Zabihollah Rezaee , Gaoguang Zhou , Luofan (Luther) Bu
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Corporate social irresponsibility and the occurrence of data breaches: A stakeholder management perspective
Ever-increasing data breach incidents are destroying firms’ operations and financial sustainability. We examine the association between corporate social irresponsibility (CSIR) and data breach incidents, stock market reactions to these incidents, and how the affected firms respond to data breaches. Using a sample of 24,456 observations from 2005 to 2018, we find a positive and significant association between CSIR and the occurrence of data breaches. More importantly, CSIR, regarding employee, community, and corporate governance issues, is more likely to result in internal data breaches, and environmental concerns can trigger external attacks. In contrast, product concerns can lead to both internal breaches and external attacks. Consistent with our prediction, the negative stock market reaction to data breaches is more pronounced in CSIR than in non-CSIR firms. Finally, we show that firms respond to data breaches by establishing corporate social responsibility (CSR) committees. Firms with such committees, especially those with robust CSR committees, are more likely to react to data breaches by mitigating CSIR. Our results offer important and timely policy, practice, and research implications as data breaches persist.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Accounting Information Systems will publish thoughtful, well developed articles that examine the rapidly evolving relationship between accounting and information technology. Articles may range from empirical to analytical, from practice-based to the development of new techniques, but must be related to problems facing the integration of accounting and information technology. The journal will address (but will not limit itself to) the following specific issues: control and auditability of information systems; management of information technology; artificial intelligence research in accounting; development issues in accounting and information systems; human factors issues related to information technology; development of theories related to information technology; methodological issues in information technology research; information systems validation; human–computer interaction research in accounting information systems. The journal welcomes and encourages articles from both practitioners and academicians.