All Stories

  1. Nouveau riche, old guard, established elite: Agency and the leadership of Vivendi Universal
  2. Assessing Conformity with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Using Expert Accounting Witness Evidence and theConceptual Framework
  3. Institutional Change of Accounting Systems: The Adoption of a Regime of Adapted International Financial Reporting Standards
  4. Perverse Audit Culture and Accountability of the Modern Public University
  5. Factors associated with the publication of a CEO letter
  6. Student imaginings, cognitive dissonance and critical thinking
  7. Leadership Discourse, Culture, and Corporate Ethics: CEO-speak at News Corporation
  8. Voluntary adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards by large unlisted companies in Portugal – Institutional logics and strategic responses
  9. Exploring Top Management Language for Signals of Possible Deception: The Words of Satyam’s Chair Ramalinga Raju
  10. Factors influencing the preparedness of large unlisted companies to implement adapted International Financial Reporting Standards in Portugal
  11. Exploring a local council's change to an outcome measurement regime
  12. Reasons for sustainability reporting by New Zealand local governments
  13. Voluntary risk reporting to enhance institutional and organizational legitimacy
  14. Risk-related disclosure practices in the annual reports of Portuguese credit institutions: An exploratory study
  15. Detecting Linguistic Traces of Destructive Narcissism At-a-Distance in a CEO’s Letter to Shareholders
  16. Earnings management induced by tax planning: The case of Portuguese private firms
  17. Intangible assets and value relevance: Evidence from the Portuguese stock exchange
  18. Auditing, Reasoning Systems, Reporting Frameworks, and Accounting Policy Risk: A Response to Alexander
  19. Intellectual capital reporting in sustainability reports
  20. A Successful Competency-Based Writing Skills Development Programme: Results of an Experiment1
  21. CEO Speak, The Language of Corporate Leadership, by Joel Amernic and Russell Craig. Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press 2006. 256pp., Hb. CAN$75.00/US$75.00, ISBN-13: 9780773533202; Pb. CAN$29.95/ US$ 24.95, ISBN-13: 9780773530379
  22. Using neo-institutionalism to advance social and environmental accounting
  23. Transformational Leadership Education and Agency Perspectives in Business School Pedagogy: A Marriage of Inconvenience?
  24. Accounting as a Facilitator of Extreme Narcissism
  25. Understanding accounting through conceptual metaphor: ACCOUNTING IS AN INSTRUMENT?
  26. Teachers as servants of state ideology: Sousa and Sales, Portuguese School of Commerce, 1759–1784
  27. A privatization success story: accounting and narrative expression over time
  28. A Proposal to Replace ‘True and Fair View’ With ‘Acceptable Risk of Material Misstatement’
  29. The preparedness of companies to adopt International Financial Reporting Standards: Portuguese evidence
  30. Recovery amid Destruction: Manoel da Maya and the Lisbon Earthquake of 1755
  31. The transformational leader as pedagogue, physician, architect, commander, and saint: Five root metaphors in Jack Welch's letters to stockholders of General Electric
  32. Assessing international accounting harmonization using Hegelian dialectic, isomorphism and Foucault
  33. Guidelines for CEO‐speak: editing the language of corporate leadership
  34. State intervention in commercial education: the case of the Portuguese School of Commerce, 1759
  35. PowerPoint Presentation Technology and the Dynamics of Teaching
  36. The mobilization of accounting in preening for privatization
  37. Firm‐specific determinants of intangibles reporting: evidence from the Portuguese stock market
  38. Measuring convergence of National Accounting Standards with International Financial Reporting Standards
  39. Roles and Social Construction of Accounting in Industrial Relations
  40. Applying Voluntary Disclosure Theories to Intangibles Reporting: Evidence from the Portuguese Stock Market
  41. English mercantilist influences on the foundation of the Portuguese School of Commerce in 1759
  42. Reform of Accounting Education in the Post-Enron Era: Moving Accounting 'Out of the Shadows'
  43. Enron discourse: the rhetoric of a resilient capitalism
  44. The Rhetoric of a Juggernaut: AOLTimeWarner's Internet Policy Statement
  45. Rejoinder: 'emulous bravery' and the quest for an 'upbeat rhythm' in accounting education: a reprise from the blues 'brothers'
  46. Accountability of accounting educators and the rhythm of the university: resistance strategies for postmodern blues
  47. Balancing Debt in the Absence of Money: Documentary Credit in New South Wales, 1817-20
  48. Three tenors in perfect harmony: “close readings" of the joint letter by the heads of aluminium giantsalcan , pechiney, and Alusuisse announcing their mega-merger plan
  49. A “Close Reading” Protocol to Identify Perception-Fashioning Rhetoric in Web Site Financial Reporting: The Case of Microsoft®
  50. 'Economic value added' as ideology through a critical lens: towards a pedagogy for management fashion?
  51. Popular television formats, The student-as-consumer metaphor, acculturation and critical engagement in the teaching of accounting
  52. Rejoinder: Creative role play and television programme formats as an extreme pedagogical device in serving the 'new economy'?
  53. THE RHETORIC OF TEACHING FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING ON THE CORPORATE WEB: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF CONTENT AND METAPHOR IN IBM'S INTERNET WEBPAGEGUIDE TO UNDERSTANDING FINANCIALS
  54. The Internet in Undergraduate Management Education: A Concern for Neophytes Among Metaphors
  55. Scholarship in university business schools – Cardinal Newman, creeping corporatism and farewell to the “disturber of the peace”?
  56. THEATRE AND INTOLERANCE IN FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING RESEARCH
  57. IMAGES AND RHETORIC: ACCOUNTING AND COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
  58. Instructional Case: The Sisters, the Board, and the Hospital
  59. ACCOUNTING IMAGES AND THE RESOLUTION OF LABOR CONTRACT COSTING CONFLICT
  60. Bookkeeping and accounting control systems in a tenth-century Muslim administrative office
  61. Religion: A Confounding Cultural Element in the International Harmonization of Accounting?
  62. Employer Equivocality and Union Heterogeneity as Determinants of the Role of Accounting in Collective Bargaining
  63. Juridical Perceptions of the Relevance of Accounting Data in Wage Fixation
  64. 'Big Bath Accounting' Using Extraordinary Items Adjustments: Australian Empirical Evidence
  65. Estimating Current Cost Depreciation Expense Using Numerical Analysis and the STAPOL Technique: A Pedagogic Exposition
  66. Exploring Signs of Hubris in CEO Language
  67. Arbitrators' perceptions of accounting data in assessing ability to pay