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When a mass-shooting prompts a call for the repeal of the 2nd
amendment, a handful of states secede and provoke the Second U.S.
Civil War.
Raymond John Chambers was born just over a century ago on 16
November 1917. It is more than fifty years since his first classic,
Accounting, Evaluation and Economic Behavior, was published, more
than forty since Securities and Obscurities: Reform of the Law of
Company Accounts (republished in 1980 as Accounting in Disarray)
and over twenty since the unique An Accounting Thesaurus: Five
Hundred Years of Accounting. They are drawn upon extensively in
this biography of Chambers' intellectual contributions, as are
other of his published works. Importantly, we also analyze archival
correspondence not previously examined. While Chambers provided
several bibliographical summaries of his work, without the benefits
of reviewing and interspersing the text with correspondence
materials from the Chambers Archive this study would lack an
appreciation of the impact of his early childhood, and nuances
related to his practical (including numerous consultancies) and
academic experiences. The 'semi-biographical narrative' codifies
article and editorial length exercises by the authors drawing on
parts of the archive related to theory development, measurement and
communication. Other parts are also examined. This allows us to
respond to those critics who claim his reforms were naive. They
further reveal a man of theory and practice, whose theoretical
ideas were solidly grounded on observations from his myriad
interests and experiences. Many of his practical experiences have
not been examined previously. This approach and the first
book-length biography differentiates this work from earlier
analyses of Chambers' contribution to the accounting literature. We
provide evidence to support the continued push for the reforms he
proposed to accepted accounting thought and practice to ensure
accounting is the serviceable technology so admired by Pacioli, Da
Vinci and many other Renaissance pioneers. It will be of interest
to researchers, educators, practitioners and regulators alike.
Originally published in 1990, this anthology of articles from the
German financial and industrial press, translated into English for
this volume, discusses the socio/politico/economic background that
was a catalyst for the development of replacement cost accounting
ideas in Europe and Anglo-American countries. The contributions to
the replacement cost debate contained in this anthology, in
general, defended depeciation and cost accumulation based on
replacement cost. If industry and the German economy were to
prosper in a time of social, economic and political chaos in the
immediate post World War I period, replacement cost accounting was
considered essential.
The Corporation is a major vehicle of business activity worldwide.
It incurs social costs and generates benefits that continually
change - hence, whether it still provides a net benefit to society
is contestable. Evidence-based observations of the last decade of
corporate sagas and the role of accounting and auditing, suggests a
serious rethink is needed about how commerce is pursued and, in
particular, whether the current corporate form has passed its
use-by-date. The authors of this new book - including
internationally renowned accounting scholars - argue that the two
major governance tools of accounting and auditing require major
makeovers. Beginning by analyzing the global sweep of deregulation
that corporations experienced since 2000, the authors go on to
discuss the various scandals and crises that characterized the
subsequent period, culminating in yet more calls for further
deregulation. Having thoroughly assessed the status quo, they
provide a series of urgent recommendations for reforms designed to
bring the corporation back to the real world and restore its
purpose. This book will be of great interest to students and
academics across accounting, business, law and finance, especially
more advanced students at undergraduate and postgraduate level.
The Corporation is a major vehicle of business activity worldwide.
It incurs social costs and generates benefits that continually
change - hence, whether it still provides a net benefit to society
is contestable. Evidence-based observations of the last decade of
corporate sagas and the role of accounting and auditing, suggests a
serious rethink is needed about how commerce is pursued and, in
particular, whether the current corporate form has passed its
use-by-date. The authors of this new book - including
internationally renowned accounting scholars - argue that the two
major governance tools of accounting and auditing require major
makeovers. Beginning by analyzing the global sweep of deregulation
that corporations experienced since 2000, the authors go on to
discuss the various scandals and crises that characterized the
subsequent period, culminating in yet more calls for further
deregulation. Having thoroughly assessed the status quo, they
provide a series of urgent recommendations for reforms designed to
bring the corporation back to the real world and restore its
purpose. This book will be of great interest to students and
academics across accounting, business, law and finance, especially
more advanced students at undergraduate and postgraduate level.
Indecent Disclosure captures the anguish the commercial public
experiences when the misleading financial disclosures of some
public corporations lead to an unexpected collapse. Here, the
authors pursue four main themes as underpinning the crisis in
companies' financial disclosures. First, companies' compliance with
the accounting standards does not produce financial statements that
disclose their wealth and financial progress; second, misleading
financial statements are more the result of compliance with the
accounting rules with the best of intentions, than from the
deviation from them with the intent to mislead; third, the raft of
knee-jerk corporate governance mechanisms imposed following the
recent corporate shenanigans are more directed at appearances than
rectifying malpractice; and fourth, there is increasing evidence
that the current group structures in which corporate activities are
arranged are incapable of effective regulation. Here those themes
are explained, explored, and illustrated, within the framework of
an agenda for true, effective reform.
not required for monographs
Originally published in 1990, this anthology of articles from the
German financial and industrial press, translated into English for
this volume, discusses the socio/politico/economic background that
was a catalyst for the development of replacement cost accounting
ideas in Europe and Anglo-American countries. The contributions to
the replacement cost debate contained in this anthology, in
general, defended depeciation and cost accumulation based on
replacement cost. If industry and the German economy were to
prosper in a time of social, economic and political chaos in the
immediate post World War I period, replacement cost accounting was
considered essential.
A small resource containing notes, summaries, tips and tricks.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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