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Gender Diversity Disclosure Regulation

Empirical Evidence from Germany

by Lennart Prinz (Author)
©2026 Thesis XXVIII, 298 Pages

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Summary

Regulators increasingly use gender diversity disclosure regulations (GDDR) to promote female representation in corporate leadership positions through public pressure. Despite their far-reaching impact on corporate personnel decisions, evidence on efficacy of GDDR is limited. This study examines the disclosure practice and the development of gender diversity across management levels, the determinants of GDDR efficacy, and potentially unintended consequences of GDDR. The results show an overall increase in female leadership among companies affected by GDDR. Furthermore, the findings indicate that different determinants (e.g., public pressure) are associated with the efficacy of GDDR. Moreover, greater supervisory board gender diversity correlates with lower financial reporting quality in specific contexts under certain contextual factors. The empirical findings offer valuable implications for regulators, auditors, enforcement institutions as well as for users of gender diversity reports.

Details

Pages
XXVIII, 298
Publication Year
2026
ISBN (Hardcover)
9783631940891
Language
English
Keywords
Public pressure Nudging Public policy Accounting for transparency Targeted transparency Disclosure Gender diversity GDDR
Published
Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, New York, Oxford, 2026. xxviii, 300 pp., 50 fig. b/w, 50 tables.
Product Safety
Peter Lang Group AG

Biographical notes

Lennart Prinz (Author)

Lennart Prinz studied Business Administration at the University of Münster (Germany) and Finance & Accounting at the University of Bamberg (Germany). He worked as a research assistant for the Chair of International Accounting at the University of Münster.

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Title: Gender Diversity Disclosure Regulation