Does voluntary disclosure matter when organizations violate stakeholder trust?

Authors

  • Jurgen Willems University of Hamburg
  • Lewis Faulk American University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30636/jbpa.21.45

Keywords:

Voluntary disclosure, Crisis, Reputation, Nonprofit, Stakeholders

Abstract

The reputations of nonprofit organizations can be damaged as a result of an organizational scandal, as demonstrated by recent examples of international nonprofit and non-governmental organizations. Common practice and findings from studies using administrative data suggest that nonprofits can reduce the negative effects of scandals by voluntarily disclosing information about the event to stakeholders. This study tests those assumptions in an experimental framework and finds that organizations’ voluntary disclosure of a scandal does not effectively mitigate negative donation intentions following the crisis.

Additional Files

Published

2019-04-18

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

Does voluntary disclosure matter when organizations violate stakeholder trust?. (2019). Journal of Behavioral Public Administration, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.30636/jbpa.21.45