Accounting and the environment can no longer be considered mutually exclusive. Accountability forms part of the philosophical justifications for current accounting practice, and as such, it is a concept that may provide a pivotal grounding upon which environmental issues may be recognised within its practice. This paper examines the radical possibilities of environmental accountability, the contribution that this could make to a new practice of accounting and ultimately, a pathway out of the environmental crisis that could be forged by such changes. Central to the development of the ideas within this work is a critique of the relationship between accountability and transparency.
History
Citation
This article was originally published as Andrew, J, Environmental Accounting and Accountability: Can the Opaque be Transparent?, Interdisciplinary Environment Review, 2 (2), 2001, 201-216. Original journal available here.