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Accounting polycentricity in Africa: Framing an ‘accounting and development’ research agenda
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Accounting polycentricity in Africa: Framing an ‘accounting and development’ research agenda

Konan A. Seny Kan, Serge Agbodjo and Serge V. Gandja
Critical Perspectives on Accounting, Vol.78, 102234
01/07/2021

Abstract

Development Institutional Analysis and Development Literature review Polycentricity Accounting Africa
This paper reviews the accounting literature on Africa development using the notion of polycentricity. The revived debates on accounting in developing countries indicate the need to link accounting and development, which implies that the accounting literature neglects the elements to do so. We question this starting from two points of reasoning. First, the exclusion of scholarly contributions from less developed countries in the international academic debates has been widely acknowledged. Second, over recent years, numerous contributions on organizational and accounting issues have appeared, but are too fragmented to constitute a coherent academic and intellectual corpus. Our review draws on 171 papers on accounting research on Africa in 33 accounting journals over the past four decades, utilizing an accounting and development research framework of polycentricity, which has two major features: actors intervening at three analytical levels (constitutive, collective, and operational) and their actions, to identify areas that may sustain the growing momentum of accounting and development research.
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Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.343 Organizational Theory
Web of Science research areas
Business, Finance
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