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Layered fields of power: a Bourdieusian critique of sustainability accounting in EU regulation and beyond

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Purpose
This paper critically examines the symbolic architecture of sustainability accounting as it unfolds through recent European regulatory initiatives, notably the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS). Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's sociology, it interrogates how symbolic power operates across regulatory, professional and transnational domains to shape what is recognized as legitimate sustainability practice.
Design/methodology/approach
Grounded in a practitioner ethnography, the study draws on over 300 field artifacts, including assurance memos, stakeholder interviews and 120 reflexive observation notes compiled during the author's embedded roles in EU standard-setting and corporate assurance engagements between 2022 and 2025. The analysis proceeds through abductive coding using Bourdieu's theoretical constructs – field, symbolic capital, habitus and symbolic violence – and integrates postcolonial perspectives to unpack the epistemic consequences of global standard diffusion.
Findings
The paper identifies three interrelated symbolic dynamics structuring the sustainability accounting field: (1) regulatory contestation, wherein dominant actors mobilize symbolic capital to redefine reporting obligations in line with neoliberal market logics; (2) professional reproduction, whereby the internalized habitus of auditors and accountants narrows disclosure practices to audit-friendly metrics, marginalizing pluralist forms of accountability; and (3) epistemic domination, through which Western-centric standards enact symbolic violence in Global South contexts, enforcing compliance while silencing alternative sustainability ontologies.
Originality/value
This article offers a novel, layered application of Bourdieu's sociology to sustainability accounting, developing an integrated framework that connects field-level power asymmetries with practitioner dispositions and global regulatory diffusion. By theorizing sustainability disclosure as a symbolic field shaped by institutionalized misrecognition and epistemic exclusion, the paper enriches critical accounting debates and opens new pathways for research on decolonial accountability, reflexive professionalism and the symbolic politics of sustainability.
Original languageEnglish
Peer-reviewed scientific journalAccounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
Volume39
Issue number9
Pages (from-to)1-27
ISSN1368-0668
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 05.12.2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article - refereed

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure
    SDG 9 Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure

Keywords

  • 512 Business and Management
  • Bourdieu

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