Canada’s 1881 census enumerators posed a range of questions that provide scope for an in–depth investigation of the identity of its accounting functionaries (accountants and bookkeepers) in that year. The significance of our findings is explained by applying the concept of closure through exclusion and occupational differentiation. We discover that Canada’s accounting community, at the dawn of professional organisation, was dominated by people originating from Great Britain & Ireland. The rural/urban divide for Canada’s accountants is the inverse of that for the population as a whole and, as in Britain, congregation occurs around the major commercial ports. Significant differentiation exists between the demographic profile of Canada’s accou...
Numerous studies have examined the institutional setting of accounting as a professional occupation....
Previous research has highlighted the crucial roles that accounting plays in both the construction a...
Several writers on the development of accountancy in the nineteenth century, such as Jones, have sta...
Canada’s 1881 census enumerators posed a range of questions that provide scope for an in–depth inves...
Abstract-Recurring difficulties over defining occupational and professional boundaries in British ac...
Although much has been written about the foundation and maturation of the early US public accountanc...
This paper provides an analysis of elite accounting practitioners during the formative years of the ...
New insights are offered to the professionalization of accountants in Britain circa 1881 by examinin...
The history of accountants, accounting firms and their representative bodies has been thoroughly res...
The incorporation of the Society of Accountants in Edinburgh in 1854 has been researched from differ...
Building on a previous study (Lee, 1997) describing the case of Edinburgh chartered accountants, the...
The early organisation of accountants in Scotland during the 1850s and 1860s has excited the intelle...
Published reports on censuses of population and the surviving enumeration books on which they were b...
1This paper draws on Bourdieu's sociolinguistic theory to interpret the overrepresentation of Anglop...
peer-reviewedThe received narrative about accounting organisation largely originates from within the...
Numerous studies have examined the institutional setting of accounting as a professional occupation....
Previous research has highlighted the crucial roles that accounting plays in both the construction a...
Several writers on the development of accountancy in the nineteenth century, such as Jones, have sta...
Canada’s 1881 census enumerators posed a range of questions that provide scope for an in–depth inves...
Abstract-Recurring difficulties over defining occupational and professional boundaries in British ac...
Although much has been written about the foundation and maturation of the early US public accountanc...
This paper provides an analysis of elite accounting practitioners during the formative years of the ...
New insights are offered to the professionalization of accountants in Britain circa 1881 by examinin...
The history of accountants, accounting firms and their representative bodies has been thoroughly res...
The incorporation of the Society of Accountants in Edinburgh in 1854 has been researched from differ...
Building on a previous study (Lee, 1997) describing the case of Edinburgh chartered accountants, the...
The early organisation of accountants in Scotland during the 1850s and 1860s has excited the intelle...
Published reports on censuses of population and the surviving enumeration books on which they were b...
1This paper draws on Bourdieu's sociolinguistic theory to interpret the overrepresentation of Anglop...
peer-reviewedThe received narrative about accounting organisation largely originates from within the...
Numerous studies have examined the institutional setting of accounting as a professional occupation....
Previous research has highlighted the crucial roles that accounting plays in both the construction a...
Several writers on the development of accountancy in the nineteenth century, such as Jones, have sta...