The paper argues that accounting historians can help us to understand the origins of the British Industrial Revolution (BIR) by explaining the contribution of accounting to financial success. It re-examines the archive of the Carron Company (hereafter, 'Carron') from its formation in 1759 to around 1850 to explore the theory derived from Marx that class conflict, the capitalist mentality, its social relations of production, and accounts, drove the BIR. It shows that, contrary to the currently accepted view that Carron's early financial accounts were a 'shambles', its partners used integrated financial and management accounts based on double entry bookkeeping to impose capitalist accountability on their managers and workers. The paper argues...
The paper introduces the notion of different methods of calculating and analysing profitability as s...
A major debate neglected by accounting historians is the importance of landlords in the English agri...
The purpose of this paper is to cast a new light on the post-Sombartian debate. As we know, Sombart ...
An important debate neglected by accounting historians concerns the existence, origins and significa...
An earlier paper (Part one) argued that to appreciate the social significance of accounting today we...
Traditional accounting histories date the advent of sophisticated cost accounting to the mid-1880s. ...
To appreciate the social significance of accounting today we must study it in changing socio-histori...
Purpose – There are two main alternative explanations in the literature for the patterns of financia...
The paper offers a new perspective on the management and accounting practices at this pioneering fir...
The paper examines an early case of creative accounting, and how, during British industrialization, ...
We demonstrate that social movements can use accounting for progressive purposes, and that such outc...
This paper explores the functioning of accounting in the social, economic and political contexts sur...
Textbooks and business managers presume that accounting is the most important management control sys...
Through a detailed critique of Johnson & Kaplan's Relevance Lost, (Johnson, H.T. & Kaplan, R.S., Rel...
Accounting and business historians are showing a growing interest in the origin and development of c...
The paper introduces the notion of different methods of calculating and analysing profitability as s...
A major debate neglected by accounting historians is the importance of landlords in the English agri...
The purpose of this paper is to cast a new light on the post-Sombartian debate. As we know, Sombart ...
An important debate neglected by accounting historians concerns the existence, origins and significa...
An earlier paper (Part one) argued that to appreciate the social significance of accounting today we...
Traditional accounting histories date the advent of sophisticated cost accounting to the mid-1880s. ...
To appreciate the social significance of accounting today we must study it in changing socio-histori...
Purpose – There are two main alternative explanations in the literature for the patterns of financia...
The paper offers a new perspective on the management and accounting practices at this pioneering fir...
The paper examines an early case of creative accounting, and how, during British industrialization, ...
We demonstrate that social movements can use accounting for progressive purposes, and that such outc...
This paper explores the functioning of accounting in the social, economic and political contexts sur...
Textbooks and business managers presume that accounting is the most important management control sys...
Through a detailed critique of Johnson & Kaplan's Relevance Lost, (Johnson, H.T. & Kaplan, R.S., Rel...
Accounting and business historians are showing a growing interest in the origin and development of c...
The paper introduces the notion of different methods of calculating and analysing profitability as s...
A major debate neglected by accounting historians is the importance of landlords in the English agri...
The purpose of this paper is to cast a new light on the post-Sombartian debate. As we know, Sombart ...