This Habermasian qualitative study considers the nature and extent of accounting and austerity colonisation in the context of widening arts engagement in England in a period of financial austerity. It also explores some of the key impacts of austerity and accounting monitoring and how arts organisations coped with them. The findings suggest that the discourses of accounting and austerity were associated with a variety of forms of colonisation and limited resistance along a continuum. The discourse of austerity was portrayed as much more problematic and colonising than the extensive accounting monitoring which was taken for granted. The discourses and practices of austerity were implicated in morally ambiguous and role-conflicted organisatio...
This paper contributes to the diverse and growing stream of accounting research on Foucault’s notion...
This article explores arts, cultural and community engagement (ACCE) in the context of enduring aust...
This paper explores the craft of visual accounts in corporate reporting practices through an arts-in...
This Habermasian qualitative study considers the nature and extent of accounting and austerity colon...
The paper adopts a lens of new materialism to analyse narratives of managers in the arts sector in r...
This study provides insight into how two national arts organisations located in London manage their...
This article examines the consequences of shifts in the terms of engagement with the state – since t...
As a social activity, accounting has the potential to affect the behaviour of individuals in organiz...
This article discusses how arts practitioners reflect on their work amidst deepening economic inequa...
Purpose – This paper considers the nature and effect of accounting disturbances on organizational mi...
Purpose – The era of austerity that has followed the outbreak of the global financial crisis has pos...
For the United Kingdom, the 2008 financial crisis coupled with the subsequent economic austerity pro...
Arts and culture represent an essential part of human life and well being, and since the second half...
If we are concerned to develop an emancipatory accounting, and if we are sensitive towards the tende...
Two trends in accounting thought and regulation are discernible. Firstly, the scope of the resource...
This paper contributes to the diverse and growing stream of accounting research on Foucault’s notion...
This article explores arts, cultural and community engagement (ACCE) in the context of enduring aust...
This paper explores the craft of visual accounts in corporate reporting practices through an arts-in...
This Habermasian qualitative study considers the nature and extent of accounting and austerity colon...
The paper adopts a lens of new materialism to analyse narratives of managers in the arts sector in r...
This study provides insight into how two national arts organisations located in London manage their...
This article examines the consequences of shifts in the terms of engagement with the state – since t...
As a social activity, accounting has the potential to affect the behaviour of individuals in organiz...
This article discusses how arts practitioners reflect on their work amidst deepening economic inequa...
Purpose – This paper considers the nature and effect of accounting disturbances on organizational mi...
Purpose – The era of austerity that has followed the outbreak of the global financial crisis has pos...
For the United Kingdom, the 2008 financial crisis coupled with the subsequent economic austerity pro...
Arts and culture represent an essential part of human life and well being, and since the second half...
If we are concerned to develop an emancipatory accounting, and if we are sensitive towards the tende...
Two trends in accounting thought and regulation are discernible. Firstly, the scope of the resource...
This paper contributes to the diverse and growing stream of accounting research on Foucault’s notion...
This article explores arts, cultural and community engagement (ACCE) in the context of enduring aust...
This paper explores the craft of visual accounts in corporate reporting practices through an arts-in...