This article argues that some of the most popular treatments of the development of accountancy in Britain do not accord with the historical evidence. This is true of the functionalist's altruistic view of the profession and of the predominant paradigm – the Weberian ‘professional project’. There is no evidence in the early history of British accountancy to support the concepts of, for example: monopolistic closure, credentialism, or the social construction of skill. Instead, using a model based on technological determinism, the article reasserts the importance of the industrialisation process in forming the accountancy profession, and sees the formation of the chartered societies as largely set up to brand the accountants' training and ther...
Professionalisation is a major research focus of accounting historians, with particular attention pa...
This article quantifies the growth in the number of professional accountants in British management, ...
This article analyses the relationship between a Scottish manufacturing company and the accountancy ...
This article argues that some of the most popular treatments of the development of accountancy in Br...
The history of accountants, accounting firms and their representative bodies has been thoroughly res...
Several writers on the development of accountancy in the nineteenth century, such as Jones, have sta...
To appreciate the social significance of accounting today we must study it in changing socio-histori...
An earlier paper (Part one) argued that to appreciate the social significance of accounting today we...
THE EVOLUTION OF ACCOUNTANCY — AN OUTLINEOF THE PROBLEMDespite possible assumptions, accountan...
An important debate neglected by accounting historians concerns the existence, origins and significa...
Hoskin and Macve have suggested that the crucial discontinuity in accounting’s development over the ...
The relationship (or what might be better described as the absence of a relationship) between accoun...
This paper examines the range of activities undertaken in the mid-1850s by the men who formed the ea...
Friendly societies date from the seventeenth century and have been the subject of statutory recognit...
Professionalisation is a major research focus of accounting historians, with particular attention pa...
This article quantifies the growth in the number of professional accountants in British management, ...
This article analyses the relationship between a Scottish manufacturing company and the accountancy ...
This article argues that some of the most popular treatments of the development of accountancy in Br...
The history of accountants, accounting firms and their representative bodies has been thoroughly res...
Several writers on the development of accountancy in the nineteenth century, such as Jones, have sta...
To appreciate the social significance of accounting today we must study it in changing socio-histori...
An earlier paper (Part one) argued that to appreciate the social significance of accounting today we...
THE EVOLUTION OF ACCOUNTANCY — AN OUTLINEOF THE PROBLEMDespite possible assumptions, accountan...
An important debate neglected by accounting historians concerns the existence, origins and significa...
Hoskin and Macve have suggested that the crucial discontinuity in accounting’s development over the ...
The relationship (or what might be better described as the absence of a relationship) between accoun...
This paper examines the range of activities undertaken in the mid-1850s by the men who formed the ea...
Friendly societies date from the seventeenth century and have been the subject of statutory recognit...
Professionalisation is a major research focus of accounting historians, with particular attention pa...
This article quantifies the growth in the number of professional accountants in British management, ...
This article analyses the relationship between a Scottish manufacturing company and the accountancy ...