Building on the argument that justice should be the transcendent principle in accounting, we argue that social accounting invokes notions of community, shared social values, and fairness in the distribution of social resources. These ideas are elaborated in relation to local government, which provides a window on how communities make decisions about distributing their social resources and the accounting processes which guide these decisions. Fieldwork in two large but contrasting English local authorities suggests that the potential of social accounting is not reflected in the predominant accounting systems in local government organisations, but in more subtle and successful forms of ‘enacted social accounting’. Its utility relates to the a...
In an increasingly complex world with increasingly powerful organisations it seems inevitable that s...
Sheila Killian and Philip O'Regan did a case study of Shell and its community reporting in North-Wes...
We have demonstrated throughout this book that accounting is not a neutral, benign technology report...
This paper presents a Social Account of Glasgow students’ experience of working part-time while in f...
This paper presents a Social Account of Glasgow students' experience of working part-time while in f...
Social accounting as a discipline has challenged the methodology and focus of the larger field of ac...
Sustainable environments, global networks, ethical financial reporting, and emancipatory accounting ...
At the heart of the social accounting project lies a radical and emancipatory intent. Yet social acc...
For this special issue we invited authors to consider the practice of accounting and the mobilisatio...
Corruption is a universal concern that can impact the quality of life of citizens. Of relevance to t...
The transformative potential of accounting-sustainability hybrids has been promoted and problematize...
In an increasingly complex world with increasingly powerful organisations it seems inevitable that s...
This article builds upon calls for a shift in the paradigm of the accounting discipline, away from p...
This essay is intended as a self-reflective, auto-critique of the ‘social accounting community’. The...
Different stakeholders are now showing a higher interest in organisations’ social responsibility tha...
In an increasingly complex world with increasingly powerful organisations it seems inevitable that s...
Sheila Killian and Philip O'Regan did a case study of Shell and its community reporting in North-Wes...
We have demonstrated throughout this book that accounting is not a neutral, benign technology report...
This paper presents a Social Account of Glasgow students’ experience of working part-time while in f...
This paper presents a Social Account of Glasgow students' experience of working part-time while in f...
Social accounting as a discipline has challenged the methodology and focus of the larger field of ac...
Sustainable environments, global networks, ethical financial reporting, and emancipatory accounting ...
At the heart of the social accounting project lies a radical and emancipatory intent. Yet social acc...
For this special issue we invited authors to consider the practice of accounting and the mobilisatio...
Corruption is a universal concern that can impact the quality of life of citizens. Of relevance to t...
The transformative potential of accounting-sustainability hybrids has been promoted and problematize...
In an increasingly complex world with increasingly powerful organisations it seems inevitable that s...
This article builds upon calls for a shift in the paradigm of the accounting discipline, away from p...
This essay is intended as a self-reflective, auto-critique of the ‘social accounting community’. The...
Different stakeholders are now showing a higher interest in organisations’ social responsibility tha...
In an increasingly complex world with increasingly powerful organisations it seems inevitable that s...
Sheila Killian and Philip O'Regan did a case study of Shell and its community reporting in North-Wes...
We have demonstrated throughout this book that accounting is not a neutral, benign technology report...