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Beyond persuasive representations of facts: “figuring out” what sustainable value creation means in practice

Cristiano Busco (School of Management, University College London, London, UK) (Luiss Business School, Rome, Italy)
Fabrizio Granà (Department of Management Control, ESCP Business School, Turin Campus, Turin, Italy)
Maria Federica Izzo (Università Telematica San Raffaele Roma Srl, Roma, Italy)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 22 June 2023

Issue publication date: 4 January 2024

442

Abstract

Purpose

Although accounting and reporting visualisations (i.e. graphs, maps and grids) are often used to veil organisations’ untransparent actions, these practices perform irrespectively of their ability to represent facts. In this research, the authors explore accounting and reporting visualisations beyond their persuasive and representational purpose.

Design/methodology/approach

By building on previous research on the rhetoric of visualisations, the authors illustrate how the design of accounting visualisations within integrated reports engages managers in a recursive process of knowledge construction, interrogation, reflection and speculation on what sustainable value creation means. The authors articulate the theoretical framework by developing a longitudinal field study in International Fashion Company, a medium-sized company operating in the fashion industry.

Findings

This research shows that accounting and reporting visualisations do not only contribute to creating unclear and often contradicting representations of organisations’ sustainable performance but, at the same time, “open up” and support managers’ unfolding search for “sustainable value” by reducing its unknown meaning into known and understandable categories. The inconsistencies and imperfections that accounting and reporting visualisations leave constitute the conditions of possibility for the interrogation of the unknown to happen in practice, thus augmenting managers’ questioning, reflections and speculation on what sustainable value means.

Originality/value

This study shows that accounting and reporting visualisations can represent good practices (the authors are not saying a “solution”) through which managers can re-appreciate the complexities of measuring and defining something that is intrinsically unknown and unknowable, especially in contexts where best practices have not yet consolidated into a norm. Topics such as climate change and sustainable development are out there and cannot be ignored, cannot be reduced through persuasive accounts and, therefore, need to be embraced.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful for the valuable comments of the three anonymous reviewers and the Editor, Lee Parker. They also acknowledge the useful comments received from Prof. Elena Giovannoni, Prof. Ikuko Sasaki, Prof. Gaia Melloni and from other participants at presentations at the Annual Conference of the European Accounting Association (Milan, 2018), and at the ENROAC-MCA conference (London, 2019).

Citation

Busco, C., Granà, F. and Izzo, M.F. (2024), "Beyond persuasive representations of facts: “figuring out” what sustainable value creation means in practice", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 37 No. 1, pp. 393-426. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-07-2021-5349

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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