Mapping the Landscape of Sustainability Reporting: A Bibliometric Analysis Across
ESG, Circular Economy, and Integrated Reporting with Sectoral Perspectives
Sustainability reporting has evolved into a multidimensional field encompassing Environmental,
Social, and Governance (ESG) disclosure, integrated reporting (IR), and circular economy
(CE) practices. This study aims to map the intellectual and thematic landscape of
sustainability reporting research over the past decade, with a focus on sectoral differentiation.
Drawing on bibliometric analysis of 1611 scientific articles indexed in Scopus, this
research applies co-word analysis, thematic mapping, and bibliographic coupling to
identify prevailing trends, conceptual clusters, and knowledge gaps. The results reveal
a clear progression from fragmented debates toward a more integrated discourse combining
ESG, IR, and CE frameworks. In the real economy, sustainability reporting demonstrates
a mature operational focus, supported by standardized frameworks and extensive empirical
evidence. In contrast, the banking sector exhibits emerging engagement with sustainability
disclosure, while the public sector remains at an earlier stage of conceptual and
practical development. Despite the increasing convergence of research streams, gaps
persist in linking reporting practices to tangible sustainability outcomes, integrating
digital innovations, and addressing social dimensions of circularity. This study concludes
that further interdisciplinary and sector-specific research is essential to advance
credible, comparable, and decision-useful reporting practices capable of supporting
the transition toward sustainable and circular business models.