Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
1988 - 2024
Current editor(s): Prof James Guthrie and Prof Lee Parker From Emerald Group Publishing Limited Bibliographic data for series maintained by Emerald Support (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 27, issue 8, 2014
- Addressing directions in interdisciplinary accounting research pp. 1218-1226

- Lee D. Parker and James Guthrie
- Realizing the potential of interdisciplinarity in accounting research pp. 1227-1232

- Brendan O’Dwyer and Jeffrey Unerman
- Creative spaces in interdisciplinary accounting research pp. 1233-1240

- Ingrid Jeacle and Chris Carter
- The present and future of accounting history pp. 1241-1249

- Garry D. Carnegie
- Interdisciplinary accounting research in the Public Sector pp. 1250-1256

- Kerry Jacobs and Suresh Cuganesan
- Reflections on interdisciplinary accounting research: the state of the art of intellectual capital pp. 1257-1264

- John Dumay
- A dream deferred: interdisciplinary accounting in the US pp. 1265-1270

- Timothy J. Fogarty
- From persuasive to authoritative speech genres pp. 1271-1307

- Hanne Nørreklit and Robert W. Scapens
- Domain theory and method theory in management accounting research pp. 1308-1338

- Kari Lukka and Eija Vinnari
Volume 27, issue 7, 2014
- Integrated Reporting: Insights, gaps and an agenda for future research pp. 1042-1067

- Charl de Villiers, Leonardo Rinaldi and Jeffrey Unerman
- Integrated Reporting and internal mechanisms of change pp. 1068-1089

- Wendy Stubbs and Colin Higgins
- Walking the talk(s): Organisational narratives of integrated reporting pp. 1090-1119

- Colin Higgins, Wendy Stubbs and Tyron Love
- Integrated reporting: On the need for broadening out and opening up pp. 1120-1156

- Judy Brown and Jesse Dillard
- Towards a legitimate compromise? pp. 1157-1189

- Koen van Bommel
- The value added statement – an appropriate instrument for Integrated Reporting pp. 1190-1216

- Axel Haller and Chris van Staden
Volume 27, issue 6, 2014
- The transnational regulation of accounting: insights, gaps and an agenda for future research pp. 894-902

- Paul Gillis, Richard Petty and Roy Suddaby
- Transnationalism and the transforming roles of professional accountancy bodies pp. 903-932

- Anna Samsonova-Taddei and Christopher Humphrey
- Transnational standard setting in accounting pp. 933-955

- Sebastian Botzem
- GAAP convergence or convergence Gap: unfolding ten years of accounting change pp. 956-994

- Lisa Baudot
- The development of national and transnational regulation on the scope of consolidation pp. 995-1025

- Christopher Nobes
- Accrual-based earnings management in state owned companies pp. 1026-1040

- Francesco Capalbo, Alex Frino, Vito Mollica and Riccardo Palumbo
Volume 27, issue 5, 2014
- Tony Lowe and the Interdisciplinary and Critical Perspectives on Accounting Project pp. 766-777

- Richard Laughlin
- “And the BAFTA goes to […]”: the assurance role of the auditor in the film awards ceremony pp. 778-808

- Ingrid Jeacle
- Progress towards institutionalising field-wide water efficiency change pp. 809-833

- Matthew Egan
- Whistle-blowing by external auditors in South Africa pp. 834-862

- Warren Maroun and Jill Atkins
- Corporate social disclosures: a user perspective on assurance pp. 863-887

- Renfred Wong and Andrew Millington
Volume 27, issue 4, 2014
- Rhetoric and argument in social and environmental reporting: the Dirty Laundry case pp. 602-633

- Niamh Brennan and Doris Merkl-Davies
- Weaving a web of control pp. 634-654

- Puja Ladva and Jane Andrew
- The rise and fall of the UK operating and financial review pp. 655-685

- N. Rowbottom and M.A.S. Schroeder
- Motivations for issuing standalone CSR reports: a survey of Canadian firms pp. 686-714

- Linda Thorne, Lois S. Mahoney and Giacomo Manetti
- Historiography for accounting pp. 715-755

- Garry D. Carnegie
Volume 27, issue 3, 2014
- Practitioners are from Mars; academics are from Venus? pp. 394-425

- Basil P. Tucker and Alan D. Lowe
- Accounting without accounting pp. 426-464

- Fábio Frezatti, David B. Carter and Marcelo F.G. Barroso
- Costing in the Newcastle Infirmary, 1840-1888 pp. 465-488

- Warwick Funnell, Andrew Holden and David Oldroyd
- The uncertainties of risk management pp. 489-526

- Eija Vinnari and Peter Skærbæk
- Developing a reporting and evaluation framework for biodiversity pp. 527-562

- Grant Samkin, Annika Schneider and Dannielle Tappin
- Rethinking bank business models: the role of intangibles pp. 563-589

- Lei Chen, Jo Danbolt and John Holland
Volume 27, issue 2, 2014
- Higher education and sustainable development pp. 218-233

- Jasmin Godemann, Jan Bebbington, Christian Herzig and Jeremy Moon
- Can accreditation help a leopard change its spots? pp. 234-258

- Stuart Cooper, Carole Parkes and John Blewitt
- Making water count: water accountability change within an Australian university pp. 259-282

- Matthew Egan
- France's new economic regulations: insights from institutional legitimacy theory pp. 283-316

- Mohamed Chelli, Sylvain Durocher and Jacques Richard
- Management, accounting and philosophy pp. 317-356

- Hiroshi Takeda and Trevor Boyns
- The religious imperative of cost accounting in the early industrial revolution pp. 357-381

- Warwick Funnell and Robert Williams
Volume 27, issue 1, 2014
- The global accounting academic: what counts! pp. 2-14

- James Guthrie and Lee D. Parker
- Media coverage of accounting: the NRL salary cap crisis pp. 15-47

- Paul Andon and Clinton Free
- Structures and relationships: women partners' careers in Germany and the UK pp. 48-72

- Patrizia Kokot
- From meticulous professionals to superheroes of the business world pp. 73-118

- Claire-France Picard, Sylvain Durocher and Yves Gendron
- Contrasting realities: corporate environmental disclosure and stakeholder-released information pp. 119-149

- Michelle Rodrigue
- Kalimantan's biodiversity: developing accounting models to prevent its economic destruction pp. 150-182

- Tehmina Khan
- Traditional and alternative methods of measuring the understandability of accounting narratives pp. 183-208

- Michael Jones and Malcolm Smith
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