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Writing a positive empirical accounting and finance journal article using data from developing and emerging economies: Reflections from selected African studies

Writing a positive empirical accounting and finance journal article using data from developing and emerging economies: Reflections from selected African studies
Writing a positive empirical accounting and finance journal article using data from developing and emerging economies: Reflections from selected African studies
There has been significant increase in the amount of empirical studies published in accounting and finance journals that use data exclusively sourced from developing and emerging economies in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Middle East, South America and the Caribbean that employ positivist approaches, relying almost exclusively on quantitative research methods. Whilst this growth is commendable, a considerable number of such studies have been criticised for ‘blindly’ or ‘naively’ applying theories and approaches (‘naïve empiricism’) that are often more appropriate to developed economies contexts rather than the ones on developing and emerging economies. This tends to impair their distinctiveness, and consequently, their unique role in contributing to the broader extant debates within the positivist empirical accounting and finance literature. In this paper, I set out to briefly address some of the key issues that authors of such studies may take into account when conceiving, designing and executing their studies based largely on my personal reflections, efforts, experiences, insights and lessons learnt, including from other co-authors, colleagues, managers, mentors, supervisors and students over the years. Specifically, I argue that authors of such studies need to fully understand and carefully consider the unique contextual developmental issues, draw insights from appropriate theories, and employ suitable quantitative data and data analyses techniques in executing their studies. I hope that in doing so, that the distinctive contribution/s of such studies may be enhanced.
Accounting and finance, positive and quantitative empirical studies, journal articles, research context and theory, developing and emerging economies, Africa, Asia, Middle East and North Africa, Caribbean, Eastern Europe, South America
2683-6599
70 - 83
Ntim, Collins
1f344edc-8005-4e96-8972-d56c4dade46b
Ntim, Collins
1f344edc-8005-4e96-8972-d56c4dade46b

Ntim, Collins (2022) Writing a positive empirical accounting and finance journal article using data from developing and emerging economies: Reflections from selected African studies. African Accounting and Finance Journal, 4 (1), 70 - 83.

Record type: Article

Abstract

There has been significant increase in the amount of empirical studies published in accounting and finance journals that use data exclusively sourced from developing and emerging economies in Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Middle East, South America and the Caribbean that employ positivist approaches, relying almost exclusively on quantitative research methods. Whilst this growth is commendable, a considerable number of such studies have been criticised for ‘blindly’ or ‘naively’ applying theories and approaches (‘naïve empiricism’) that are often more appropriate to developed economies contexts rather than the ones on developing and emerging economies. This tends to impair their distinctiveness, and consequently, their unique role in contributing to the broader extant debates within the positivist empirical accounting and finance literature. In this paper, I set out to briefly address some of the key issues that authors of such studies may take into account when conceiving, designing and executing their studies based largely on my personal reflections, efforts, experiences, insights and lessons learnt, including from other co-authors, colleagues, managers, mentors, supervisors and students over the years. Specifically, I argue that authors of such studies need to fully understand and carefully consider the unique contextual developmental issues, draw insights from appropriate theories, and employ suitable quantitative data and data analyses techniques in executing their studies. I hope that in doing so, that the distinctive contribution/s of such studies may be enhanced.

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Accepted_AAFJ_May_2022 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 May 2022
Published date: 28 May 2022
Keywords: Accounting and finance, positive and quantitative empirical studies, journal articles, research context and theory, developing and emerging economies, Africa, Asia, Middle East and North Africa, Caribbean, Eastern Europe, South America

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457294
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457294
ISSN: 2683-6599
PURE UUID: 705bf0ed-15df-4390-981a-61b7cd97d24f
ORCID for Collins Ntim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1042-4056

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Date deposited: 31 May 2022 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:27

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