2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10551-014-2340-3
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The Sustainability Balanced Scorecard: A Systematic Review of Architectures

Abstract: The increasing strategic importance of environmental, social, and ethical issues as well as related performance measures has spurred interest in corporate sustainability performance measurement and management systems. This paper focuses on the balanced scorecard (BSC), a performance measurement and management system aiming at balancing financial and nonfinancial as well as short and long-term measures. Modifications to the original BSC which explicitly consider environmental, social, or ethical issues are ofte… Show more

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Cited by 361 publications
(359 citation statements)
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“…This critique is well established in the literature and therefore has already been addressed in our review that consequently also explored nonlinear architectures (Hansen and Schaltegger 2016). However, Hahn and Figge's critique is once again too simplistic for reasons we now present.…”
Section: Critique Of Linear Cause-and-effect Relationships and Systemmentioning
confidence: 67%
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“…This critique is well established in the literature and therefore has already been addressed in our review that consequently also explored nonlinear architectures (Hansen and Schaltegger 2016). However, Hahn and Figge's critique is once again too simplistic for reasons we now present.…”
Section: Critique Of Linear Cause-and-effect Relationships and Systemmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Given the complex relationships between architecture and actual organisational practice as well as the high relevance legitimacy plays in corporate sustainability management practices (Schaltegger and Hörisch 2015;Aragón-Correa et al 2016), these different cases of misfit should also be explored in future research from the 4 The results of Bento et al's (2016) experimental study show, to some extent, that the technical integration of sustainability-related objectives in SBSC architecture may not always prevent financial bias. While the authors imply there is a general bias in the SBSC (even if it was implemented for instrumental reasons), we see the study rather as a proof of legitimacy seeking by the top management as a response to institutional pressures, with managers on the lower levels (the study participants) being pressured to decouple (Hansen and Schaltegger (2016). Bento et al themselves address one major limitation of their study: the SBSC architecture in their experiment was limited to an add-on perspective (architecture ''A0'' in our SBSC typology), which we have described as being prone to use as a marketing exercise or for philanthropic purposes.…”
Section: Contingencies Fit and Misfit In The Use Of The Typology Of mentioning
confidence: 68%
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