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Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next
Public Money & Management, Volume: 44, Issue: 5, Pages: 347 - 348
Swansea University Authors: Richard Baylis , Lukas Helikum
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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/09540962.2024.2333613
Abstract
The crisis within public sector accounting (PSA) has been the topic of much discussion with an emerging consensus that action needs to be taken to manage the demand and supply for statutory audit (ICAEW, Citation2022) and the sustainability of the PSA profession (Baylis & De Widt, Citation2023)....
Published in: | Public Money & Management |
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ISSN: | 0954-0962 1467-9302 |
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Informa UK Limited
2024
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa65972 |
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v2 65972 2024-04-04 Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next 94b4f1c7033b10801cd7696329c5d15d 0000-0003-0080-647X Richard Baylis Richard Baylis true false b4dd73821ce17c52521386cd177395bb 0000-0002-9392-6165 Lukas Helikum Lukas Helikum true false 2024-04-04 CBAE The crisis within public sector accounting (PSA) has been the topic of much discussion with an emerging consensus that action needs to be taken to manage the demand and supply for statutory audit (ICAEW, Citation2022) and the sustainability of the PSA profession (Baylis & De Widt, Citation2023). In this article, we continue and extend this debate on how PSA can be stimulated and rejuvenated in the higher education context using an alternative educational framework to maintain a functioning and value-adding public sector accountability regime. Journal Article Public Money & Management 44 5 347 348 Informa UK Limited 0954-0962 1467-9302 9 4 2024 2024-04-09 10.1080/09540962.2024.2333613 Debate COLLEGE NANME Management School COLLEGE CODE CBAE Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) Swansea University 2024-06-03T09:43:17.1741968 2024-04-04T17:43:39.7979462 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Management - Accounting and Finance Richard Baylis 0000-0003-0080-647X 1 Dennis De Widt 2 Lukas Helikum 0000-0002-9392-6165 3 Rachel Ashworth 4 65972__30474__478f62d3e6784e3fb2e5d0e089a451ea.pdf 65972.VoR.pdf 2024-05-29T11:58:39.9864233 Output 641013 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2024 The Author(s). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
spellingShingle |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next Richard Baylis Lukas Helikum |
title_short |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
title_full |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
title_fullStr |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
title_full_unstemmed |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
title_sort |
Debate: The lack of public sector accounting education within universities and what is next |
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94b4f1c7033b10801cd7696329c5d15d b4dd73821ce17c52521386cd177395bb |
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94b4f1c7033b10801cd7696329c5d15d_***_Richard Baylis b4dd73821ce17c52521386cd177395bb_***_Lukas Helikum |
author |
Richard Baylis Lukas Helikum |
author2 |
Richard Baylis Dennis De Widt Lukas Helikum Rachel Ashworth |
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Journal article |
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Public Money & Management |
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44 |
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5 |
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347 |
publishDate |
2024 |
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Swansea University |
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0954-0962 1467-9302 |
doi_str_mv |
10.1080/09540962.2024.2333613 |
publisher |
Informa UK Limited |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Management - Accounting and Finance{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Management - Accounting and Finance |
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description |
The crisis within public sector accounting (PSA) has been the topic of much discussion with an emerging consensus that action needs to be taken to manage the demand and supply for statutory audit (ICAEW, Citation2022) and the sustainability of the PSA profession (Baylis & De Widt, Citation2023). In this article, we continue and extend this debate on how PSA can be stimulated and rejuvenated in the higher education context using an alternative educational framework to maintain a functioning and value-adding public sector accountability regime. |
published_date |
2024-04-09T09:43:17Z |
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11.037056 |