Accounting for non-financial matters: technologies of humility as a means for developing critical dialogic accounting and accountability
Judy Brown and
Jesse Dillard
Meditari Accountancy Research, 2020, vol. 29, issue 2, 197-218
Abstract:
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present an expanded introduction ofJasanoff’s (2003,2007)work on “technologies of humility” to the accounting literature and to show how it can be useful in developing critical dialogic accountings for non-financial matters. Design/methodology/approach - Drawing onJasanoff’s (2003,2007)distinction between “technologies of hubris” and “technologies of humility”, this study extends prior research on critical dialogic accounting and accountability (CDAA) that seeks to “take pluralism seriously” (Brown, 2009;Dillard and Vinnari, 2019). This study shows how Jasanoff’s work facilitates constructing critical, reflexive approaches to accounting for non-financial matters consistent with agonistics-based CDAA. Findings - Jasanoff’s four proposed focal points for developing new analytical tools for accounting for non-financial matters and promoting participatory governance – framing, vulnerability, distribution and learning – are argued to be useful in conceptualising possible CDAA technologies. These aspects are all currently ignored or downplayed in conventional approaches to accounting for non-financial matters, limiting accounting’s ability to promote more socially just and ecologically sustainable societies. Originality/value - The authors introduce Jasanoff’s work on technologies of humility to show how CDAA, informed by Jasanoff’s proposed focal points, can help to expose controversial issues that powerful interests prefer to obscure, to surface the normative foundations of technocratic analytic methods, to address the need for plural perspectives and social learning and to bring all these aspects “into the dynamics of democratic debate” (Jasanoff, 2003, p. 240). As such, they provide criteria for constructing accounting technology consistent with agonistics-based CDAA.
Keywords: Agonistic pluralism; Accounting for non-financial matters; Participatory governance; Technologies of hubris; Technologies of humility; Critical dialogic accounting and accountability (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:medarp:medar-01-2020-0692
DOI: 10.1108/MEDAR-01-2020-0692
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