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Environmental Reporting On The Internet By America'S Toxic 100: Legitimacy And Self-Presentation

Author

Listed:
  • Charles H. Cho

    (John Molson School of Business - Concordia University [Montreal])

  • Robin W. Roberts

    (UCF - University of Central Florida [Orlando])

Abstract

This study uses Goffman's self-presentation theory to examine corporate website environmental disclosures from an organizational legitimacy perspective. We argue that corporations use Internet environmental disclosure to project a more socially acceptable environmental management approach to public stakeholders. We argue further that this disclosure activity is often de-coupled from their actual environmental performance. To test these conjectures, we refine and employ a comprehensive disclosure evaluation metric to assess both the content and the presentation of these types of disclosures and utilize a firm's America's Toxic 100 toxic score - a newly developed measure based on the US Environmental Protection Agency's toxics release inventory (TRI) data, to proxy for environmental performance. Based on empirical tests of four size-matched samples, our findings support our conjectures, showing that worse environmental performers provide more extensive disclosure in terms of content and website presentation.

Suggested Citation

  • Charles H. Cho & Robin W. Roberts, 2008. "Environmental Reporting On The Internet By America'S Toxic 100: Legitimacy And Self-Presentation," Post-Print halshs-00522478, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:journl:halshs-00522478
    Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://shs.hal.science/halshs-00522478
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