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Researching accounting in health care: considering the nature of academic contribution

Christopher S. Chapman and Steven Cahan

Accounting and Finance, 2015, vol. 55, issue 2, 397-413

Abstract: type="main" xml:id="acfi12142-abs-0001">

As academics we naturally seek to address interesting and important questions. Our concerns for rigour drive us to work from generally accessible preoccupations towards more narrowly and precisely defined questions however. Such specialisation is properly understood as a source of strength in our knowledge. The growing impact of governance mechanisms surrounding journal rankings threatens this strength by attacking our abilities to produce, but also to integrate, the specialised contributions that we make however. This article will expand upon this basic argument and further elaborate it through a discussion of the academic literature around costing in health care.

Date: 2015
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