Corporate sustainability reporting of major commercial banks in line with GRI : Bangladesh evidence

Khan, Habib-Uz-Zaman, , Fatima, Johra, & Ahmed, Khadem (2011) Corporate sustainability reporting of major commercial banks in line with GRI : Bangladesh evidence. Social Responsibility Journal, 7(3), pp. 347-362.

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Description

Purpose – This paper aims to examine the tendencies of sustainability reporting by major commercial banks in Bangladesh in comparison with global sustainability reporting indicators outlined in the GRI framework together with banks' predilection toward reporting 16 GRI financial service sector (FSS) specific performance indicators. Design/methodology/approach – Based on the GRI G3 guidelines, the paper investigated banks' reporting in five broad areas of sustainability, such as environment, labour practices and decent works, product responsibility, human rights and society. The 2008/2009 annual reports of 12 major commercial banks listed on Dhaka stock exchange were analysed and coded using a content-based technique. Findings – The results show that information on society is addressed most extensively with regard to extent of reporting. This is followed by the disclosures prepared on decent works and labour practices and environmental issues. Furthermore, the disclosures of product responsibility information and the information for human rights are rather scarce in banks' reporting; on the subject of FSS-specific disclosures, only seven items out of 16 are disclosed by all sample banks. Research limitations/implications – The findings of the study indicate that Bangladeshi commercial banks' social disclosures could develop in this style to become more holistic and over time (in association with the country's central bank involvement) to resemble a type of structured reporting to the point where they are properly labelled per se. Originality/value – The study contributes to the social disclosure literature, in particular in a developing countries banking sector context, seeing as it disseminates evidence of the standing on social disclosures practices at the level of GRI with developing countries' banks data.

Impact and interest:

113 citations in Scopus
86 citations in Web of Science®
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ID Code: 70636
Item Type: Contribution to Journal (Journal Article)
Refereed: Yes
Measurements or Duration: 16 pages
DOI: 10.1108/17471111111154509
ISSN: 1758-857X
Pure ID: 32111778
Divisions: Past > QUT Faculties & Divisions > QUT Business School
Current > Schools > School of Accountancy
Copyright Owner: Copyright 2011 Emerald Group Publishing Ltd
Copyright Statement: Author's Pre-print: author can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing) Author's Post-print: author can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) Publisher's Version/PDF: author cannot archive publisher's version/PDF General Conditions: ?Voluntary deposit by author of author's pre-print or author's post-print allowed on author's personal website or Institutional repository, where there is no mandate to deposit ?If mandated by a funding agency, the author's post-print may be deposited in any open access repository after a 24 months embargo period ?Author's pre-print and Author's post-print not allowed on subject-based repository ?Must link to publisher version with DOI ?Publisher version cannot be used ?Published source must be acknowledged with set statement ?Non-commercial
Deposited On: 30 Apr 2014 00:41
Last Modified: 25 Apr 2025 15:20