Prelims
Advances in Management Accounting
ISBN: 978-1-78714-530-6, eISBN: 978-1-78714-529-0
ISSN: 1474-7871
Publication date: 3 July 2017
Citation
(2017), "Prelims", Advances in Management Accounting (Advances in Management Accounting, Vol. 28), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xvi. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1474-787120170000028014
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
ADVANCES IN MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Series Page
ADVANCES IN MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
Series Editors:
Volumes 1–25: Marc J. Epstein and John Y. Lee
Volumes 26 and 27: Marc J. Epstein and Mary A. Malina
Recent Volumes:
Volumes 1–27: Advances in Management Accounting
Title Page
ADVANCES IN MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING VOLUME 28
ADVANCES IN MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
EDITED BY
Mary A. Malina
University of Colorado Denver, USA
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2017
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Publishing Limited
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78714-530-6 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78714-529-0 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78714-963-2 (Epub)
ISSN: 1474-7871 (Series)
List of Contributors
Mohamed E. Bayou | College of Business, Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Dearborn, MI, USA |
Eric Cauvin | Université Nice Sophia (UNS), Nice, France; Kedge Business School, Marseilles, France |
Emer Curtis | Discipline of Accountancy & Finance, J.E. Cairnes School of Business & Economics, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland |
Michael M. Grayson | Murray Koppelman School of Business, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, New York |
Natalie Kyung Won Kim | Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea |
Anne M. Lillis | Fitzgerald Chair of Accounting, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia |
Ella Mae Matsumura | University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA |
Kenneth A. Merchant | Deloitte & Touche LLP Chair of Accountancy, Leventhal School of Accountancy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA |
Bruce R. Neumann | The Business School, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado |
Alan Reinstein | George R. Husband Professor of Accounting, Mike Ilitch School of Business, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan |
Michael L. Roberts | The Business School, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, Colorado |
Martin Schmidt | Department of Financial Reporting and Audit, ESCP Europe Berlin, Berlin, Germany |
Kelly M. Soderstrom | School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia |
Naomi S. Soderstrom | Accounting Department, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia |
Christopher R. Stewart | Accounting Department, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia |
Breda Sweeney | Discipline of Accountancy & Finance, J. E. Cairnes School of Business & Economics, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland |
Lourdes Ferreira White | Merrick School of Business, University of Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, USA |
Paul F. Williams | Poole College of Management, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA |
Editorial Board
Christopher Akroyd
Oregon State University, USA
Shannon W. Anderson
University of California Davis, USA
Jacob G. Birnberg
University of Pittsburgh, USA
Jan Bouwens
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Adriana Rejc Buhovac
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Laurie Burney
Baylor University, USA
Clara X. Chen
University of Illinois, USA
Donald K. Clancy
Texas Tech University, USA
Antonio Dávila
University of Navarra, Spain
Nabil S. Elias
University of North Carolina, Charlotte, USA
K. J. Euske
Naval Postgraduate School, USA
Eric G. Flamholtz
University of California, Los Angeles, USA
George J. Foster
Stanford University, USA
Dipankar Ghosh
University of Oklahoma, USA
Frank G. H. Hartmann
Erasmus University, The Netherlands
James W. Hesford
University of Lethbridge, Canada
Robert Hutchinson
Michigan Tech University, USA
Larry N. Killough
Virginia Polytechnic Institute, USA
Leslie Kren
University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA
Raef Lawson
Institute of Management Accountants, USA
Anne M. Lillis
University of Melbourne, Australia
Raj Mashruwala
University of Calgary, Canada
Ella Mae Matsumura
University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA
Lasse Mertins
Johns Hopkins University, USA
Sean A. Peffer
University of Kentucky, USA
Mina Pizzini
Texas State University, USA
Arthur Posch
Vienna University, Austria
Frederick W. Rankin
Colorado State University, USA
Karen L. Sedatole
Michigan State University, USA
Lourdes F. White
University of Baltimore, USA
Sally K. Widener
Clemson University, USA
Marc Wouters
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Statement of Purpose
Advances in Management Accounting (AIMA) is a publication of quality applied research in management accounting. The journal’s purpose is to publish thought-provoking articles that advance knowledge in the management accounting discipline and are of interest to both academics and practitioners. The journal seeks thoughtful, well-developed articles on a variety of current topics in management accounting, broadly defined. All research methods, including survey research, field tests, corporate case studies, experiments, meta-analyses, and modeling are welcome. Some speculative articles, research notes, critiques, and survey pieces will be included where appropriate.
Articles may range from purely empirical to purely theoretical, from practice-based applications to speculation on the development of new techniques and frameworks. Empirical articles must present sound research designs and well-explained execution. Theoretical arguments must present reasonable assumptions and logical development of ideas. All articles should include well-defined problems, concise presentations, and succinct conclusions that follow logically from the data.
Review Procedures
AIMA intends to provide authors with timely reviews clearly indicating the acceptance status of their manuscripts. The results of initial reviews normally will be reported to authors within eight weeks from the date the manuscript is received. The author will be expected to work with the Editor, who will act as a liaison between the author and the reviewers to resolve areas of concern. To ensure publication, it is the author’s responsibility to make necessary revisions in a timely and satisfactory manner.
Manuscript Form Guidelines
Manuscripts should include a cover page that indicates the author’s name and affiliation.
Manuscripts should include a separate lead page with a structured abstract (not to exceed 250 words) set out under four to seven sub-headings; purpose, methodology/approach, findings, research limitations/implications (if applicable), practical implications (if applicable), social implications (if applicable), and originality/value. Keywords should also be included. The author’s name and affiliation should not appear on the abstract.
Tables, figures, and exhibits should appear on a separate page. Each should be numbered and have a title.
In order to be assured of anonymous reviews, authors should not identify themselves directly or indirectly.
Manuscripts currently under review by other publications should not be submitted.
Authors should e-mail the manuscript in two WORD files to the editor. The first attachment should include the cover page and the second should exclude the cover page.
Inquiries concerning Advances in Management Accounting should be directed to:
Mary A. Malina
mary.malina@ucdenver.edu
Introduction
This volume of Advances in Management Accounting (AIMA) represents the diversity of management accounting topics, methods and author affiliation which form the basic tenets of AIMA. Included are papers on traditional management accounting topics such as management control systems and performance measurement, as well as articles on broader topics of interest to management accountants such as corporate social responsibility, sunk costs and the integration of financial and management accounting policies. The papers in this volume utilize a wide-variety of methods, including archival data analysis, literature reviews, experiments, and framework development. Finally, the diversity in authorship is apparent with affiliations from Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Republic of Korea, and the United States.
This volume begins with a paper developing a framework integrating topics in the ethics and management control literatures. At the 3rd AIMA World Conference on Management Accounting Research in May 2016, Kenneth Merchant presented a compelling session on this topic. The paper by Merchant and White is the product of that plenary session. The article brings to light the many topics where ethics and management control converge. By linking these topics, organizations can provide a framework to promote behavior that both contributes to the achievement of the organization’s objectives and also follows ethical principles. This is clearly a fruitful area for research and for integration in the classroom.
The next two papers explore the topic of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and how we, as management accounting researchers, can leverage our expertise to advance knowledge in CSR/sustainability. Ella Mae Matsumura presented a plenary session at the 3rd AIMA World Conference on Management Accounting Research. The paper by Kim and Matsumura is the product of that plenary session. Kim and Matsumura build a framework for analyzing CSR issues and Soderstrom, Soderstrom and Stewart conduct a literature review linked to the framework proposed in Kim and Matsumura. Both papers identify numerous research opportunities available for those interested in the intersection of management accounting and CSR/sustainability.
The fourth paper in the volume revisits Simons’ Levers of Control (LoC) framework. Curtis, Lillis, and Sweeney draw researchers back to the conceptual underpinnings of the LoC framework in order to advance the development of management control theory. The authors focus on the way the LoC have been operationalized in practice, the separate trajectories of the qualitative and quantitative literatures which often do not “speak” to each other and the potential to build a more coherent literature by drawing attention back to the conceptual core of the framework.
Reinstein, Bayou, Williams, and Grayson provide a summary of various literatures dealing with the age-old issue of sunk costs. The paper presents the impasse or conflict that exists between accounting/economic theories that sunk costs ought not to be brought into incremental decision-making and what actually happens in practice as reported in the organizational behavior literature. The authors bring together the various literatures in a coherent way so as to provide guidance to future research and practice.
The sixth paper by Schmidt examines the effects of various aspects of firm complexity on the alignment between firms’ financial and management accounting systems. The author tackles the difficult issue of understanding some firm-level determinants of integrated financial and management accounting systems. This is an interesting topic and the author utilizes a novel approach based on reported financial information to examine this issue.
The final paper by Roberts, Neumann, and Cauvin investigates the potential characteristics, causes and boundaries of the financial measures bias. The authors develop a theoretical model to explore evaluators’ choice and use of the most important performance measurement criterion among financial and non-financial measures. They run an experiment to provide direct evidence of participants’ experience and attitudes about the relative accounting qualities of financial and non-financial measures and links them to their choice of the most important performance measures.
The seven papers in Volume 28 represent relevant, theoretically sound, and practical studies that can greatly benefit the management accounting discipline. They manifest the journal’s commitment to providing a high level of contribution to management accounting research and practice.
Mary A. Malina
Editor
- Prelims
- Linking the Ethics and Management Control Literatures
- Managerial Accounting Research in Corporate Social Responsibility: A Framework and Opportunities for Research
- Sustainability/CSR Research in Management Accounting: A Review of the Literature
- Simons’ Levers of Control Framework: Commensuration within and of the Framework
- Resolving the Sunk Cost Conflict
- Aligning Financial and Management Accounting Policies: What Drives Integration? – Empirical Evidence from German IFRS 8 Segment Reports
- Individual Performance Measures: Effects of Experience on Preference for Financial or Non-Financial Measures
- Index