Dr. Peetra Kuenkel</em>, Co-Founder, Executive Director, Collective Leadership Institute</p><p><strong>"This new book is a very welcome addition to the international literature on CSR performance and measurement. The book presents a lively and broad variety of approaches to CSR measurement and impact which allows readers to obtain a more comprehensive and in-depth understanding of this important topic. The book is particularly relevant at a time when many CSR academics and practitioners are concerned about whether CSR claims can indeed be back up by sufficient empirical evidence. I strongly recommend the book to students, practitioners, and academics interested in reflecting more deeply on-going CSR developments and debates". — </strong><em>Dr. Peter Lund-Thomsen</em>, Professor in Corporate Social Responsibility in Developing Countries, Copenhagen Business School</p><p><strong>"The idea that ‘If you can measure it, you can manage it’ is often associated with the great management guru Peter Drucker, but as an idea it can be traced back at least to the 1500s and Rheticus. When sustainability moved from the fringes of the debate in management scholarship and practice towards the mainstream in the late 1980s, there was a widespread perception that it was somehow a ‘soft’ set of issues, difficult to get to grips with. This book demonstrates how far we have come in the last 30 years in recognising sustainability as a very ‘hard’ set of issues, both in the sense of being challenging to tackle, and in having very direct and measurable impacts on all aspects of business organisations. The 17 chapters in this book combine to demonstrate how the challenge of measuring and managing sustainability varies across different types of organisation, and cuts across traditional disciplinary boundaries. For those wishing to understand the vital importance of managing sustainability issues, and how to do it effectively in ways that protect the value of companies, their brands and their contribution to society, this book will be invaluable." </strong><strong>— </strong><em>Prof. Ken Peattie,</em> Head of Marketing and Strategy Section, Cardiff University</p><p><strong>"For organizations wanting to gain and maintain a competitive edge in today’s marketplace, corporate sustainability is a necessary practice. This collection of chapters puts forward a comprehensive view of challenges in connection with the sustainable value-creation process and of opportunities resulting from innovations in this process. Written in an accessible language, this anthology offers a fine mix of theoretical, integrative, and empirical perspectives on key dimensions in sustainability. As such, the anthology represents an important resource for researchers, as well as a source of key insights and inspiration for practitioners willing to engage strategically with sustainability questions and ideas." - </strong><em>Prof. Valérie Swaen,</em> Louvain School of Management, Université catholique de Louvain</p>
Efforts to establish the measurement and control of sustainability have produced notable tools, but those instruments lack applicability in practice. Increasing the level of standardization of such tools also seems difficult to achieve, because the contexts surrounding the focal organizations differ considerably. Therefore, what we need is a systematic, interdisciplinary assessment of how to measure and control sustainability, so that we can establish an essential definition and up-to-date picture of the field.
Measuring and Controlling Sustainability attempts to provide such an assessment in 17 chapters, organized into four main topic sections: (a) organizations and social value creation: concepts, responsibilities, and barriers; (b) accounting, measurement, performance, and diffusion of social value; (c) practical and managerial insights from real-life cases; and (d) choices, incentives, guidance, and ethics.
This research anthology provides a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge theories and research that will further the development and advancement of measuring and controlling sustainable efforts in theory and managerial practice.
This book provides a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge theories and research that will further the development and advancement of measuring and controlling sustainable efforts in theory and managerial practice.
List of figures; List of tables; About the editors; About the contributors; Foreword and acknowledgments; Part 1: Organizations and social value creation: concepts, responsibilities, and barriers; 1.1: The Responsible Care initiative as an enabler of implementing coporate social responsibility concepts in the chemical industry, Peter Letmathe and Ilja Rabinovitch; 1.2: Mind the gap! Existing barriers to standardizing the measurement of social value creation, Cecilia Grieco and Laura Michelini; Part 2: Accounting, measurement, performance, and diffusion of social value; 2.1: The sustainability balanced scorecard: an introduction to the SBSC and its links to accounting and reporting, Florian Lüdeke-Freund and Stefan Schaltegger; 2.2: Sustainability accounting standards in the USA – procedural legitimacy: governance, participation, and decision-making processes, Delphine Gibassier; 2.3: Adapting the measuring rod for social returns in advanced welfare states: a critique of SROI, Konstantin Kehl, Gorgi Krlev, Volker Then, and Georg Mildenberger; 2.4: Measuring the impact of strategic corporate social responsibility (S-CSR): finding the right approach, Fabian Herkenrath and Christine Vallaster; 2.5: A performance tool for policy-makers to monitor the dual objective of social enterprises: a data envelopment analysis approach, Matthias Staessens, Pieter Jan Kerstens, Johan Bruneel, and Laurens Cherchye; 2.6: Diffusion of sustainability: a road map for developing corporate compliance programmes with high diffusion potential, Duygu Türker and Ceren Altuntaş Vural; Part 3: Practical and managerial insights from real-life cases; 3.1: The impact of environmental and social practices on the triple bottom line: a mediated model, Cristina Gimenez, Vicenta Sierra, Cristina Sancha, Joan Rodón, and Stefan Markovic; 3.2: Disclosing the invisible: measurement and disclosure pitfalls of carbon dioxide emissions, Nils Niehues and Andreas Dutzi; 3.3: Social entrepreneurship and social impact assessment: the case of euphoria, Florian Hoos; 3.4: Mechanisms and tools for measuring and reporting sustainability in the hotel industry: a practical dimension, Piotr Zientara and Paulina Bohdanowicz-Godfrey; 3.5: The growth of social banks: a new measurement approach, Nikolas Höhnke and Susanne Homölle; Part 4: Choices, incentives, guidance, and ethics; 4.1: An experimental study on corporate social responsibilty in junior managers’ project choice in an energy-producing company, Matthias Sohn, Dominik Fischer, and Werner Sohn; 4.2: Design options for sustainability-oriented incentive systems, Robert Huber, Bernhard Hirsch, and Matthias Sohn; 4.3: Sustainability reporting: do the Global Reporting Initiative Guidelines provide clear guidance?, Rudiger W. Waldkirch and Bernhard Hirsch; 4.4: Sustainability and ethics in financial reporting: an empirical study of German, Austrian, and Swiss Groups, Peter G. Kirchschläger and Michaekla M. Schaffhauser-Linzatti; Index.