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Accessibility In ESG, HR, Digital Transformation and Emergency Services

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dc.contributor.author Bokor, Edita
dc.contributor.author Stănilă, Manuel-Victoraș
dc.contributor.author Lățea, Cristi Daniel
dc.contributor.author Nen, Madlena
dc.date.accessioned 2026-05-21T07:53:31Z
dc.date.available 2026-05-21T07:53:31Z
dc.date.issued 2026
dc.identifier.issn 3100-5527
dc.identifier.uri https://irek.ase.md:443/xmlui/handle/123456789/4885
dc.description BOKOR, Edita; Manuel-Victoraș STĂNILĂ; Cristi Daniel LĂȚEA and Madlena NEN. Accessibility In ESG, HR, Digital Transformation and Emergency Services. Online. In: Proceedings of the 29th International Scientific Conference Competitiveness and Innovation in the Knowledge Economy, Chișinău, Moldova, September 26-27, 2025. București: Editura ASE, 2026, pp. 40-46. ISSN 3100-5527. Disponibil: https://doi.org/10.24818/cike2025.04 en_US
dc.description.abstract Accessibility has become an important policy priority, anchored in frameworks such as the UN CRPD, the EU Web Accessibility Directive, and the European Accessibility Act. Yet in management scholarship and practice it is still treated mainly as compliance. This paper investigates why accessibility, though referenced in ESG reporting, HR/DEI frameworks, and digital transformation, has not yet been institutionalized as a distinct management strategy. We reviewed 2020–2025 peer-reviewed articles and EU policy reports retrieved from Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar; thematically coded references to accessibility across ESG, HR/DEI, digital transformation, and public-sector management; and conducted an analytical gap assessment against the defining features of fundamental strategies (scope, objectives, performance measures, long-term orientation). Accessibility is largely compliance-driven across domains. It is often implemented as an add-on or technical adjustment rather than as a proactive, value-creating framework. Positive developments—such as Romania’s SMS-113 service and AI-enabled tools in emergency call management—demonstrate potential but remain isolated improvements. Reframing accessibility as a strategic asset could generate competitive advantages and strengthen organizational resilience. Institutionalizing it as a fundamental management strategy could also catalyze digital innovation and enhance public value. The paper contributes a clear research agenda and a rationale for developing an Accessibility Strategy Framework. This framework aims to guide organizations and public institutions beyond mere compliance toward inclusive, high-performance design. JEL: M10, M14, O33, H83, I18 en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher ASE en_US
dc.subject accessibility en_US
dc.subject strategic management en_US
dc.subject ESG en_US
dc.subject diversity and inclusion en_US
dc.subject digital innovation en_US
dc.subject public sector en_US
dc.subject 112 emergency services en_US
dc.title Accessibility In ESG, HR, Digital Transformation and Emergency Services en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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