63. The (uncertain) invisible college of Spanish accounting scholars
64. Accountability and human rights: A tentative exploration and a commentary
65. Networks of accounting research: A citation-based structural and network analysis
66. Visualizing the negative space: Making feminine accounting practices visible by reference to Japanese women's household accounting practices
67. Americanism and financial accounting theory – Part 1: Was America born capitalist?
68. A longitudinal study of the interplay of corporate collapse, accounting failure and governance change in Australia: Early 1890s to early 2000s
69. Reflections and projections: A decade of Intellectual Capital Accounting Research
70. The role of accounting technologies in the creation of social and societal risk
71. Qualitative management accounting research: Assessing deliverables and relevance
72. Social accounting research: An Australasian perspective
73. The Development of Accounting and Reporting in Ghana
74. A spiritual reflection on emancipation and accounting
75. Accounting for human rights: The challenge of globalization and foreign investment agreements
76. Repoliticalization of accounting standard setting—The IASB, the EU and the global financial crisis
77. Belief perseverance among accounting practitioners regarding the effect of non-audit services on auditor independence
78. A critique of Gray's framework on accounting values using Germany as a case study
79. Taking pluralism seriously: Embedded moralities in management accounting and control systems
80. Extending AIS research to management accounting and control issues: A research note
81. An examination of contextual factors and individual characteristics affecting technology implementation decisions in auditing
82. Norman Macintosh: Accounting academe's joyful kynic
83. Accounting education literature review (2013–2014)
84. Accounting for the fictitious: A Marxist contribution to understanding accounting's roles in the financial crisis
85. Journal ranking effects on junior academics: Identity fragmentation and politicization
86. Public secrecy in government auditing revisited
87. An examination of disciplinary culture: Two professional accounting associations in New Zealand
88. An exploration of NGO and media efforts to influence workplace practices and associated accountability within global supply chains
89. Accounting colonization: Three case studies in further education
90. Fusion of expertise among accounting faculty: towards an expertise model for academia in accounting
91. Reshaping accounting research: Living in the world in which we live
92. A ‘panoptical’ or ‘synoptical’ approach to monitoring performance? Local public services in England and the widening accountability gap
93. Transplanting Anglo-American accounting oversight boards to a diverse institutional context
94. The Code of Ethics and the development of the auditing profession in Greece, the period 1992–2002 Original Research Article
95. From inspection to auditing: Audit and markets as linked ecologies
96. Constructing an ‘efficient frontier’ of accounting journal quality
97. Satanic Mills?: An illustration of Victorian external environmental accounting
98. An unprecedented privatisation of mandatory standard-setting: The case of European accounting policy
99. Beneath the globalization paradox: Towards the sustainability of cultural diversity in accounting research
100. “This is England”: Punk rock's realist/idealist dialectic and its implications for critical accounting education
101. The Wheat Study on Establishment of Accounting Principles (1971–72): A historical study
102. Reflections on the public interest in accounting
103. Accounting for rituals and ritualization: The case of shareholders’ associations
104. Development of accounting in Iran
105. Whose voice is it anyway? Rethinking the oral history method in accounting research on race, ethnicity and gender
106. Appearance of accounting in a political hegemony
107. Accounting practices as social technologies of colonialistic outreach from London, Washington, et Cetera
108. Critical reflections on research approaches, accounting regulation and the regulation of accounting
109. Ranking accounting journals using dissertation citation analysis: A research note
110. Still flickering at the margins of existence? Publishing patterns and themes in accounting and finance research over the last two decades
111. The impact of an independent inspectorate on penal governance, performance and accountability: Pressure points and conflict “in the pursuit of an ideal of perfection”
112. What is going on? The sustainability of accounting academia
113. Accounting for suffering: Calculative practices in the field of disaster relief
114. Trends in research on international accounting harmonization
115. Accounting and empire: Professionalization-as-resistance: The case of Philippines
116. Accounting, New Public Management and American Politics: Theoretical Insights into