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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
431

Hållbarhetsrapportering och aktieägares investeringsbeslut : - En studie baserad på svenska börsnoterade företag

Johansson, Hanna, Heidari, Soheila January 2016 (has links)
Intresset för företags ekonomiska prestationer har sedan länge varit stort. På senare år har även intresset för företagens sociala och miljömässiga prestationer ökat. För att möta detta ökade intresse publicerar ett stort antal av världens företag hållbarhetsrapporter där det rapporteras om detta. Ett flertal organisationer har skapat riktlinjer för att standardisera dessa rapporter för att underlätta jämförelser mellan företag. Riktlinjerna upprättade av Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) är de mest frekvent använda. Det ökade intresset för sociala och miljömässiga prestationer har även fått EU att upprätta ett direktiv som kräver att alla större företag ska upprätta hållbarhetsrapporter i enlighet med GRI:s riktlinjer.På grund av den stora produktionen av hållbarhetsrapporter som även kan tänkas öka i och med EU:s direktiv är det av intresse att veta vilken nytta intressenter har av dessa rapporter. En av dessa intressenter är aktieägare. Tidigare studier har visat att information som är användbar för aktieägarnas investeringsbeslut kommer att påverka aktiekursen. Denna studie undersökte vilken nytta aktieägare har av hållbarhetsrapporter upprättade i enlighet medGRI:s riktlinjer. För att undersöka detta studerades sambandet mellan företagens hållbarhetsrapportering och aktiekursen genom regressionsanalyser och t-test.Resultatet av studien visar att de företag som upprättat hållbarhetsrapporter har en högre aktiekurs än de som inte upprättat hållbarhetsrapporter. Detta tyder alltså på att aktieägare använder hållbarhetsrapporter vid sina investeringsbeslut och att dessa rapporter därmed är av nytta för denna typ av intressenter. Omfattningen av hållbarhetsrapporten tycks däremot intepåverka aktiekursen positivt medan kvaliteten på hållbarhetsrapporten tycks ha en positiv påverkan på aktiekursen. / The economic performance of businesses has for a long time been of great interest. Lately the interest of businesses’ social and environmental performance have increased. To meet this increased interest a large amount of the world’s businesses publishes sustainability reports in which social and environmental performance is presented. Several organizations have createdguidelines to standardize these reports in order to make it easier to compare different business performance. The guidelines established by Global reporting initiative (GRI) is the most commonly used. The increased interest in the social and environmental performance has also led EU to draw up a directive that requires all of the large companies to create sustainability reports in accordance with GRI’s guidelines. This great production of sustainability reports raises the question of the usefulness of these reports. One of the stakeholders that uses business information is the shareholders. Several studies have shown that information that the shareholders finds useful will affect the share price. This study has examined shareholders’ usefulness of sustainability reports prepared in accordance with GRI’s guidelines. To examine this the relationship between the share price and the business sustainability reports has been investigated trough regression analysis and t-test.The results of the studies were that businesses which have published sustainability reports prepared in accordance with GRI’s guidelines in general have a higher share price than businesses that do not have published this reports. These results indicate that shareholders value the sustainability reports when investments are made. Therefore the sustainabilityreports seems to be useful to shareholders. The study also indicates that the shareholders do not value the quantity of the report but the quality.
432

From disclosure overload to decision-useful information: Quality of disclosure in voluntary reporting

Winter, Sophie 20 May 2021 (has links)
As a result of new information technology and globalization, there has never before been a time when people have had better access to information, than nowadays. The potential overload of information builds the basis for the research questions of this cumulative dissertation, which relates to the extensively discussed 'disclosure overload problem'. Special focus is put on decision-useful information in voluntary reporting of capital market-oriented companies. In this context the first manuscript investigates the quality of information in voluntary strategy reporting and formulates qualitative principles. Based thereon, the second manuscript examines determinants influencing the quality of strategy reporting. The third manuscript is focusing on Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) reporting and investigates the relation of transparency in CSR reports and external assurance. The prior discussed topics as well as financial reporting and new reporting concepts, like integrated reporting, are put into context in the fourth manuscript. In this educational case study special emphasis is placed on the determination of material information, which is of high importance for future decision leaders.
433

An Assessment of Swedish Construction Companies Preparedness for the CSRD / En utvärdering hur förberedda svenska byggföretag är inför CSRD

Markendahl, Karin January 2023 (has links)
This master’s thesis investigates the preparedness of a selection of medium-sized Swedish construction companies for the upcoming Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). By examining the companies’ awareness and knowledge of the new regulation, this thesis aims to provide insights into the challenges and opportunities they may encounter. The research questions explored include: the extent of these companies’ knowledge and understanding of the CSRD requirements, the most challenging aspects of these regulations, and the potential impact of the CSRD on their sustainability practices.  The results shows that the examined medium-sized Swedish construction companies has limited knowledge about the CSRD. The companies face a number of challenges in connection to their ability to comply to the CSRD. The most prominent challenge was found to be External data collection - scope 3. Furthermore, the companies believe that by complying with the CSRD it will make them more sustainable. However, the companies believe the tools and methods needed to comply with the CSRD could affect their profitability. Nevertheless the companies generally believe that this need for resources can become a long-term investment and thereby make them more sustainable and profitable. / Denna masteruppsats undersöker beredskapen hos ett urval av medelstora svenska byggföretag för det kommande Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). Genom att undersöka företagens medvetenhet och kunskap om den nya förordningen syftar denna avhandling till att ge insikter om de utmaningar och möjligheter de kan möta. Forskningsfrågorna som undersöks inkluderar: omfattningen av dessa företags kunskap och förståelse för CSRD kraven, de mest utmanande aspekterna av dessa förordningar och den potentiella inverkan av CSRD på deras hållbarhetspraxis.  Resultaten visar att de undersökta medelstora svenska byggföretagen har begränsad kunskap om CSRD och ESRS. Företagen står inför ett antal utmaningar i samband med deras förmåga att följa CSRD. Den mest framträdande utmaningen visade sig vara extern datainsamling - scope 3. Vidare tror företagen att genom att följa CSRD kommer det att göra dem mer hållbara. Företagen tror dock att de verktyg och metoder som behövs för att följa CSRD kan påverka deras lönsamhet. Trots det tror företagen generellt att detta resursbehov kan bli en långsiktig investering och därmed göra dem mer hållbara och lönsamma.
434

Has the pendulum swung too far? a legal evaluation of Florida's child abuse and neglect registry

Debler, Julianna 01 August 2012 (has links)
Over the past several years, increasing public emphasis on preventing child maltreatment has resulted in substantial changes to Florida's child abuse and neglect central registry. Many of these recent changes, aimed at preventing child maltreatment, have resulted in over one million false, unsubstantiated, and inconclusive reports of child abuse and neglect within the last decade. While the information held in reports may be useful for identifying and preventing potential child abuse or neglect, due process concerns have been raised with regards to the process of placing a person's name in a report without providing a hearing for challenging or removing inaccurate information. Focusing on Florida law, this research concentrates on: 1) the child maltreatment reporting process, 2) the procedures for maintaining reports, and 3) the accessibility of these reports in order to determine whether due process constitutional rights are protected under Florida's child abuse and neglect reporting laws. The intent of this thesis is to analyze the occurrence of unsubstantiated cases of child maltreatment, incidences of false reporting, and legal remedies available for those wrongfully accused of abusing or neglecting a child. Through the analysis of case law, federal and state statutes, available statistics, child abuse resources, and personal interviews with members of the Florida Legislature, evidence shows that due process constitutional rights are not protected under Florida's child abuse and neglect reporting laws. By raising awareness of the areas of child protection that require legal re-evaluation, this thesis aims to discover the balance between protecting children from harm and protecting adults from the severe ramifications resulting from false and improper allegations of child abuse and neglect.
435

"Vi behöver bygga motorn samtidigt som vi flyger" : En fallstudie av hur det nya direktivet för hållbarhetsrapportering (CSRD) översätts hos en internationell revisionsbyrå

Gradin, Tilda, Björn, Zackarias January 2024 (has links)
Revisorer beskriver Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) som det största som någonsin hänt inom revisionsprofessionen. Klimatförändringar är något som inte går att blunda för i dagsläget utan alla måste agera för att vända den pågående förödande trend i världen. Europaparlamentet fattade beslut att införa CSRD för att EU ska bli den första kontinenten att bli klimatneutrala, vilket är EU:s gröna giv. Tidigare har stora företag i EU omfattats av Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) men kraven på vad företag måste rapportera har varit nästintill obefintliga, vilket resulterar i att många företags hållbarhetsrapporter kan klassas som greenwashing. CSRD syftar till att öka transparens, jämförbarhet och kvalité för hållbarhetsrapporter då det nya direktivet är betydligt mer omfattande än NFRD. Företag som omfattas av det nya direktivet ska nu rapportera hur de hanterar miljö, socialt och bolagsstyrning för att öka jämförbarhet och trovärdigheten. Rapporter omfattas enligt CSRD även av lagstadgad revision vilket innebär att auktoriserade revisorer ska utföra oberoende granskning för att öka trovärdigheten för intressenter.  Syftet med studien är att med utgångspunkt i skandinavisk institutionell teori identifiera hur det nya direktivet för hållbarhetsrapportering översätts hos en revisionsbyrå samt skapa en förståelse för vilka utmaningar dessa förklaringar ger uttryck för. Intervjuer genomfördes med revisorer för att få en förståelse för hur de ser på direktivet och skapa en bild över hur direktivet översätts i organisationen. Även textanalys av CSRD och statens offentliga utredning om hållbarhetsrapportering genomfördes för att besvara studiens syfte. Resultatet visar att det finns flera olika steg som organisationer går igenom när de implementerar CSRD i revisionsbyrån. Studien identifierar flertalet teman som påverkar översättningsprocessen både internt och externt. Utifrån dessa identifierade teman i empirin framstår tre utmaningar kopplat till översättningsprocessen vilket är tidspress, kompetens och slutkonsumentens makt. / Auditors describe the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) as the biggest thing that has ever happened to the audit profession. Climate change is something that cannot be turned a blind eye to and everyone must act to reverse the ongoing devastating trend in the world. The European Parliament decided to introduce CSRD so that the EU can become the first continent to become climate neutral, which is the EU's green Deal. In the past, large companies in the EU have been covered by the Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), but the requirements for what companies must report have been almost non-existent, which results in many companies' sustainability reports being classified as greenwashing. CSRD aims to increase transparency, comparability, and quality of sustainability reports as the new directive is significantly more comprehensive than NFRD. Companies covered by the new directive must now report how they manage environmental, social and corporate governance to increase comparability and credibility. Reports according to CSRD are also covered by statutory audit, which means that authorized auditors must carry out independent review to increase credibility for stakeholders. The purpose of the study is to identify, based on Scandinavian institutional theory, how the new directive for sustainability reporting is translated at an accounting firm and to create an understanding of the challenges these explanations express. Interviews were conducted with auditors to gain an understanding of how they view the directive to create a picture of how the directive is translated in the organization. Text analysis of the CSRD and the state's public inquiry into sustainability reporting was also carried out to answer the purpose of the study. The result shows that there are several different steps that organizations go through when implementing CSRD in the audit firm. The study identifies several themes that affect the translation process both internally and externally. Based on these identified themes in the empirical work, three challenges appear linked to the translation process, which are time pressure, competence and the power of the end consumer.
436

The First Time Assurance on Sustainability Reports and Risk Premiums

Akkam, Nawras, Andusa Ambele, Bih Norberter January 2016 (has links)
The economic utility of sustainability has been a recent domain under scrutiny by several academicians. More specifically, researchers have investigated the positive effects of sustainability reporting on firms from different angles. One of these angles is sustainability’s effect on firms’ prestige in the market, which is inevitably connected to market indicators, such as, risks and returns. Consequently, this research paper is positioned as a complement to previous researchers’ work within the field of sustainability reporting and its positive effects on firms. This paper’s foremost aspiration is to fill a knowledge gap in research by finding empirical evidence whether the first time assurance on sustainability reports causes a lower subsequent cost of equity capital. For this matter, the researchers’ methodology was deductive in nature, which relied on investigating established theories that are connected to the two dimensions of the research question; cost of equity capital and assurance on sustainability reports. This investigation formed the researchers’ theoretical schemata upon which they both neglected certain theories in favour of others and formed a verifiable theoretical research hypothesis. In this research, Sweden, a country known for its dedication for sustainability, was chosen as a market from which a sample was collected. The researchers conducted their study in a panel format where the same information about 44 different companies was collected on several years. Due to the fact that the number of listed firms that had been reporting their sustainability reports was quite moderate, a census study was convenient and applicable. The researchers ended up with a sample of 44 firms that constituted 352 observations, which formed the basis for the statistical inference. The empirical study employed several regression models of panels to reach the most representative model that fitted the data in hand. Also, to guarantee higher quality results the fitted model, the Two- way Error Component Fixed-effects Model, was tested for heteroskedasticity, cross- sectional correlation, autocorrelation and non-stationarity. This model revealed a relatively low explanatory power that drove the researchers to interpret their statistical findings with great caution. At a specific level of statistical significance, the regression model revealed a significant correlation between assurance on sustainability reports and a subsequent lower cost of equity capital. This result was refuted at higher levels of significance. Thus, the researchers were able to answer the research question affirmatively, to a certain extent, and to demonstrate that the research’s results verify the underpinnings of neo-institutional and signalling theories.
437

The determination of greenness indices and the relationships between greenness and leaf area index and total dry weight of seven crops

Redelfs, Maryann Samson January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
438

A customisable data analysis interface for an online electrical energy information system / Rudolf Adriaan Petrus Fockema

Fockema, Rudolf Adriaan Petrus January 2014 (has links)
In South Africa the main electricity supplier “Eskom” is struggling to meet the increasing demand. To lower the problematic electricity demand, demand side management projects are implemented by large electricity consumers. Measuring equipment is installed as part of these projects to monitor and manage the electricity consumption. Measured data is stored and can be analysed to produce information used for energy management. This, however, is a difficult and time-consuming task, because there are large volumes of data to filter through. It is repetitive work which can be automated. Various data analysis methods are available. These include plotting charts and tables using software packages or data management products. Manually analysing the data using different methods and software packages can be a long and painstaking process especially with large volumes of historical data. Information needs to be customised for different users. For example, managers need to view the end power usage and the amount of electrical energy that can be saved or was saved. Technical personnel need more detail about the electricity consumption by individual components in their system. To interpret the data in different ways a powerful tool is needed. There are many existing tools and software packages available, but most of them focus on buildings or factories. The software packages also have fixed reporting methods that are usually not customisable. In this study a customisable data analysis interface was developed to provide a solution for all the different needs. This interface is user friendly without limiting its customisable functionality. Data is received via emails, processed and then stored in a database hosted by a web server. Users access a website and configure custom charts and tables using the available data. The charts and tables are then displayed on the client’s own home page when the client logs onto the website. This interface was implemented on a website. The results of the interface were tested by automating existing reports using the customisable data analysis interface. Also when compared with the previous data analysis methods it was easily customisable, where it was very hard to customise the previous data analysis methods. It was found that the development of the customisable data analysis interface reduced man-hours spent on reporting with 70% to 80% for large energy consumers by automating the reports. The man-hours are estimated to have a value of R 20 000 to R 60 000 per month, depending on the salaries of the personnel and the volume of reports. It will help the Demand-Side Management (DSM) projects to become a continuous system to lower electricity consumption by providing information that is useful for energy management. / MIng (Computer and Electronic Engineering), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
439

A customisable data analysis interface for an online electrical energy information system / Rudolf Adriaan Petrus Fockema

Fockema, Rudolf Adriaan Petrus January 2014 (has links)
In South Africa the main electricity supplier “Eskom” is struggling to meet the increasing demand. To lower the problematic electricity demand, demand side management projects are implemented by large electricity consumers. Measuring equipment is installed as part of these projects to monitor and manage the electricity consumption. Measured data is stored and can be analysed to produce information used for energy management. This, however, is a difficult and time-consuming task, because there are large volumes of data to filter through. It is repetitive work which can be automated. Various data analysis methods are available. These include plotting charts and tables using software packages or data management products. Manually analysing the data using different methods and software packages can be a long and painstaking process especially with large volumes of historical data. Information needs to be customised for different users. For example, managers need to view the end power usage and the amount of electrical energy that can be saved or was saved. Technical personnel need more detail about the electricity consumption by individual components in their system. To interpret the data in different ways a powerful tool is needed. There are many existing tools and software packages available, but most of them focus on buildings or factories. The software packages also have fixed reporting methods that are usually not customisable. In this study a customisable data analysis interface was developed to provide a solution for all the different needs. This interface is user friendly without limiting its customisable functionality. Data is received via emails, processed and then stored in a database hosted by a web server. Users access a website and configure custom charts and tables using the available data. The charts and tables are then displayed on the client’s own home page when the client logs onto the website. This interface was implemented on a website. The results of the interface were tested by automating existing reports using the customisable data analysis interface. Also when compared with the previous data analysis methods it was easily customisable, where it was very hard to customise the previous data analysis methods. It was found that the development of the customisable data analysis interface reduced man-hours spent on reporting with 70% to 80% for large energy consumers by automating the reports. The man-hours are estimated to have a value of R 20 000 to R 60 000 per month, depending on the salaries of the personnel and the volume of reports. It will help the Demand-Side Management (DSM) projects to become a continuous system to lower electricity consumption by providing information that is useful for energy management. / MIng (Computer and Electronic Engineering), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
440

Sustainability and integrated reporting : an analysis of the audit committee's oversight role

Marx, B., Van der Watt, A. January 2011 (has links)
Published Article / Sustainability has been described as the primary moral and economic imperative of the twenty-first century and one of the most important sources of both opportunities and risks for businesses. Companies are also expected to behave, and be seen to behave, as responsible corporate citizens that is, as protecting, enhancing and investing in the wellbeing of the economy, society and the natural environment in which they do business. Accordingly the need exists for accurate, reliable and credible stakeholder reporting by organisations on their economic, social and environmental performances and achievements. An effectively functioning audit committee can play an important role in this regard to assist the board in providing accurate and credible sustainability reporting and disclosures that are integrated with the company's financial reporting. The objective of the article is twofold: it aims, firstly, to provide a brief overview of the development of sustainability and sustainability reporting and the role that audit committees can fulfil in this regard; and, secondly, its intention is to provide evidence that the recommendations of the third Report on Corporate Governance for South Africa (King III) regarding sustainability reporting, assurance and the audit committee's oversight responsibility for this are justified. This is done through a literature review of current sustainability and audit committee developments and practices, and this is supported by empirical evidence obtained from assessing the annual reports and questionnaires sent to the audit committee chairs of the Top 40 listed companies in South Africa. The main findings of the study are that the majority of audit committees at the largest listed companies in South Africa are not taking oversight responsibility for sustainability reporting on their boards' behalf, although they are dealing with some ethical and social reporting aspects. It was also found that reporting by companies in their annual reports on their audit committee's corporate governance, social and sustainability oversight responsibilities was limited and does not reflect the true state of affairs. These findings are of significance, as they provide support for the recommendations of King III (effective from 1 March 2010) that companies should in future provide integrated reporting in terms of both their finances and sustainability, and that the audit committee should take oversight responsibility for this. The study is of specific relevance for Africa with its rich mineral resources, as it is of vital importance that companies that do business on the continent behave as responsible corporate citizens, respect the environment and society, and provide accurate, reliable and credible reporting on their financial and sustainability performance to all of their stakeholders.

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