ntegrated Reports privilege a neo-liberal programmatic and incorporate the elements of sustainability that are aligned with underlying principles of capitalism. This does not mean that Integrated Reporting and Thinking will not produce some positive social and environmental changes. However, the content of an Integrated Report constructs the points of common reference between the sustainability programmatic and local corporate practices and provides a frame (or structural constraint) within which sustainability can be embedded (or resisted) into the corporation. In line with Flower (2014) I argue that current format of the Integrated Report excludes too much of the sustainability programmatic and does not allow for any substantive redistribution of power.