Summary of “Stakeholder Engagement in Sustainability Reporting by Fortune Global 500 Companies: A Call for Embeddedness” (Ardiana, 2023, Meditari Accountancy Research)
This paper investigates whether Fortune Global 500 companies truly embed stakeholder engagement within their sustainability reporting. It explores whether stakeholder engagement disclosures are integrated into sustainability disclosures, rather than appearing as separate, independent sections of the report.
The study’s main research question asks:
Do large global corporations not only disclose stakeholder engagement practices but also link these disclosures to sustainability issues, thereby embedding stakeholder engagement in their sustainability reporting?
The paper argues that “embeddedness” means that stakeholder engagement is deeply ingrained in an organisation’s sustainability practices, influencing the selection of report content, disclosure framing, and accountability toward diverse stakeholders.
Large multinational corporations, particularly those listed in the Fortune Global 500, play a dominant role in shaping global sustainability discourse. Their size and visibility expose them to diverse stakeholder expectations and potential conflicts. As a result, sustainability reporting has evolved as a legitimacy and communication tool to reduce information asymmetry and signal accountability.
However, despite widespread reporting, previous studies have found that sustainability reports often reflect managerial self-promotion rather than meaningful dialogue (Gray, 2006; Milne & Gray, 2013). Reports may highlight positive achievements while downplaying or omitting challenges.
This study argues that true sustainability accountability requires embedding stakeholder engagement—that is, ensuring that reported issues genuinely reflect stakeholder concerns, rather than being “cherry-picked” by management. By linking engagement disclosures to sustainability topics, reports can demonstrate that companies are responsive and inclusive, fostering dialogic accountability (Manetti, 2011; Bellucci et al., 2019).
The study builds upon stakeholder theory and dialogic accounting. Stakeholder engagement is conceptualised as an interactive, dialogic process involving consultation, communication, and participation (Greenwood, 2007).
Key prior studies (Bellucci et al., 2019; Kaur & Lodhia, 2018) emphasise that quality stakeholder engagement must:
The paper advances this theoretical conversation by proposing that embeddedness requires explicit connections between stakeholder engagement disclosures (who is engaged and how) and sustainability disclosures (economic, social, and environmental issues). Without this linkage, reports risk becoming generic, “boilerplate” statements that lack stakeholder relevance.
The study uses mixed content analysis—both quantitative and qualitative—on 646 sustainability reports (in English) produced by 219 Fortune Global 500 companies between 2015 and 2017.
The sample spans 31 countries and 19 industries, representing both developed and emerging markets.
(a) Low Level of Stakeholder Engagement Disclosures
Example: BP’s 2015 report detailed responses to oil spill concerns, but such examples were rare.
These results show that most companies list stakeholders but fail to demonstrate reciprocal engagement or responsiveness.
(b) Weak Connection Between Engagement and Sustainability Disclosures
The analysis revealed scant evidence of embeddedness—that is, few companies linked stakeholder engagement practices to specific sustainability topics.
Overall, the findings indicate that most companies treat stakeholder engagement as a symbolic exercise—an obligatory section rather than an integrated foundation for sustainability reporting.
The study concludes that stakeholder engagement is loosely embedded in sustainability reporting among the world’s largest corporations. Reports often satisfy formal disclosure requirements (e.g., GRI) but fail to demonstrate substantive integration between engagement activities and sustainability content.
This gap illustrates a broader decoupling between sustainability rhetoric and practice:
Embedding stakeholder engagement requires connecting strategy, governance, and operations to reporting. Firms must demonstrate how stakeholder input shapes decision-making, materiality assessment, and disclosure design.
The study’s analysis was limited to English-language PDF sustainability reports (2015–2017), excluding web-based or social media disclosures. Findings may not generalise beyond the Fortune Global 500 sample.
Future research could: