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Título
Cooperatives and the CSRD: do sector agnostic ESRS reflect their distinctive value?Fecha de publicación
2026Departamento
FinanzasVersión
PostprintTipo de documento
ArtículoIdioma
InglésDerechos
© 2025 Emerald Publishing LimitedAcceso
Acceso abiertoVersión de la editorial
https://doi.org/10.1108/SAMPJ-05-2025-0635Publicado en
Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal 2026, JanuaryEditorial
Emerald Publishing LimitedPalabras clave
CSRD
ESRS
European Green Deal
cooperatives ... [+]
ESRS
European Green Deal
cooperatives ... [+]
CSRD
ESRS
European Green Deal
cooperatives
Fuzzy Delphi
Sustainability accounting and reporting [-]
ESRS
European Green Deal
cooperatives
Fuzzy Delphi
Sustainability accounting and reporting [-]
Clasificación UNESCO
ContabilidadResumen
Purpose
This paper aims to examine whether, as suggested in the literature, a structural disconnect exists between the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and cooperatives, creating n ... [+]
Purpose
This paper aims to examine whether, as suggested in the literature, a structural disconnect exists between the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and cooperatives, creating non-congruent external pressures that undermine their identity, or whether, instead, the framework can function as a meaningful accountability tool that enables cooperatives to disclose their values within sustainability reporting.
Design/methodology/approach
The Fuzzy Delphi Method was used to identify equivalent ESRS to those found in literature, with the aim of capturing the differential value of cooperatives. A panel of 23 experts evaluated 133 indicators in four iterative rounds, and the results were analysed using fuzzy logic.
Findings
Forty-eight ESRS indicators reflected cooperative distinctiveness, while 15 expert-proposed indicators lay outside the ESRS scope. This reveals that the CSRD acts as a coercive, non-congruent institutional pressure on cooperatives.
Practical implications
The findings suggest that sustainability reporting frameworks for cooperatives should incorporate specific dimensions to effectively capture their identity and serve as accountability tools. Striking the right balance between adopting a standardised framework and allowing for contextual flexibility is crucial to preserving their identity.
Social implications
Recognising cooperative role is crucial for preserving organisational diversity and supporting inclusive, democratic and socially responsible economic models.
Originality/value
This study shifts the focus from how organisations report to the design of the CSRD, exploring the structural misalignment between the framework and cooperatives. Rather than analysing behavioural patterns, it draws conclusions by examining the pressure inherent in the standard itself. [-]


















