Year
2002
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Abstract
Using data from Islamic accounting in Indonesia, and the global network of Islamic financial engineers, accounting’s rhetorical functions are challenged by attending to the inherent reflexivity of accounting practice. Such a move is necessary because critical accounting scholarship mirrors Islamic accountancy debates around the form of accounting knowledge. The techniques for creating anthropological knowledge in the light of new cultures of accounting deserve recognition and attention.
English
ISSN/ISBN
0025-1496
No. of Pages
pp. 645-667
Number
4
Volume
8
Select type of work
Name of the Journal
CIS Program Old
CIS publications
No
CIS Thesis
No