Accounting for the Holocaust

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Accounting
Accounting and Culture
accounting role in genocide
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Category=KCZ
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Category=KJC
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Concentration camps
dehumanisation mechanisms
Double-entry bookkeeping
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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eq_society-politics
expropriation of assets
fascist regime studies
Final Solution
Genocide
Holocaust
Jews
Nazi economic policy
professional ethics history
propaganda analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032685274
  • Weight: 690g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jun 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Accounting for the Holocaust: Enabling the Final Solution reveals how accounting practices allowed the attempted annihilation of Jews by the German Nazis and the Italian Fascists to be carried out with machine-like efficiency and devoid of any moral considerations.

This largely hidden aspect of the Holocaust will allow a wide range of readers, both academic and across many sectors of the general population, to understand how the systematic murder of more than six million Jews was expedited by accounting practices and the information that these produced by allowing the humanity of those killed to be denied when they became mere numbers in a process. Readers will gain a new understanding of how the enactment of the scale of the Holocaust was made possible by the way in which accounting practices as “technologies of death” were used to reduce Jews to a life without value. The numerical calculations, techniques, and reports that constitute accounting practices allowed the systematic murder of Jews to be drained of any considerations that would imply that the numbers and costings were related to prescient human beings. These technologies of death also allowed those who managed and organised the murder of Jews to absolve themselves of the actual killings.

Warwick Funnell is Emeritus Professor of Accounting and Public Sector Accountability at Kent Business School, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK.

Michele Bigoni is a Reader in Accounting at Kent Business School, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK.

Erin Twyford is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting at the University of Wollongong, Gwynneville, NSW, Australia.