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Purpose

This paper aims to examine how environmental and social (E&S) disclosures influence ACD in France, explores the role of corporate governance (board independence, board size and executive directors) and evaluates the impact of the Grenelle II Law, a French regulation promoting corporate sustainability and transparency.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors analyze 142 French listed firms over 2010–2020 using panel regressions and a 150-keyword content analysis to measure ACD. A Difference-in-differences approach assesses how the Grenelle II Law affected the relationship between E&S disclosures and ACD.

Findings

Results show a positive association between E&S and ACD: firms more transparent in E&S reporting also disclose more on anti-corruption. Board independence and size further enhance ACD, and the E&S–ACD relationship strengthens following the full implementation of the Grenelle II Law.

Practical implications

Integrating E&S strategies can increase ACD and stakeholder trust. Strong corporate governance, particularly independent and larger boards, supports transparency, providing guidance for policymakers to align sustainability and anti-corruption practices and helping investors assess firm ethics and governance.

Originality/value

This study is among the first to investigate how E&S disclosures and governance influence ACD in France, a leading country in sustainability regulation. It highlights the effect of the Grenelle II Law on improving corporate transparency and introduces a novel 150-keyword content analysis tool for ACD.

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