Routledge Handbook of Accounting Ethics

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accounting and business ethics
accounting decisions
Accounting Ethics
Accounting Ethics Education
Accounting Information Systems
Accounting Profession
Accounting student
AICPA Code
AICPA Member
Audit Client
Auditor Independence
auditor professionalism
Beta Alpha Psi
blockchain in finance
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Contingent Fees
CPA Exam
discourse ethics
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ethical complexities
ethical decision making in accountancy
Ethical implications
ethical responsibilities in accounting
ethics in accounting
External Whistleblowing
feminist perspectives
Human society
Intellectual Virtues
Large Public Accounting Firms
Management Accounting Research
Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation
moral philosophy
Non-audit Services
Occupational Frauds
PCAOB
PCAOB Audit Standard
Practical Wisdom
Professional Skepticism
Public Accounting Firms
sustainability accounting
Tax Avoidance
the intersectionality of accounting and ethics
US public accounting profession
Virtue Ethics

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138591967
  • Weight: 1340g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The perspective of this book is to present "ethics" as a conversation about how we decide what is good or bad, right or wrong. It is a collection of conversations employed by educators to assist accounting students in developing their understanding of accounting's ethical aspects and to help them develop into critical thinkers who consider the ethical complexities of the function of accounting in human society.

Because we are social beings, ethics is a central human concern, since it involves determining the ethicality of human actions and their effect on other individuals, as well as determining the collective societal acceptance or rejection of an action. Thus, the book’s primary goal is to call attention to the intersectionality of accounting and ethics and to encourage students and researchers to consider the ethical implications of accounting decisions. The book contains a diversity of perspectives within which discussions of accountants' and accounting's ethical responsibilities may occur. The contributing authors were deliberately chosen for their diverse perspectives on whence moral guidance for accounting may come. Each chapter stands on its own and represents the thinking of its authors. The book is not a primer on correct behavior for accountants but a place where educators may spur the conversation along.

Eileen Z. Taylor, PhD, CPA, CFE, is a professor of accounting in the Poole College of Management at North Carolina State University. Her teaching and research focus on whistleblowing, ethics, and data security.

Paul F. Williams, PhD, is a professor of accounting in the Poole College of Management at North Carolina State University. His scholarly interests include accounting ethics, theory, and critical perspectives in accounting.