Count me in: The readers’ take on sustainability reporting (2008)
This report features the findings and analysis from the first GRI Readers’ Choice survey of report users. Conducted by SustainAbility and KPMG between October 2007 and January 2008, the survey captures the views of nearly 2,300 respondents.
Tomorrow’s Value (2006)
SustainAbility’s fourth international benchmark of corporate sustainability reporting, has once again been developed in partnership with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Standard & Poor's. Tomorrow’s Value asks the question: How far has the value lightbulb switched on in corporate brains and boardrooms?
Issue Brief: Assurance (2005)
At present, there are no requirements for companies to have their sustainability reports assured.
Issue Brief: Materiality (2004)
Materiality matters because it goes to the heart of what is meant by corporate accountability.
Risk & Opportunity (2004)
The 2004 Global Reporters international benchmark survey of corporate sustainability reporting. Considers the question: Is the glass of non-financial reporting (and wider sustainability reporting) currently half full, as enthusiasts might argue, or half empty, as some critics allege? The evidence suggests an increasingly positive assessment, though there are still major gaps to be closed in the linked fields of disclosure, reporting and communication.
Trust Us (2002)
The second report in the Global Reporters series to put corporate sustainability reporting under the microscope and focus on the emerging trends and hot topics in corporate accountability.
The Global Reporters (2000)
The fourth SustainAbility / United Nations Environment Programme survey of corporate reports and reporting – and the first of its kind to assess quality of sustainability disclosure and communication.
The Internet Reporting Report (1999)
A survey of corporate reporting over the Internet. It also begins to explore some of the ways in which virtuality will drive - or impede - the sustainability transition and whether the Internet will spur new forms of accountability?
The Social Reporting Report (1999)
This short publication is intended as an introduction to the field of corporate social reporting for those new to it, especially first time or would be reporters. It aims to link the growing demands for social accountability with the wider sustainable development debate.
The Non-Reporting Report (1998)
Our goal in this publication is to promote reporting by exploring why some companies choose to produce corporate environmental reports, while others choose not to. The focus is primarily on large - Fortune 500 - companies with signficant environmental impacts.
The 1997 Benchmark Survey (1997)
Our third benchmark survey of corporate environmental reports analyses 100 reports from 16 sectors and 18 countries.