Bibliographie sélective OHADA

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Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
Titre
International Accounting Standards in Africa: Selective Recursivity for the 'Happy Few'?
Résumé
This study explores recursivity in international accounting standard-setting, focusing on participation of actors from African countries. While the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) Foundation bases its legitimacy claims as a global standard-setter on a combination of expertise and a formally transparent set of recursive procedures for consultation of stakeholders, empirical results show that participation in the latter is geographically very uneven. The article argues that conceptual mismatch between the standard-setter's objectives on the one hand and the socio-economic, cultural and political conditions in many African countries on the other leads to selective recursivity that is problematic for the former's legitimacy and effectiveness. These findings are of wider relevance for debates on global standard-setting and development.
Publication
Global Policy
Date
2017
Volume
8
Numéro
4
Pages
553-562
ISSN
1758-5880
Titre abrégé
International Accounting Standards in Africa
Langue
EN
Référence
Botzem, S., Quack, S., & Zori, S. G. (2017). International Accounting Standards in Africa: Selective Recursivity for the “Happy Few”? Global Policy, 8(4), 553–562. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.12514