Called to Account: Financial Frauds that Shaped the Accounting Profession

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Routledge, Jul 24, 2013 - Business & Economics - 384 pages

Selected as an Outstanding Academic Title by Choice Magazine in 2014!

Called to Account takes a broad perspective on how financial frauds have shaped the public accounting profession by focusing on cases of fraud around the globe. Ever entertaining and educational, the book traces the development of the accounting standards and legislation put in place as a direct consequence of these epic scandals.

The new edition offers updated chapters on ZZZZ Best and Arthur Andersen, plus new chapters devoted to Parmalat, Satyam, and The Great Recession. Through stories like Barry Minkow’s staged constructions sites and MiniScribe’s fake inventory number generating computer program, "Cook Book", students will learn that fraud is nothing new, and that financial reform is heavily influenced by politics.

With discussion questions and a useful chart showing instructors and students how each chapter illustrates the topics covered in other textbooks, Called to Account is the ideal companion for any class in auditing, advanced accounting or forensic accounting.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Part I Birth of a Profession
15
Part II The Professions Principle Problem
43
Part III The Savings Loan Crisis
79
Part IV The Expectation Gap
117
Part V The Litigation Crisis
151
Part VI Beginning of the End
185
Part VII From Profession to Regulated Industry
221
Part VIII The World is Flat
267
Discussion Questions
310
Suggestions for Integrating Called to Accoun twith Popular Auditing Texts
321
Notes
324
Sources
342
Index
365
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Paul M. Clikeman is Associate Professor of Accounting at the E. Claiborne Robins School of Business at the University of Richmond, USA.

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