Author
Listed:
- Daniela Cortés
- Albert Anton Traxler
- Dorothea Greiling
Abstract
Purpose - While research on sustainability reporting in the construction industry has already provided comprehensive findings, the purpose of this paper is to answer the question of how construction companies anchor the topic of sustainability in their strategic and operative management control practices. The implementation of sustainable business models and sustainability strategies requires proper management control instruments or mechanisms that support the transformation process or make it possible in the first place. Design/methodology/approach - A qualitative content analysis based on deductive and inductive procedures was conducted. 39 sustainability reports published by the largest construction companies in the EU were examined. Findings - Valuable insights are provided by showing which control instruments and mechanisms are used to improve corporate sustainability performance as well as how these are linked systematically. The results show that the focus is on strategic planning, cultural and administrative controls, while short-term targets, which could set out the path to achieving the long-term sustainability goals set, are often not reported. Strategic stakeholder theory and legitimacy theory provide explanations for the use of management control practices identified. Originality/value - Previous studies often focus on selected single control practices and miss holistic approaches for investigating corporate sustainability in construction companies. Furthermore, theoretical perspectives with instrumental and socio/political views on corporate sustainability help us explain the control practices applied. Moreover, practitioners, standard setters and legislators can use the findings for sustainability management or for developing standards and legislation.
Suggested Citation
Daniela Cortés & Albert Anton Traxler & Dorothea Greiling, 2024.
"Management control practices for the sustainability transformation in the European construction industry,"
Journal of Accounting & Organizational Change, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 20(6), pages 156-177, July.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:jaocpp:jaoc-11-2023-0209
DOI: 10.1108/JAOC-11-2023-0209
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