Social reporting by islamic banks
Social reporting by islamic banks
The last thirty years have witnessed the appearance and rapid expansion of Islamic banking both inside and outside the Islamic world. Islamic banks provide financial products that do not violate Sharia, the Islamic law of human conduct. The Islamic principles upon which the banks claim to operate give an important role to social issues. Applying these principles, we develop a benchmark set of social disclosures appropriate to Islamic banks. These are then compared, using a disclosure index approach, the actual social disclosures contained in the annual reports of twenty-nine Islamic banks (located in sixteen countries) to this benchmark. In addition, content analysis is undertaken to measure the volume of social disclosures. Our analysis suggests that social reporting by Islamic banks falls significantly short of our expectations. The results of the analysis also suggest that banks required to pay the Islamic religious tax Zakah provide more social disclosures than banks not subject to Zakah.
266-289
Maali, Bassam
6568baba-7fb8-452d-b96c-b4ea485aae73
Casson, Peter
5ac137b1-dc94-41fb-82c5-736ad5be75c2
Napier, Christopher
18004e1c-0616-43b2-98cf-afaa1f2cca99
2006
Maali, Bassam
6568baba-7fb8-452d-b96c-b4ea485aae73
Casson, Peter
5ac137b1-dc94-41fb-82c5-736ad5be75c2
Napier, Christopher
18004e1c-0616-43b2-98cf-afaa1f2cca99
Abstract
The last thirty years have witnessed the appearance and rapid expansion of Islamic banking both inside and outside the Islamic world. Islamic banks provide financial products that do not violate Sharia, the Islamic law of human conduct. The Islamic principles upon which the banks claim to operate give an important role to social issues. Applying these principles, we develop a benchmark set of social disclosures appropriate to Islamic banks. These are then compared, using a disclosure index approach, the actual social disclosures contained in the annual reports of twenty-nine Islamic banks (located in sixteen countries) to this benchmark. In addition, content analysis is undertaken to measure the volume of social disclosures. Our analysis suggests that social reporting by Islamic banks falls significantly short of our expectations. The results of the analysis also suggest that banks required to pay the Islamic religious tax Zakah provide more social disclosures than banks not subject to Zakah.
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Published date: 2006
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 36524
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/36524
ISSN: 0001-3072
PURE UUID: ae232c5f-4c9c-4be5-a3c8-941c4725f050
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Date deposited: 20 Jun 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:57
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Author:
Bassam Maali
Author:
Peter Casson
Author:
Christopher Napier
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