1st Edition

Sustainability in Accounting Education

    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    Accounting sustainably involves accounting for and to the natural environment, and accounting for and to society, including groups currently oppressed or disadvantaged by unsustainable processes and practices. This book creates a compelling case for the inclusion of sustainability at the heart of accounting educational programmes, offering critical lessons and identifying risks to avoid when designing accounting programmes and courses. Accounting sustainability has moved from the side-lines of policy discourses, accounting institutions, professional accounting practices, and research activities into the mainstream. The chapters in this proposed book engage in a critical dialogue to facilitate change in accounting education for sustainability. They dispel the myth that accounting for sustainability is an oxymoron, bad for business, unrelated to practice, or contrary to professional accounting bodies’ accreditation requirements.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Accounting Education.

    Introduction: Sustainability and Accounting Education: The Elephant in the Classroom Maria Cadiz Dyball, Ian Thomson and Richard M S Wilson

    Part 1: Sustainability and Accounting Education

    1. Sustainability and Accounting Education: The Elephant in the Classroom Rob Gray

    2. A Commentary on ‘Sustainability and Accounting Education: The Elephant in the Classroom’ Matias Laine

    3. ‘Utopia’ and ‘Passion’: A Commentary on ‘Sustainability and Accounting Education: The Elephant in the Classroom’ Massimo Contrafatto

    Part 2: Integrated Reporting

    4. Integrated Reporting: A Review of Developments and their Implications for the Accounting Curriculum Gareth Owen

    5. A Commentary on ‘Integrated Reporting: A Review of Developments and their Implications for the Accounting Curriculum’ Nancy Kamp-Roelands

    6. A Commentary on ‘Integrated Reporting: A Review of Developments and their Implications for the Accounting Curriculum’ Carmen Correa Ruiz

    7. A Rejoinder to Commentaries on ‘Integrated Reporting: A Review of Developments and their Implications for the Accounting Curriculum’ Gareth Owen

    Part 3: Rhetoric or Reality?

    8. Rhetoric or Reality? Do Accounting Education and Experience Increase Weighting on Environmental Performance in a Balanced Scorecard? Monte Wynder, Kai-Uwe Wellner and Karin Reinhard

    9. A Commentary on ‘Rhetoric or Reality? Do Accounting Education and Experience Increase Weighting on Environmental Performance in a Balanced Scorecard?’ Carlos Larrinaga

    10. Sustainability Education and Accounting Experience. What Motivates Higher Valuation of Environmental Performance? Stefan Schaltegger

    11. Will Rhetoric ever Become Reality? A Rejoinder to Larrinaga and Schaltegger Monte Wynder

    Part 4: Corporate Responsibility

    12. Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights and Business Schools’ Responsibility to Teach It: Incorporating Human Rights into the Sustainability Agenda Ken McPhail

    13. A Commentary on ‘Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights and Business Schools’ Responsibility to Teach It’ Jeff Everett

    14. Incorporating Human Rights into the Sustainability Agenda Jane Andrew

    15. A Rejoinder to Commentaries on ‘Corporate Responsibility to Respect Human Rights and Business Schools’ Responsibility to Teach It’ Ken McPhail

    Biography

    Maria Cadiz Dyball is Associate Professor of Accounting at Macquarie University, Australia. She has diverse research interests that explore differences and shifts in philosophies and traditions and how these are mediated through and reflected in accounting professionalisation projects, practices, and education. Professor Dyball has published widely in top-tier academic and professional journals and her research is supported by external, competitive grants.

    Ian Thomson is Professor of Accounting at the University of Strathclyde, UK. He has undertaken research into many different aspects of accounting and sustainability. These projects have included interdisciplinary studies on implementation of cleaner technology, establishing industrial ecologies, effective stakeholder engagement, risk governance in water and salmon farming, sustainable development indicators, government policy-making, external accounting and accounting education. In 2012, he was elected convener of the governing council of the Centre for Social and Environmental Accounting Research.

    Richard M S Wilson is Emeritus Professor of Business Administration and Financial Management at Loughborough University, UK. He has devoted his career to boundary-spanning (e.g.as practitioner and professor, across disciplines, and in different jurisdictions). For 40 years he has been active nationally and internationally in educational policy-making on the interface of accounting education and training; has worked in more than a dozen countries; has published widely; is the founding editor of Accounting Education: an international journal; holds two Lifetime Achievement Awards (one specifically for his work on accounting education); and is an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences.