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Therapeutic governance: the art of mediating shame and blame and quasi-judicial pragmatic technologies in Indonesian government auditor-auditee engagements

Therapeutic governance: the art of mediating shame and blame and quasi-judicial pragmatic technologies in Indonesian government auditor-auditee engagements
Therapeutic governance: the art of mediating shame and blame and quasi-judicial pragmatic technologies in Indonesian government auditor-auditee engagements
Government audit services provided by state auditors are frequently beset by complex and often emotional engagements with the auditees. Both auditors and auditees are subjected to multiple yet conflicting socio-political rationalities, administrative demands, and complex performance measurements. Auditees often perceive these interactions as a source of burden, fear, frustration, anxiety, and, at times, resistance or even revulsion regarding the audit process. Our ethnographic case study shows that the Indonesian government auditors and auditees employ the arts of the emotional self, as they feel burdened with the potential shame and blame that might result from an unsuccessful audit. Our study provides insights into how the quasi-judicial rationalities and bureaucratic demands manifested in various indices of performance imposed upon auditors and auditees lead to the critical need to achieve unqualified audit opinions. The pressures of ensuring a successful audit and reputation maintenance stimulate the enfolding of emotionalities in different stages of the audit process. Our study reveals auditor-auditee engagement in therapeutic governance as a mediation strategy to avoid the enfolding of shame or blame around a failure to achieve the targeted audit performance. In such a complex audit setting, both parties engage in pragmatic technological actions by administering shifts in roles and fostering familiarity to co- produce audit evidence.
Auditor-auditee engagements, Practical mediation strategies, Pragmatic technologies, Quasi-judicial power, Shame and blame, Therapeutic governance
1045-2354
Hidayah, Nunung Nurul
f57c537d-8eec-4097-b209-d98a280469b1
Amyar, Firdaus
3a8aa008-b7a7-4d7e-9a05-8995b6fad5a5
Lowe, Alan
c551b4f4-428b-4359-bcf8-ffeec292dac1
Hidayah, Nunung Nurul
f57c537d-8eec-4097-b209-d98a280469b1
Amyar, Firdaus
3a8aa008-b7a7-4d7e-9a05-8995b6fad5a5
Lowe, Alan
c551b4f4-428b-4359-bcf8-ffeec292dac1

Hidayah, Nunung Nurul, Amyar, Firdaus and Lowe, Alan (2024) Therapeutic governance: the art of mediating shame and blame and quasi-judicial pragmatic technologies in Indonesian government auditor-auditee engagements. Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 100, [102765]. (doi:10.1016/j.cpa.2024.102765).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Government audit services provided by state auditors are frequently beset by complex and often emotional engagements with the auditees. Both auditors and auditees are subjected to multiple yet conflicting socio-political rationalities, administrative demands, and complex performance measurements. Auditees often perceive these interactions as a source of burden, fear, frustration, anxiety, and, at times, resistance or even revulsion regarding the audit process. Our ethnographic case study shows that the Indonesian government auditors and auditees employ the arts of the emotional self, as they feel burdened with the potential shame and blame that might result from an unsuccessful audit. Our study provides insights into how the quasi-judicial rationalities and bureaucratic demands manifested in various indices of performance imposed upon auditors and auditees lead to the critical need to achieve unqualified audit opinions. The pressures of ensuring a successful audit and reputation maintenance stimulate the enfolding of emotionalities in different stages of the audit process. Our study reveals auditor-auditee engagement in therapeutic governance as a mediation strategy to avoid the enfolding of shame or blame around a failure to achieve the targeted audit performance. In such a complex audit setting, both parties engage in pragmatic technological actions by administering shifts in roles and fostering familiarity to co- produce audit evidence.

Text
Therapeutic Governance CPA accepted - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 27 September 2026.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 September 2024
Published date: 1 December 2024
Keywords: Auditor-auditee engagements, Practical mediation strategies, Pragmatic technologies, Quasi-judicial power, Shame and blame, Therapeutic governance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494241
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494241
ISSN: 1045-2354
PURE UUID: be219250-be7c-4438-9816-1062f2f46142
ORCID for Nunung Nurul Hidayah: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3178-4584

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Oct 2024 16:59
Last modified: 06 Dec 2024 02:59

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Contributors

Author: Firdaus Amyar
Author: Alan Lowe

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