ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

 

AC424     
Accounting, Organisations and Institutions

This information is for the 2021/22 session.

Teacher responsible

Professor Michael Power KSW 3.12 (MT), Dr Andrea Mennicken KSW 3.09 (LT), Dr Alexa Scherf OLD 3.12 (LT)

Availability

This course is compulsory on the MSc in Accounting, Organisations and Institutions. This course is not available as an outside option.

This course is not available to other students except in special circumstances and with the written permission of the Course Director.

Pre-requisites

There are no specific accounting pre-requisites.  This course does not require a background in accounting and both the programme and this course are open to accounting specialists and non-specialists alike. Pre-sessional training in the form of various intensive sessions prior to the start of term will be offered for those who need a brief 'technical' preparation for the Progamme.

Course content

The objective of the course is to provide students with an advanced, social science- based and critical understanding of the changing role and position of accounting practices in organisations, both public and private, and in societies more generally. Students will be exposed to advanced scholarship  and case materials which show  how accounting practices are more than a collection of routine self-evident techniques but are shaped by their institutional contexts, have behavioural consequences and can represent different values. We will focus on how the fundamental assumptions of internal and external accounting practices are institutional in nature and are  shaped by social and political aspirations in different jurisdictions. The role of accountants and other agents involved in the production and consumption of accounting numbers will also be addressed.

The course will equip students to understand the inter-relations between technical, organisational and institutional issues. While some technical accounting knowledge may be helpful, it is not essential and each lecture will provide the necessary technical foundations.

Indicative topics include:

Foundations: Reporting, Calculation and Transparency; Quantification and Measurement; Accounting and the Notion of "Entity"; Audit and Assurance: The Audit Society; Organisational Boundaries, Structure and Control; Accountability, Incentives and Performance; Accounting for Sustainability; Organisational Failure; Accounting Standardisation and Harmonization; the Political Economy of Financial Reporting and Standard Setting; Accounting and Development; the Roles of Accounting in Global Financial Governance; Political, Institutional and Economic Influences in Changing National and International Financial Reporting Frameworks; Consequences of International Accounting Harmonization for Financial Statement Users, Business Entities and Wider Local and Global Stakeholders.

Teaching

Teaching will be delivered in the form of two weekly 90-minute sessions over 11 weeks across both Michaelmas and Lent Terms. Each session contains a variety of technical content, practical exercises, and case analyses. This year, some or all of this teaching may be delivered using virtual classes as an alternative to face-to-face teaching.



This course has a reading and feedback week in Week 6 of both MT and LT so there is 30 hours of teaching per term.

Formative coursework

Students will be required to pr