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Across the US and the UK, few senior accountants exist in proportion to their white peers, and only a handful ever reach the level of partner in large accounting firms. This problem has been left largely unexamined on both sides of the Atlantic and is overwhelmingly disregarded due to an inherent assumption of racial neutrality within the field of accountancy. This book unpacks the lived working experience of black accountants in the US and UK to highlight the existence of institutionalized racism. Using the perspective of Critical Race Theory (CRT), Anton Lewis demonstrates how the black accountant is in fact an outsider, with limited options for professional progress. He offers a qualitative, narrative-focused approach, exploring detailed testimonies of Black British and African American accountants within a CRT theoretical framework, to highlight how the field of accounting has participated in a historic system of racial and professional inequities. This book invites the reader to critically examine how black people enter and progress in the field and comprehend the processes by which black accountants understand the impact race has on their professional identities. Looking at the way forward, the author also serves up practical guidelines for black accountants on how to network, and how best to strategize for success across their careers from entry level positions, to senior professionals seeking partnership.
My research into the Black accounting experience specifically aims to reveal the lived working lives of those often considered "Other." Questions such as how the raced, gendered and classed outsider successfully navigates career progression in the accountancy profession are explored. This study highlights the existence of often hidden institutionalized inequalities of race and gender in the field. A Critical Race Theory (CRT) framework is employed to examine the narratives of Black working life and frames the Black professionals' experience through a lens of race and sometimes at the intersection of gender. The value of this study lies in it's contribution to a field of study where little academic or industry research exists that examines the the professional experience of the Black accountant. Using a CRT lens accountancy, which is commonly viewed as a technocracy, is (re)imagined as a site of racial, gender and class struggle.
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