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Hardbound. This series rose out of the belief that the
international accounting literature should devote more attention to
the study of the accounting problems and issues of emerging
economies (developing and newly industrialized countries).The
desire of the series is to raise the level of interest in the
specific problems of accounting in emerging economies and raise the
awareness of the real issues, so that accounting in these countries
will not be seen as a matter of copying what is done in
industrialized countries. Through an increasing awareness of the
real issues and the accounting practices advocated in it, the
annual has become relevant to actual needs, and is making a real
contribution to the accounting development process of emerging
economies.
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Research in Third World Accounting (Hardcover)
R.S. Olusegan Wallace, John M. Samuels, Richard J. Briston; Foreword by Robert H. Parker; Volume editing by R.S. Olusegan Wallace
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R3,450
Discovery Miles 34 500
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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This series aims to concern itself with the theoretical, empirical
and applied research into the macro and micro accounting issues of
developing countries, including the relevance to the Third World of
international accounting standards. It is our hope that we can
raise the level of interest in the specific problems of accounting
in developing countries and raise the awareness of the real issues,
so that accounting in the Third World will not just be seen as a
matter of copying what is done in the industrialized countries. It
is our hope that through an increasing awareness of the issues, the
accounting practices advocated and the training made available will
become relevant to actual needs, and will make a real contribution
to the development process.
This special edition (Supplement 1) of "Research in Accounting in
Emerging Economies" (RAEE) focuses on accounting and economic
development issues in developing countries, with special reference
to Africa. The decision to publish a special supplement on Africa
originated from the first conference on African accounting held
under the aegis of the University of Botswana in February 1993.
This supplement is a collaboration between African and non-African
scholars. The chapters that have resulted have incorporated changes
in accounting practices that have arisen between February 1993
(when the Botswana Conference took place) and December 1997. The
last four chapters of this supplement did not originate from the
Botswana Conference. They are derived from the unsolicited
submissions to our annual series and went through our normal review
process. They were included in this supplement because of their
focus on an African country - Nigeria.
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