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M e d ita ri ISSN2049-372X A Volume22 Number1 2014 cc Volume22 Number1 2014 o u n ta n c y R e s e Meditari Accountancy Research arc Meditari Accountancy h Research Number 1 The accounting academic GuestEditors:GrantSamkinandAnnikaSchneider 1 Editorialadvisoryboard 2 Theaccountingacademic GrantSamkinandAnnikaSchneider 20 Australianaccountingacademics:challengesandpossibilities JamesGuthrie,ElaineEvansandRogerBurritt The accounting academic 38 SUPER-VISION?Personalexperiencesofanaccountingacademic StewartLawrence Guest Editors: Grant Samkin and 54 TheAustralianaccountingacademicinthe1950s:R.J.Chambersandnetworksofaccounting Annika Schneider research MartinE.PerssonandChristopherJ.Napier 77 Usinguniversitywebsitestoprofileaccountingacademicsandtheirresearchoutput:athree countrystudy GrantSamkinandAnnikaSchneider 107 Educatingprofessionals:describingtheknowledgeagencyofAccountingacademics IlseLubbe V o lu m e 2 2 N u m b e r 1 2 0 1 4 w w w .e m e ra ld in s ig Access this journal online h t.co www.emeraldinsight.com/medar.htm ISBN978-1-78441-351-4 www.emeraldinsight.com m EDITORIALADVISORY UrtonAnderson MaryLow Editorial UniversityofTexasatAustin,USA TheUniversityofWaikato, BOARD ShahidAnsari NewZealand advisory board VivienA.Beattie BabsonCollege,USA HabibMahama LancasterUniversityManagement KarinBarac AustralianNationalUniversity, School,LancasterUniversity, UniversityofPretoria,SouthAfrica Australia Lancaster,UK SebastianBecker WarrenMaroun JaneBroadbent HECParis,France UniversityoftheWitwatersrand, RoyalHolloway,Universityof A.Brettenny SouthAfrica 1 London,UK NelsonMandelaMetropolitan C.Nobes JohnBurns University,SouthAfrica RoyalHollowayUniversityof UniversityofExeter,UK B.W.Bruwer London,UK CharlesCho UniversityofStellenbosch, KrishnaReddy ESSECBusinessSchool,France SouthAfrica UniversityofWaikato,NewZealand CraigDeegan P.W.Buys ElmarieSadler RMITUniversity,Australia North-WestUniversity,SouthAfrica UniversityofSouthAfrica, JesseDillard DanieCoetsee SouthAfrica VictoriaUniversityofWellington, UniversityofJohannesburg, DanielaSangiorgi NewZealandandUniversityof SouthAfrica UniversitadeBologna,Italy CentralFlorida,USA StephenCoetzee GerritSarens RobGray UniversityofPretoria,SouthAfrica UniversitéCatholiquedeLouvain, UniversityofStAndrews,UK E.D.Cook Belgium JamesGuthrie UniversityofLouisiana,USA K.Sartorius Universita‘diBologna,Italyand ChristoCronje UniversityoftheWitwatersrand, MacquarieUniversity,Australia UniversityofSouthAfrica, SouthAfrica ElaineHarris SouthAfrica UmeshSharma UniversityofRoehampton,UK StevenDellaportas UniversityofWaikato,NewZealand KathrynHaynes RMITUniversity,Australia BenedettaSiboni NewcastleUniversity,UK JohnDumay Universita‘diBologna,Italy TanHunTong UniversityofSydney,Australia E.M.Stack NanyangTechnologicalUniversity, Singapore FedericaFarneti RhodesUniversity,SouthAfrica Universita‘diBologna,Italy LesleyStainbank DVaenbdrearbJielttUerniversity,USA JeffreyFaux UniversityofKwa-ZuluNatal, UniversityofBallarat,Australia SouthAfrica ChristopherNapier RoyalHolloway,Universityof N.Fry D.E.Stout London,UK UniversityofWestEngland,UK YoungstownStateUniversity,USA StefanSchaltegger D.G.Gouws SatoshiSugahara LeuphanaUniversityLüneburg, UniversityofPretoria,SouthAfrica HiroshimaShudoUniversity,Japan Germany AbdelHalabi MathewTsamenyi JillSolomon MonashUniversity,Australia ChinaEuropeInternationalBusiness HenleyBusinessSchool,UK AssociateProfessorNoel School,Ghana AndrewStark Harding S.P.J.VonWielligh TheUniversityofManchester,UK UniversityofNewSouthWales, UniversityofStellenbosch, Australia SouthAfrica DonnaStreet UniversityofDayton,USA JulieHarrison T.L.Voogt TheUniversityofAuckland, UniversityofJohannesburg, CarolTilt FlindersUniversity,Australia NewZealand SouthAfrica AssociateProfessorKristyL. JamesHazelton M.Walpole Towry MacquarieUniversity,Australia UniversityofNewSouthWales, GoizuetaBusinessSchool,Emory BeverleyJackling Australia University,Atlanta,Georgia,USA VictoriaUniversity,Australia P.Willis EnricoUliana C.Joseph DublinCityUniversity,Ireland UniversityofCapeTown,SouthAfrica MaraUniversityofTechnology TrevorWilmhurst JeffreyUnerman (UITM),Malaysia UniversityofTasmania,Australia RoyalHolloway,Universityof A.D.Koekemoer H.C.Wingard London,UK UniversityoftheFreeState, TheUniversityofSouthAfrica, ChrisvanStaden SouthAfrica SouthAfrica UniversityofCanterbury, StewartLawrence NormanWong NewZealand TheUniversityofWaikato, UniversityofAucklandBusiness NewZealand School,NewZealand EDITORIALBOARD AssociateProfessorS.K.Lodhia M.P.Wormald MeditariAccountancyResearch ChrisAkroyd AssociateProfessor,Universityof UniversityofCapeTown, Vol.22No.1,2014 OregonStateUniversity,USA SouthAustralia,Australia SouthAfrica p.1 ©EmeraldGroupPublishingLimited 0249-372X Thecurrentissueandfulltextarchiveofthisjournalisavailableat www.emeraldinsight.com/2049-372X.htm MEDAR The accounting academic 22,1 Grant Samkin and Annika Schneider Department of Accounting, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand 2 Abstract Purpose–This paper aims to consider the accounting academic, the environment in which the academicoperatesandthechallengestheyface. Design/methodology/approach–Thispaperexploresanumberofissuesrelatingtotheaccounting academic.Thefivepapersthatmakeupthespecialissuearelocatedwithinaframeworkwhichisused toillustratehoweachonecontributestothefield.Thispaperisprimarilydiscursiveinnature. Findings–Thetheoretical,methodologicalandempiricalapproachesusedinthepapersthatmakeup this special issue are described. In addition, the paper suggests that the accounting academic will remainafertileareaforfutureresearch. Practicalimplications–This portrayal of accounting academics is of interest to accounting researchers,accountinghistorians,universitymanagersandindividualacademics. Originality/value–This special issue provides a range of examples of research relevant to the accountingacademicandsetsanagendaforfutureresearch. Keywords Autoethnography,Accountingresearch,Self-reflection,Scholarship,Diegesis, Accountingacademic,Researchoutput,Personalaccounts PapertypeConceptualpaper Introduction Research on the accounting academic is fragmented with a thorough search of the literature being needed to identify previous contributions. The special issue, which considers the accounting academic, the environment in which they operate and the challenges they face, was motivated primarily by what was perceived as the relative absenceofresearchonthesubjectofthe“accountingacademic”.Aswillbeshownbythe varietyofcontributionsinthisspecialissue,anumberofapproachesareavailableto researcherswishingtoengageinthispotentiallyfruitfulareaofstudy. Otherthanbroadgeneralisationssuchasacademic,professionalqualificationsand, perhaps, levels of research output, little is known about the accounting academic “everyperson”.Theseincludequestionssuchas: • Whatmotivatesindividualstogiveuplucrativeaccountingpracticesorleavethe profession? JELclassification–M40,M41 CharldeVilliers,theEditorofMeditariAccountancyResearch,isthankedforprovidingthe authors with the privilege of editing this first special issue to be published by the journal. Additionally,StewartLawrenceandBrennanAllenarethankedforthecommentsprovidedon MeditariAccountancyResearch earlierdraftsofthiseditorial. Vol.22No.1,2014 pp.2-19 Appreciationisexpressedtothereferees,whoseanonymouscommentsassistedinenhancing ©EmeraldGroupPublishingLimited the quality of this paper. Appreciation is also expressed to Professor Charl de Villiers who 2049-372X DOI10.1108/MEDAR-05-2014-0041 personallyhandledthereviewprocessforthispaper. • What is known about the diversity of the individuals engaged in accounting The accounting academe,thesocialpracticesoftheaccountingacademic,theindividualpressures academic theyface? • Howtheyareovercome? While answers to some of these questions can be found in the gender and critical literature,contributionsarelimited.Thepurposeofthisspecialissuethenistoprovide 3 aforumthroughwhichtheaccountingacademiccanbeexplored.Theliteraturereview thatfollowsisusedtopositionthepapersthatmakeupthisspecialissue. Institutionalchangestoworkenvironmenthavemajorimpactsonacademics.These changes impact how individuals undertake the teaching, research and community/ service/administration components of their work, engage with their colleagues and studentsor,ultimately,whethertheyremainintheacademe.Aschangesinworkimpact all employees, the institutional changes that have occurred in higher education are reviewedfirst.ThisreviewwillofnecessitydrawontheworkundertakeninAustralia andtheUK,asthisisprimarilywherethebulkofthepublishedresearchoriginates.This setsuptheliteratureusedtohighlightthepressuresfacedbytheaccountingacademic. The different vehicles of autoethnographies, personal accounts, biographies and autobiographies used by individuals to communicate their stories, or the stories of others,toreadersarethenintroduced.Giventhattheaccountingacademicisrequiredto focusonscholarship,thenotionofscholarshipisdiscussed. Institutional changes Sincethe1990s,numerousinstitutionalchangeshaveoccurredamonghighereducation providers.InanumberofcountriesincludingAustralia,NewZealandandtheUK,key reforms termed “new public management” were aimed at the privatisation, commercialisationandcorporatisationofthepublicsector(Parkeretal.,1998;Parker, 2002, 2010, 2011, 2012a, 2012b). Under the new public management reforms, direct deliveryareassuchaseducation,healthandwelfarewereoutsourced(Parker,2010). These“newpublicmanagement”reformshavehadaparticularimpactonuniversities.In thecountriesinwhichtheyhavebeenintroduced,thesereformshaveincluded: • changinguniversityfundingmodels; • adoptionofacorporatisedenvironment; • commercialised education where knowledge has become a privaterevenue generatingassetandexportproduct; • evolvingpublicexpectations; • increasedaccountability; • increasedcompetitionbetweenuniversitiesandfromprivatesectorproviders; • deteriorationinstaff/studentratioacrossuniversities;and • educational massification through customised education (Adams, 1998; Guthrie and Parker, 2014; Parker, 2002, 2010, 2011, 2012a, 2012b; Parker et al., 1998; Subramaniam,2003;WrightandChalmers,2010). Inthismanagerialised,market-basedenvironment,Parkeretal.(1998)arguethatthe traditional teaching, research, community/service/administration forms of academic MEDAR labourhavebecomemorehighlystructured,intensifiedandcommodified(Daviesand Thomas,2002;GuthrieandNeumann,2007;NewmanandGuthrie,2002;Thomasand 22,1 Davies,2002).Thiscommodification: […] encompasses the efforts by labour to adapt its work in order to secure the means of generatingincomeforsupportingitsexistence,aswellastheexternalpressuresdesignedto redesignworkandtocontrolitsothatlabouroperatesinwaysandproducesoutcomesthat 4 meetmanagerialrequirements(Parkeretal.,1998,p.373). Accounting academics face additional pressures associated with the research assessmentexercisesthathavebeenintroducedincountriesincluding,butnotlimited to,Australia,Italy,HongKong,Singapore,NewZealandandtheUK.Theseresearch assessment exercises constitute a performance system that measures output against internationalbenchmarks.Academicsalsofacepressuresassociatedwiththedriveby senior university management to obtain external accreditation, as it is viewed as an externalmarkofqualityandaformofpubliclegitimisation(Lightbody,2010a,2010b). In Australia and New Zealand, this external accreditation is obtained from organisations such as the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, a US-based business school accrediting body, the Association of MBAs and European QualityImprovementSystem. Finally, accounting academics face increasing pressures associated with a rapidly changing discipline. These include the adoption of and frequent amendments (particularlysurroundingfinancialinstrumentsandgroupaccounting)toInternational AccountingStandardsandInternationalAuditingStandardsandtheimpactsthatthese changeshaveonteaching;criticismofthe“stateofwork-ready”accountinggraduates (Evans et al., 2010; Guthrie et al., 2014); and broadening of accounting work to encompass aspects of social reporting, corporate governance, sustainability and risk management(Guthrieetal.,2014). Pressuresfacingaccountingacademics Thesechangeshavehadamajorimpactonacademicstaff,andimpedetheirabilityto maintain an appropriate teaching, research, community/service/administration and work/life balance. For example, in Australia and New Zealand, changes in the government funding model have placed pressures on universities to maximise full fee-paying business students (Evans et al., 2010). This has had a number of consequences.Theseincludeclasssizesofupto1900inthefirstyear;1,300inthesecond year;andstudenttostaffratiosof70:1(GuthrieandParker,2014;Guthrieetal.,2014; James,2008),aswellasalargenumberofinternationalstudentswherethelanguageof tuitionisnottheirnativelanguage.Thishasresultedinincreasedworkloads(James, 2008;WrightandChalmers,2010)coupledwith“greateraccountabilityacrossarangeof research and teaching and learning indicators” (Wright and Chalmers, 2010, p. 72). Research assessment and accreditation exercises have resulted in senior university management demands for greater research productivity. This has translated into universitiesrequiringincreasingresearchoutputasnecessaryforcareeradvancement. Thedemandforincreasedproductivityhasseenfurtherpressurebeingplacedonjunior staffalreadyburdenedwithdemandingteachingandassociatedadministrativeduties tocommence,progressandcompletetheirPhDs,aswellasengageinotherresearch.All outputsand“activities”aresubjecttocontinuousmonitoring(James,2008). WhileacademicsincountriessuchasAustralia,NewZealandandtheUKhaveto The accounting deal with corporatised and commercialised university environments and research academic assessment and accreditation exercises, their colleagues in developing countries face verydifferentbutnolesschallengingworkenvironments.Theseinclude: • largeclasssizes; • studentsfromdisadvantagededucationalbackgrounds; 5 • lackofteachingresources; • poorsalaries; • threatstoacademicfreedom;and • complyingwithgovernmenttransformationandgrowthstrategies. Inonesuchdevelopingcountry,SouthAfrica,reformswereundertakentotransformthe post-apartheid education sector. This included the merger of a number of higher education providers to create new universities. In addition, a number of institutional changes have been made that will impact the nature and extent of research being undertaken. Accounting academics, in particular, are likely to be impacted by these changes, as they traditionally do not engage in research to the same level as their colleaguesinAustralia,Europe,NewZealand,theUKandtheUSA. Thesechangeshavevariouslybeenidentifiedas: • aspirationsofresearch-ledSouthAfricanuniversitiestoengageinscholarship; • complyingwithlegislativequalityassuranceobligations; • introductionofnewfundingformulae;and • compliancewithDepartmentofEducation’s(2007). HigherEducationQualificationsFramework,whichrequiresbachelorhonoursdegrees tocontainaresearchcomponent(Hesketh,2011;vanderSchyf,2008). ThereisanabsenceofprofessorialstaffinSouthAfricawithextensiveresearchand publishingexperience(SamkinandSchneider,2014).Asaresult,accountingacademics indevelopingcountries,includingthoseatSouthAfricanuniversitieswhoattemptto increase their research output will have to contend with an absence of research leadership,orwhatIrvineetal.(2010)describeasthe“drought”ofsenioraccounting academics(Evansetal.,2010). Autoethnographies, personal accounts and biographies A number of vehicles exist through which stories or accounts can be communicated. Theseincludeautoethnographies,personalaccounts,biographiesandautobiographies. Howthesedifferentvehicleshavebeenusedinaccountingresearchisdetailedbelow. Autoethnographies While autoethnographic narratives are seldom used in accounting research (Davie, 2008;Haynes,2006),theyhavefoundtractioninothermanagementdisciplines(Dillon, 2012; Ellis, 2011). Autoethnography is a research approach that describes and systematicallyanalysespersonalexperiencestounderstandculturalexperience(Davie, 2008;Ellisetal.,2010;Haynes,2006,2011).Autoethnographyisaformofself-reflective MEDAR autobiographical writing through which the personal is connected to the cultural by analysingtheselfwithinasocialcontext(Haynes,2011;HaynesandFearfull,2008). 22,1 Essentially, autoethnographies are retrospective narratives or accounts about personal experiences where the researcher is the participant or the subject of the research.Assuch,theresearcherbecomesthestoryteller.Inanautoethnography,the narratives take the form of self-reflections on the processes of personal discovery, 6 makingchoicesand/ortheinteractionswithothers(Davie,2008;Haynes,2006,2011). Ultimately, the experiences of the researcher inform the account. Autoethnography facilitates an understanding of subjectivity unavailable through other methods of research by focussing on the author as the object of the study (Harding et al., 2010). Autoethnographies can encompass more than traditional writing. Various other art forms may be used to generate insights, including narratives, autobiographical vignettes, poetry, stream-of-consciousness, displays of artefacts, photographs, drawingsandliveperformances(EllingsonandEllis,2008;HaynesandFearfull,2008). Withinaccounting,studiesincorporatinganautoethnographicelementarelimited. Haynes and Fearfull (2008) locate their study in gendered relations and position of women in the academy. Within this location, autobiographical vignettes are used to “focusthelensofdiscoveryuponourselvesor,perhapsmoreappropriately,ourselves,in ordertoexploreoursomewhatconflictingidentitypositionsaswomeninaccounting and management academia” (Haynes and Fearfull, 2008, p. 186). This form of introspection, they argue, provides the identities and experiences of others to be understood.Hardingetal.(2010)useethnography,autoethnography,theoriesoftheself andqueertheorytotellthestoryofwhoistheaccountingandmanagementacademic who reflects upon the self? Davie’s (2008, p. 1,055) authethnography, grounded in self-reflectionandcriticaltheory,isalivedaccountofthe“serendipitousandfortuitous choices”madewhilstundertakingresearchinaccountingforherdoctoralstudiesata university in the UK. What makes Davie’s (2008) narrative different is that it is constructed from a multicultural background from within a politically divided multiracialsocietyinwhichshewasborn,raisedandeducated.Injustifyingwhyher reconstructionofexperienceswasimportant,Davie(2008,p.1,056)explains: Thisautoethnographyfurtherbreaksthesilenceabouthowanindividualcomestoadopta particulartheorisinginaccountingresearch.IncontradistinctiontoLowe(2004)thispaperis notabouta“toy-horse-like”reactiontoaparticularmethodologicalchoice.Ratherthepaper aimstospeaktoanaudience“outthere”strugglingtomakesenseofthegreatsuccessstories far removed from their own experiences. It emphasises that doing accounting research in searchofnewinsightisaverycomplexandamessyprocessofknowledgeproduction. Understanding how to evaluate autoethnographic research is important. It is not possibletoapplythetraditionalmeaningofreliability,generalizabilityandvaliditythat are usually associated with social science research (Haynes, 2011). As an autoethnography does not seek an objective truth (Haynes, 2011), alternative positioning of reliability, generalizability and validity is required. For example, questionsofreliabilityrefertothenarrator’scredibility.“Couldthenarratorhavehad theexperiencesdescribed,givenavailable‘factualevidence’”(Ellisetal.,2010)?Validity referstothefeelingthatitevokesinreaders,“afeelingthattheexperiencedescribedis lifelike,believableandpossible;afeelingthatwhathasbeenrepresentedcouldbetrue” (Ellis et al., 2010). Is the story coherent? Can the readers connect with the writers? Finally,inauthoethnographicresearch,generalizability: […] moves from respondents to readers, and is always being tested by readers as they The accounting determineifastoryspeakstothemabouttheirexperienceoraboutthelivesofothersthey academic know(Ellisetal.,2010). Personalnarrativesoraccounts Analternativeformofautoethnographyispersonalnarrativesoraccounts.Theseare 7 described by Ellis et al. (2010) as “stories about authors who view themselves as the phenomenon and write evocative narratives specifically focused on their academic, research,andpersonallives”.Althoughnotnumerous,anumberofpersonalnarratives oraccountsappearintheaccountingliterature(Hopkins,2004;Irvine,2003;Laine,2006; Perrin,1998;Samkin,2011;Stone,1996). Stone(1996)providesapersonalaccountofmanagingthetenureprocess.Becauseof hisloveofskiing,Stone(1996)usesthemetaphor“dancewithamountain”todescribe hisexperiencewiththetenureprocess.Stoneexplainsthatalthoughmountainsappear stable, immovable and invariant, the reality is very different. Stone draws on his experienceasanewPhDgraduatetomakesuggestionsonhowassistantprofessorscan managethetenureprocess.Perrin(1998)looksbackovernearly25yearsofpublicsector accountingintheUKduringtheperiodwhenaccrualsaccountingbegantoreplacecash accounting in the operational branches of the public sector. Irvine (2003) provides a personal account of some of the confidentiality issues arising during a qualitative researchprojectwithinalargereligious/charitableorganisation,whileHopkins(2004) describes her account of taking a case for sexual discrimination against Price Waterhousewhenshefailedtomakepartner.Laine’s(2006)accountdetailshispersonal experiences of taking his first steps in the academy as a Social and Environmental Accountingresearcher,whileSamkin(2011)documentshisexperienceofnavigatingthe journalreviewprocess. Whilepersonalnarrativesandaccountsareusuallynon-fictional,fictionalstoriesare consideredavaluableresearchtoolinthat“literaturecanconveyinsights[…]inaway thatis[…]vividandmemorable,[and]expandsunderstandingofdeeperandsubtler realms […]” (Jermier and Domagalski, 2000, p. 62). Fictional narratives can be told throughadiegesis,(“narrative”inGreek).Adiegesisisaformoffictionalstorytelling that presents a view of the world as experienced by the characters in situations and eventsofthenarrative(Abbott,2002).Thenarrator,whocanspeakfromthe“inside”as aparticularcharacter,ortheinvisiblenarratororanall-knowingnarratorwhospeaks from the “outside” and who is entirely separate from the events, situations and charactersinthestory,tellsthenarrative.Theuseofdiegesisinaccountingresearchis limited. One example is that of Burritt (2012) who makes use of personal reflection through a diegesis to consider the developments in relation to the content of a 2012 specialissueofAccounting,Auditing&AccountabilityJournal,andinahypodiegesisto reflect on the relationship between academic outpourings and practitioners in the context of environmental performance and accountability relating to a 1997 special issueofAccounting,Auditing&AccountabilityJournalwhichheedited. Biographiesandautobiographies Much like individual biographies detailed in the Accounting Hall of Fame (The Ohio State University, 2014), obituaries in academic journals celebrate the impact the deceasedhadonthediscipline,aswellastheaccomplishmentsandthecontributions MEDAR theymadetothescholarshipofaccounting(Burows,1997;Grahametal.,2011;Guthrie andParker,2010;Klumpes,2003;MladenovicandPoullaos,2005;Power,2000).These 22,1 pieces serve to remind readers that as an academic discipline, accounting has been blessedwithamultitudeofoutstandingscholars.WhiletheAccountingHallofFame primarily comprises deceased North American academics, it is also important to recognisethecontributionofotheracademicsthathavemadeasignificantcontribution 8 to,aswellasexpanding,theboundariesofthediscipline. While biographies and obituary pieces are useful, they are in reality perhaps best described as ex post facto narratives of the accomplishments and the research and teachingcontributionsofindividuals.Detailedbiographiesthatevaluatetheextentand contributiontoaccountingandorganisationallifeofindividualsarelimited.Thosethat havebeencompletedrelatetoinfluentialfigures(Matthews,2000;Parker,1984,1994; Spruill and Wootton, 1995). Nevertheless, the potential exists for biographical work, particularly focusing on those who may have been marginalised or excluded from accountingresearch(HammondandSikka,1996). Autobiographies are, however, more limited, especially those by individuals still entrenchedwithinanacademiccareer.Althoughresearchthatmakesuseofnarrative and biographical methods is increasing in the social sciences, it remains limited in accounting. An exception is Haynes (2006) who makes use of an autobiographical narrativetoresearchthelivedexperienceofaccountants,drawnfromherexperienceof accounting,academiaandmotherhood.However,thenatureofthisparticularnarrative meansthatitformsonlyasmallportionofheroverallstory. The nature of scholarship Anacademic’scurrencyandrelevanceissustainedthroughtheactivitiesincorporated withinthecommunity/service/administrationcomponentoftheirwork.Thisincludes consulting, involvement with standard setting, policy formulation and analysis and involvementwiththeprofession.However,thisisnotanacademicscholarship.Gray et al. (2002, p. 12) describe scholarship as encompassing “the individual’s pursuit of learningandunderstandingthroughformalresearch,reading,reflection,discussionand writing”. Scholarship is an integral part of academic life. Scholarship embodies a thirst for knowledge.Itinvolvesasystematicsearch.AsGrayetal.(2002,pp.9-10)soeloquently explain,scholarshiprequires: […]theaspirationtopursueeruditionandthe(arguablyunachievable)goalofbecominga learnedpersonisasinenonquaofacademiclife.Withoutit,teachingfallsintoSterling’s(1973) criticism that all that is taught is prior practice, and universities fail to offer any counter-hegemonicmoment(sic)butbecome,rather,manufacturersofmassdegree-bearing students. Scholarshipisanintellectualquestthatrequiresbothinspirationandinvolvementor socialisation within an academic community (Irvine et al., 2010). Most importantly, however,thevalueofscholarshipistestedandconfirmedbyitsdisseminationthrough teaching, workshops, conversations, conferences and various forms of publications (Grayetal.,2002). While an important aspect of academic work, it is important to recognise that scholarshipencompassesmorethanteaching.InSouthAfrica,theprofessionalbody, the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants (SAICA), has entered into the debateastowhatconstitutesscholarship.Whiletheyacceptthatscholarshipincludes The accounting peer-reviewedandprofessionaljournalpublications,theybelievethatitalsoincludes academic consulting work and participation in standard setting (Olivier, 2014). This is a view supported by a number of academics in that country who argue for a redefinition of scholarshiptoinclude: • contributiontopolicydocuments; 9 • theaccountingstandardsettingprocess;and • revisiting definitions underpinning structures of financial accounting (Hesketh, 2011;Lubbe,2013). Thatis,essentiallynarrowingthedefinitionofscholarshiptomerelya“contributionto accountingknowledgeandcapacitytopromotedefensibleimprovementstofinancial reporting”(Hesketh,2011,p.27). However, danger exists in enabling professional bodies, firms and others with narrowself-intereststodefinescholarship.Forexample,professionalbodiescontrolthe accreditationofuniversitiesthroughtheimpositionofcurriculaandsyllabithatrequire anarrowfocusontechnicalteachingtodevelopthe“high-levelfinancialskills”needed byacountry.Tohelpthemachievethis,theprofessionattemptstodepictaccountingas a value-free, neutral portrayal of reality or stated another way as impartial and independent (Davie, 2008). This has been achieved according to Sikka and Willmott (1997,p.158)throughtheaccountingprofessionsurroundingitself: […] with narratives of even-handed public behaviour, professional ethics and discipline through which it rehearses and sustains the dominant fable of “progress” embedded in accountinghistory.Inthisfable,heroicprofessionalbodiesandtheirleadersbattleagainstthe oddsand,amidstthechaos,introduceorderandprotectthepublicfromdiversetroublesand dangers. Some,however,considerthisportrayaltobeamyth.Anumberofacademicshavebecome increasingly critical of existing accounting practice and, in particular, of the accounting profession.Theseindividualshavedisseminatedtheirscholarshipthroughthemediumof the mass media as well as peer reviewed journal publications to expose the accounting professionaspurveyorsof“darkpractices”(Cousinsetal.,1998;Cousinsetal.,2004;Mitchell andSikka,2002,2011;Sikka,2013,2014;TaxJusticeNetwork,2014).Scholarshipshould, therefore,wherenecessary,incorporateacriticalcomponent.Thiscouldincludeacritical evaluation of the role of the accounting profession and its related disciplines, such as auditing,insociety(Cousinsetal.,1998;Cousinsetal.,2004;MitchellandSikka,2002,2011; Sikka,2013,2014;TaxJusticeNetwork,2014).Thiscriticalevaluationshould,accordingto Samkin(2010,p.238),includeanexaminationof: […] the behaviour of individual accountants and accounting firms, schemes sold by accountingfirmsaimedatreducingtaxes,accountingfirminvolvementinmoneylaundering activities, the lobbying of accounting standard setting bodies by accounting firms, and corporateabuseofaccountingtechniques. The danger of professional bodies such as the SAICA together with those large professional firms that sponsor chairs of accounting, entering into the debate on the natureofscholarship,isthataccreditationorfundingmaybeusedtoinfluencewhat constitutesscholarship.InSouthAfrica,theaccountingprofession’scontrolofcurricula

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