146. Alternative perspectives to deal with auditors’ agency problem
147. Critical insights into contemporary Islamic accounting
148. Why grids in accounting?
149. Cash balance pension plans: A case of standard-setting inadequacy
150. An unprecedented privatisation of mandatory standard-setting: The case of European accounting policy
151. The implications of reform-oriented investment for regulation and governance
152. Publishing without editors or authors? Competing logics, circulation, and cultural creation in a publishing firm
153. Performance contracting and social capital (re)formation: A case study of Nairobi City Council in Kenya
154. Exhibiting nongovernmental organizations: Reifying the performance discourse through framing power
155. How can we explain internal auditing? The inadequacy of agency theory and a labor process alternative
156. On the intellectual roots of critical accounting: A personal appreciation of Tony Lowe (1928–2014)
157. Accounting change and value creation in public services—Do relational archetypes make a difference in improving public service performance?
158. Framing shared services: Accounting, control and overflows
159. The translation of accrual accounting and budgeting and the reconfiguration of public sector accountants’ identities
160. The translation and sedimentation of accounting reforms. A comparison of the UK, Austrian and Italian experiences
161. Wider still and wider? A critical discussion of intellectual capital recognition, measurement and control in a boundary theoretical context
162. Internal auditors’ roles: From watchdogs to helpers and protectors of the top manager
163. Accounting curriculum reform? The devil is in the detail
164. In search of consensus: The role of accounting in the definition and reproduction of dominant interests
165. Accounting decoupled: A case study of accounting regime change in a Malaysian company
166. Structuration theory: The contribution of Norman Macintosh and its application to emissions trading
167. The actual evaluation of school PFI bids for value for money in the UK public sector
168. Taking the customer into account: Transcending the construction of the customer through the promotion of self-accounting
169. Discourses surrounding the evolution of the IASB/FASB Conceptual Framework: What they reveal about the “living law” of accounting
170. Government accounting reform in an ex-French African colony: The political economy of neocolonialism
171. The accountant will have a central role in saving the planet … really? A reflection on ‘green accounting and green eyeshades twenty years later’
172. The effect of an Audit Judgment Rule on audit committee members’ professional skepticism: The case of accounting estimates
173. “Continuous” budgeting: Reconciling budget flexibility with budgetary control
174. Understanding the Sarbanes-Oxley Act—A valued added approach for public interest
175. Charity and finance in the university
176. Making imaginary worlds real: The case of expensing employee stock options
177. Tension between the corporate and collegial cultures of Australian public universities: The current status
178. Socialism, accounting, and the creation of ‘consensus capitalism’ in America, circa.1935–1955
179. The politics of environmental disclosure regulation in the chemical and petroleum industries: Evidence from the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986
180. Performance-measurement system design and functional strategic decision influence: The role of performance-measure properties
181. Cargo cult science and the death of politics: A critical review of social and environmental accounting research
182. Accounting for public space
183. Accounting for entrepreneurship: A knowledge-based view of the firm
184. Transplanting Anglo-American accounting oversight boards to a diverse institutional context
185. The two publics and institutional theory – A study of public sector accounting in Tanzania
186. University corporatisation: Driving redefinition
187. The GAO investigation of corporate environmental disclosure: An opportunity missed
188. How accounting begins: Object formation and the accretion of infrastructure
189. The political economy of fair value reporting and the governance of the standards-setting process: Critical issues and pitfalls from a continental European union perspective
190. Power over empowerment: Encountering development accounting in a Sri Lankan fishing village
191. The strategic competence of accountants and middle managers in budget making
192. Accounting, regulation and profitability: The case of PFI hospital refinancing
193. Ambiguous but tethered: An accounting basis for sustainability reporting
194. Back to basics: What do we mean by environmental (and social) accounting and what is it for?—A reaction to Thornton
195. Making up users
196. Accounting activism and Bourdieu's ‘collective intellectual’ – Reflections on the ICL C