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Development of the accounting profession and practices in the public sector - a hegemonic analysis

Development of the accounting profession and practices in the public sector - a hegemonic analysis
Development of the accounting profession and practices in the public sector - a hegemonic analysis
This paper uses Gramsci’s theory of hegemony to analyse the development of the public sector accounting profession and accounting practices in the UK since the nineteenth-century. Three periods of hegemony and accounting development are identified and the relationship between the two phenomena is discussed. The analysis emphasises the non-teleological development of the public sector accounting profession and accounting techniques and clearly places them within an ideological framework which is itself the outcome of a complex interrelation between economic crises, class interests and the state. The paper concludes that the public sector accounting professional body in the UK has played an important hegemonic role in constituting and reflecting ideologies and in reflecting the coercive and consensual approaches adopted by the state. The paper also sets an agenda for a research programme which looks at specific crises and hegemonies in more depth.
history, professions, public sector accounting
0951-3574
655-688
Goddard, Andrew
1bee5bd5-13fe-43e5-9c7d-a23acdf431b2
Goddard, Andrew
1bee5bd5-13fe-43e5-9c7d-a23acdf431b2

Goddard, Andrew (2002) Development of the accounting profession and practices in the public sector - a hegemonic analysis. Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, 15 (5), 655-688. (doi:10.1108/09513570210448957).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper uses Gramsci’s theory of hegemony to analyse the development of the public sector accounting profession and accounting practices in the UK since the nineteenth-century. Three periods of hegemony and accounting development are identified and the relationship between the two phenomena is discussed. The analysis emphasises the non-teleological development of the public sector accounting profession and accounting techniques and clearly places them within an ideological framework which is itself the outcome of a complex interrelation between economic crises, class interests and the state. The paper concludes that the public sector accounting professional body in the UK has played an important hegemonic role in constituting and reflecting ideologies and in reflecting the coercive and consensual approaches adopted by the state. The paper also sets an agenda for a research programme which looks at specific crises and hegemonies in more depth.

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Published date: 2002
Keywords: history, professions, public sector accounting

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Local EPrints ID: 35824
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/35824
ISSN: 0951-3574
PURE UUID: 5212614c-1ea2-4170-9d79-c24680aa5a67

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Date deposited: 23 May 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:54

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Author: Andrew Goddard

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