Traditional accountants and business professionals: portraying the accounting profession after Enron

Carnegie, Garry and Napier, Christopher

(2009)

Carnegie, Garry and Napier, Christopher (2009) Traditional accountants and business professionals: portraying the accounting profession after Enron.

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Abstract

Society’s perception of the legitimacy of the accounting profession and its members is grounded in the verbal and visual images of accountants that are projected not only by accountants themselves but also by the media. The paper uses the critical literature on stereotypes to examine how books written for a general readership on Enron and other corporate failures portray accountants and accounting, and the implications their authors draw for corporate governance and the survival of the financial system. The paper explores how commentators have analysed the changing activities of accountants (including the rise of consulting) and have contrasted the personalities of “founding fathers” of the US accounting profession with their early 21st-century successors. The paper concludes that changing stereotypes of accountants may be evidence of “negative signals of movement” for the accounting profession, threatening accounting’s ongoing professionalization project.

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This is a Published version
This version's date is: 26/01/2009
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/0235f852-04bd-daba-ca08-bb3209e79bb8/1/

Item TypeMonograph (Working Paper)
TitleTraditional accountants and business professionals: portraying the accounting profession after Enron
AuthorsCarnegie, Garry
Napier, Christopher
Uncontrolled KeywordsAccounting profession, Enron, stereotypes, professionalization, auditing, popular management
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\Management

Identifiers

doiSoM0901

Deposited by () on 23-Dec-2009 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 14-Apr-2011

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