Accounting for the “uncounted” workers: a dialectical view of accounting through Rancière
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal
ISSN: 0951-3574
Article publication date: 29 July 2020
Issue publication date: 20 October 2020
Abstract
Purpose
This paper examines how accounting either contributes to or undermines worker resistance to unfair pay, thereby enhancing our current understanding of the emancipatory potential of accounting.
Design/methodology/approach
We apply Jacques Rancière's concept of politics and build on recent calls to introduce Rancière's work to accounting by analysing a case based on workers in an Australian supermarket chain who challenged their employer Coles over wage underpayments.
Findings
We find that in this case, accounting is, in part, a means to politics and a part of the police in Rancière's sense. More specifically, accounting operated within the established order to constrain the workers, but also provided workers with a resource for their political acts that enabled change.
Originality/value
This empirical research adds to Li and McKernan (2016) and Brown and Tregidga (2017) conceptual work on Rancière. It also contributes more broadly to emancipatory accounting research by identifying radical possibilities for workers' accounting to bring about change.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This paper forms part of a special section Accounting for modern slavery, employees and work conditions in business, Guest edited by Katherine Christ, Roger Burritt and Stefan Schaltegger.
Citation
Yang, D., Dumay, J. and Tweedie, D. (2020), "Accounting for the “uncounted” workers: a dialectical view of accounting through Rancière", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 33 No. 7, pp. 1627-1655. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-06-2020-4608
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited