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Original Articles

Accounting and the Benthams: accounting as negation?

Pages 239-274 | Published online: 28 Jul 2006

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John Richard Edwards & HughT. Greener. (2003) Introducing ‘mercantile’ bookkeeping into British central government, 1828–1844. Accounting and Business Research 33:1, pages 51-64.
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Christopher J. Napier. (1996) Academic disdain? Economists and accounting in Britain, 1850–1950. Accounting, Business & Financial History 6:3, pages 427-450.
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Keith Hooper & Kathryn Kearins. (1995) The rise and fall of the Judge and Renouf Corporations: extravagant reporting and publicity. Accounting, Business & Financial History 5:2, pages 187-210.
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Articles from other publishers (12)

Deirdre M Collier & Paul J Miranti. (2018) The Enlightenment’s connections to two US accounting-based regulatory models. Accounting History 24:2, pages 269-292.
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Thomas N Tyson & David Oldroyd. (2018) Accounting for slavery during the Enlightenment: Contradictions and interpretations. Accounting History 24:2, pages 212-235.
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James M. Wilson. (2016) Performance-based pay: alternative interpretations of the Portsmouth Block Mills’ savings. Journal of Management History 22:3, pages 269-297.
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Sonja Gallhofer & Jim Haslam. 2015. Wiley Encyclopedia of Management. Wiley Encyclopedia of Management 1 6 .
Tim Murphy, Vincent O’Connell & Ciarán Ó hÓgartaigh. (2013) Discourses surrounding the evolution of the IASB/FASB Conceptual Framework: What they reveal about the “living law” of accounting. Accounting, Organizations and Society 38:1, pages 72-91.
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Catriona Paisey & Nicholas J. Paisey. (2011) Visibility, governance and social context. Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal 24:5, pages 587-621.
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Jayne Elizabeth Bisman. (2009) The census as accounting artefact: A research note with illustrations from the early Australian colonial period. Accounting History 14:3, pages 293-314.
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Mahmoud Ezzamel. (2009) Order and accounting as a performative ritual: Evidence from ancient Egypt. Accounting, Organizations and Society 34:3-4, pages 348-380.
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Stephen P Walker. (2004) Expense, social and moral control. Accounting and the administration of the old poor law in England and Wales. Journal of Accounting and Public Policy 23:2, pages 85-127.
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John Richard Edwards, Hugh M Coombs & Hugh T Greener. (2002) British central government and “the mercantile system of double entry” bookkeeping: a study of ideological conflict. Accounting, Organizations and Society 27:7, pages 637-658.
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Sonja Gallhofer, Jim Haslam, STEPHEN MORROW & Robin Sydserff. (1999) Accounting, Transparency and the Culture of Spin: Re‐Orientating Accounting Communication in the New Millennium. Pacific Accounting Review 11:1/2, pages 97-111.
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Garry D. Carnegie & Christopher J. Napier. (1996) Critical and interpretive histories: insights into accounting’s present and future through its past. Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal 9:3, pages 7-39.
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