Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami

This study examines government influence, changes in societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami on corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Sri Lanka, a developing country. Hypotheses are formulated based on legitimacy theory to examine the annual changes in total quantity and categories of CSR disc...

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Main Authors: Dharmaratne, T., Christopher, T., Cullen, Lisa
Format: Journal Article
Published: Curtin University of Technology 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42315
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author Dharmaratne, T.
Christopher, T.
Cullen, Lisa
author_facet Dharmaratne, T.
Christopher, T.
Cullen, Lisa
author_sort Dharmaratne, T.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study examines government influence, changes in societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami on corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Sri Lanka, a developing country. Hypotheses are formulated based on legitimacy theory to examine the annual changes in total quantity and categories of CSR disclosures between 2004 and 2007. Four directional hypotheses are used to test the increase in CSR disclosures and the increase in category-specific CSR disclosures based on a disclosure classification system. A null hypothesis is used to test whether the change in CSR disclosures from 2004 to 2005 and from 2005 to 2006 remained relatively constant after 2006. The directional hypotheses and the null hypothesis on the extent of disclosure are supported but the category-specific hypotheses are rejcted. This result provides support for legitimacy theory.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2011
publisher Curtin University of Technology
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-423152017-01-30T14:58:49Z Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami Dharmaratne, T. Christopher, T. Cullen, Lisa This study examines government influence, changes in societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami on corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Sri Lanka, a developing country. Hypotheses are formulated based on legitimacy theory to examine the annual changes in total quantity and categories of CSR disclosures between 2004 and 2007. Four directional hypotheses are used to test the increase in CSR disclosures and the increase in category-specific CSR disclosures based on a disclosure classification system. A null hypothesis is used to test whether the change in CSR disclosures from 2004 to 2005 and from 2005 to 2006 remained relatively constant after 2006. The directional hypotheses and the null hypothesis on the extent of disclosure are supported but the category-specific hypotheses are rejcted. This result provides support for legitimacy theory. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42315 Curtin University of Technology fulltext
spellingShingle Dharmaratne, T.
Christopher, T.
Cullen, Lisa
Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title_full Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title_fullStr Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title_full_unstemmed Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title_short Corporate social responsibility in Sri Lanka: The impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
title_sort corporate social responsibility in sri lanka: the impact of government influence, societal expectations and the 2004 tsunami
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42315