Matias Laine is Professor of Accounting at Tampere University, Finland. Helen Tregidga is Professor of Accounting at Royal Holloway, University of London, UK.
""Accountants are key partners in the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals through their role in supporting companies to make informed decisions and provide information aimed at discharging accountability for their actions and impacts. Sustainability Accounting and Accountability is the book that provides the essential underpinning for this task, introducing accounting tools that will advance sustainability and providing constructive critique as to if these tools are fit for purpose. This book is an insightful and clear-headed exposition from leaders in the field and will be essential for all students, practitioners and researchers as the regulatory context around sustainability accounting and reporting is in a state of flux."" Professor Jan Bebbington, Director, Pentland Centre for Sustainability in Business, University of Lancaster, UK. “Sustainability Accounting and Accountability is more essential than ever. As regulatory frameworks around sustainability disclosure, climate risk, and corporate accountability rapidly evolve, this book equips accounting students and educators with the critical conceptual tools needed to navigate and shape these changes. By addressing the intersection of accounting with the climate crisis, economic inequality, and human rights, it empowers students to engage meaningfully in the most urgent debates of our time. The viability of our future depends on books like this, and I hope all accounting students have access to courses with this as their primary resource.” Professor Jane Andrew, University of Sydney, Australia. “Without evidence or knowledge of the social, economic or ecological consequences of our decisions we will remain trapped in destructive patterns of behaviour. We will remain unaware of how to create sustained shared value, build resilient systems or reduce the risks we currently face. Drawing on extensive research, the authors identify the blind spots, knowledge gaps and those marginalised by conventional accounting and accountability. This book offers insights, new possibilities and pathways to align the undoubted power of accounting and accountability with the challenges of the 21st century to help ensure a sustainable future for all.” Professor Ian Thomson, Chair in Accounting and Sustainability, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK.