Article

Do board monitoring and audit committee quality help risky firms reduce CSR controversies?

Details

Citation

Kuzey C, Al-Shaer H, Uyar A & Karaman A (2024) Do board monitoring and audit committee quality help risky firms reduce CSR controversies?. Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11156-024-01280-6

Abstract
This study focuses on potential inhibiting and driving factors of corporate social responsibility (CSR) controversies including board monitoring intensity and audit committee quality with a particular focus on risky firms. We draw on agency, resource dependence, and slack financial resources theories to explain this association. Using an international sample between 2002-2019 and executing fixed-effects regression and Hayes’s moderation analysis methodology, we find that risky firms tend to commit more CSR controversies. Furthermore, CSR performance, firm complexity, and indebtedness exacerbate CSR controversies, whereas larger boards mitigate them. Moreover, while board monitoring intensity and audit committee quality do not prevent committing CSR controversies in absolute terms, they alleviate risky firms' CSR controversies tendency. The findings confirm agency theory and the monitoring function of the board in mitigating CSR controversies. In line with the resource dependence theory, audit committees’ independent members and members with different skills and expertise provide critical resources that help prevent CSR controversies.

Keywords
Board monitoring; Audit committee quality; Firm risk; CSR; CSR controversies

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting

StatusIn Press
Publication date online30/04/2024
Date accepted by journal01/04/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35969
ISSN0924-865X
eISSN1573-7179

People (1)

People

Professor Habiba Al-Shaer

Professor Habiba Al-Shaer

Professor in Accounting, Accounting & Finance