BackgroundIn recent times, we have seen significant developments in responsible investing. Firstly, the uptake of environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria in finance and business in general has seen unprecedented acceleration (Fink, 2021). Once considered a "niche" strategy, ESG adoption is now widespread and mainstream (Edmans, 2022). A total of 4,902 investors managing $121.3tn had signed the Principles for Responsible Investment by the first quarter of 2022.The growth of responsible investing was influenced by the 2030 Agenda and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and, in particular, the Paris Agreement that led to commitments to align financial flows with the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5°C. In the EU context, the European Green Deal (European Commission, 2019) and the EU Sustainable Finance Taxonomy (European Parliament and the Council of the European Union, 2020), building on the previous EU Action Plan on Sustainable Finance (European Commission, 2018), have promoted an ambitious package of measures.Over the past year, the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic further exposed the dire need for investments supporting a resilient economy and society. Public recovery programmes such as the Recovery Plan of Europe (Council of the European Union, 2020a, 2020b) or the American Rescue Plan (Tankersley and Crowley, 2021) have been impressive; however, the scale of the investment challenge calls for the financial sector to step up, take responsibility and reorient investments to incentivize sustainable business practices, low-carbon and circular solutions and societal well-being.At the same time, data collection and corporate reporting transparency challenges remain, and investors still find it difficult to direct funding to companies which represent good investments in the long-termfor both shareholders and society. Areas of concern are, for example, risks of greenwashing, potential exclusion of companies at the early stage of sustainability transitions and the reporting costs for small and medium sized companies. The role of investors and their accountability has also raised social justice and equity concerns (Parsa, 2021), and calls to ensure that sustainability issues are not instrumentalized for pure financial interests, but have real-world positive impact on the safety and well-being of all.Academic evidence in the area of responsible investing is increasing, yet its dissemination and impact on real-world investing practices remains fairly limited. Advancing this agenda requires collaboration of both academics and investors, as well as policymakers. This Special Issue (SI) aims to strengthen the dialogue between practitioners and academics about theoretical and practical challenges on enhancing positive business impact on society through responsible investing through:understanding the state of the art; explaining existing practices and developments in the field; uncovering patterns and risks; and exploring multidisciplinary perspectives.