Professions enjoy privileged positions and expend efforts to sustain these in public and interprofessional domains. This research investigates a previously vacant and largely uncontested jurisdiction in the UK charity sector that was claimed, maintained and subsequently expanded by the accountancy profession. We find that the dominant involvement of the accountancy profession leads to a charity regulatory framework that centralises the giving of an account. Over time, the accountancy profession advances highly specialised charity accounting and novel disclosures in annual reports. The study contributes to a deeper understanding of professions expanding jurisdiction in the absence of competition. In our conclusions, we scrutinise implication...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>Disputes can be very c...
This article aims at contributing to the sociology of the accountancy profession by analysing how pr...
Purpose - To trace the evolution of accounting regulations for the UK legal profession. Design/met...
Professions enjoy privileged positions and expend efforts to sustain these in public and interprofes...
Our research paper aims to obtain a deeper understanding of the issues that charities encounter with...
A substantial academic literature has accumulated on the development of professions,including the ac...
State regulation of charities is increasing. Nevertheless, although religious entities also pursue c...
This thesis examines the transformation of the modern-day charity as a result of accounting reforms ...
The paper analyses the changing nature of professionalism through a study of the effects of a change...
Purpose: This paper seeks to explore the way charity accountants understand, interpret and legitima...
This research examines the disclosure patterns of narrative information in the annual reports of the...
The interplay between the ideology of the profession that seeks to legitimize accounting's regulator...
Prior to 2015, there were no requirements for charities in New Zealand to produce financial reports....
Access to charities' financial statements has recently become possible in New Zealand due to the dev...
This thesis seeks to investigate the accounting, governance and executive compensation practices of ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>Disputes can be very c...
This article aims at contributing to the sociology of the accountancy profession by analysing how pr...
Purpose - To trace the evolution of accounting regulations for the UK legal profession. Design/met...
Professions enjoy privileged positions and expend efforts to sustain these in public and interprofes...
Our research paper aims to obtain a deeper understanding of the issues that charities encounter with...
A substantial academic literature has accumulated on the development of professions,including the ac...
State regulation of charities is increasing. Nevertheless, although religious entities also pursue c...
This thesis examines the transformation of the modern-day charity as a result of accounting reforms ...
The paper analyses the changing nature of professionalism through a study of the effects of a change...
Purpose: This paper seeks to explore the way charity accountants understand, interpret and legitima...
This research examines the disclosure patterns of narrative information in the annual reports of the...
The interplay between the ideology of the profession that seeks to legitimize accounting's regulator...
Prior to 2015, there were no requirements for charities in New Zealand to produce financial reports....
Access to charities' financial statements has recently become possible in New Zealand due to the dev...
This thesis seeks to investigate the accounting, governance and executive compensation practices of ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>Disputes can be very c...
This article aims at contributing to the sociology of the accountancy profession by analysing how pr...
Purpose - To trace the evolution of accounting regulations for the UK legal profession. Design/met...