Unravelling the narratives of the climate ...
Document type :
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
Title :
Unravelling the narratives of the climate finance agenda
Author(s) :
Ralite, Soline [Auteur]
Dauphine Recherches en Management [DRM]
Chenet, Hugues [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Institute of Space and Astronautical Science [ISAS]
Dauphine Recherches en Management [DRM]
Chenet, Hugues [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Institute of Space and Astronautical Science [ISAS]
Conference title :
19th European Institute for Advanced Studies in Management (EIASM) Interdisciplinary conference on intangibles, sustainability and value creation: reporting, management and governance
City :
Grenoble
Country :
France
Start date of the conference :
2024-06
Publication date :
2024
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Gestion et management
English abstract : [en]
This Conference follows the adoption, in July 2023, by the European Commission, of the first delegated act that sets out cross-cutting standards for the disclosure of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) information. ...
Show more >This Conference follows the adoption, in July 2023, by the European Commission, of the first delegated act that sets out cross-cutting standards for the disclosure of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) information. The sustainability reporting revolution has started and further guidance is now expected to address its implementation challenges that relate to the definition and the content of material sustainability/ESG information, to how to collect the required sustainability/ESG information, or to what form of communication should be employed, including in what digital form. To address those issues, an interdisciplinary conversation seems instrumental. Hence, the ambition of the Grenoble conference is in creating an unprecedent opportunity for cross-disciplinary exchanges that will assist regulators, preparers, and all users of the upcoming sustainability reporting. The conversation is expected to encompass all pillars of the European Sustainability Reporting Standards : Climate change, Pollution, Water and marine resources, Biodiversity and ecosystems, Resource use and circular economy, Own workforce, Workers in the value chain, Affected communities, Consumers and end-users, Business conduct. Beyond those reporting issues that will contribute to an equal footing between sustainability and financial reporting, other management sciences problematics persist that address the changes in corporate culture, the emergence of a sustainability governance and an enhancement of risk and uncertainties management that include impacts, and the contribution of sectorial analysis. This makes of the concept of “values creation” – rather than single value creation, a multi-perspective, multi-stakeholders, multi-dimension, multi-time horizon, multi-intangibility concept that deploys various objectives yet to structure. Hence, company ecosystems, more than ever, need academic support to drive the transition from a purely shareholder oriented perception of value to a stakeholder and sustainability-infused vision.Show less >
Show more >This Conference follows the adoption, in July 2023, by the European Commission, of the first delegated act that sets out cross-cutting standards for the disclosure of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) information. The sustainability reporting revolution has started and further guidance is now expected to address its implementation challenges that relate to the definition and the content of material sustainability/ESG information, to how to collect the required sustainability/ESG information, or to what form of communication should be employed, including in what digital form. To address those issues, an interdisciplinary conversation seems instrumental. Hence, the ambition of the Grenoble conference is in creating an unprecedent opportunity for cross-disciplinary exchanges that will assist regulators, preparers, and all users of the upcoming sustainability reporting. The conversation is expected to encompass all pillars of the European Sustainability Reporting Standards : Climate change, Pollution, Water and marine resources, Biodiversity and ecosystems, Resource use and circular economy, Own workforce, Workers in the value chain, Affected communities, Consumers and end-users, Business conduct. Beyond those reporting issues that will contribute to an equal footing between sustainability and financial reporting, other management sciences problematics persist that address the changes in corporate culture, the emergence of a sustainability governance and an enhancement of risk and uncertainties management that include impacts, and the contribution of sectorial analysis. This makes of the concept of “values creation” – rather than single value creation, a multi-perspective, multi-stakeholders, multi-dimension, multi-time horizon, multi-intangibility concept that deploys various objectives yet to structure. Hence, company ecosystems, more than ever, need academic support to drive the transition from a purely shareholder oriented perception of value to a stakeholder and sustainability-infused vision.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Non
Comment :
Award for the “best junior contribution to the theory and practice award of intangibles, ic and sustainability”
Collections :
Source :