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Avarice and Ambition in Congress: Representatives' Decisions to Run or Retire from the U.S. House
In: American political science review, Band 89, Heft 1, S. 121-136
ISSN: 0003-0554
Organizations: Structures, Processes, and Outcomes
In: Teaching sociology: TS, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 88
ISSN: 1939-862X
The Probability of Dependence on Public Assistance
In: Economica, Band 48, Heft 190, S. 109
The Taxation of Earnings Under Public Assistance
In: Economica, Band 42, Heft 168, S. 373
PRATT AND PRATFALLS:: Revisioning Contact Zones
In: Crossing Borderlands, S. 95-109
Introduction: Right-Wing Populism and the Media
In: New political science: official journal of the New Political Science Caucus with APSA, Band 34, Heft 4, S. 439-454
ISSN: 1469-9931
Introduction: Right-Wing Populism and the Media
In: New political science: a journal of politics & culture, Band 34, Heft 4, S. 439-454
ISSN: 0739-3148
The Land Question in South Africa:The challenge of transformation and distribution
In: http://opencontent.uct.ac.za/Humanities/The-Land-Question-in-South-AfricaThe-challenge-of-transformation-and-distribution
The extent to which indigenous people were dispossessed of their land by whites in South Africa under colonial rule and apartheid has no parallels on the African continent. This book debates these issues against the backdrop of a land reform programme that made limited headway in the first decade of South Africa's democracy. The book offers a robust assessment of that programme and raises critical questions for its future.
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Disclosure Regulation and Accounting Education in the UK: Moving Towards Corporate Accountability 252 and Transparency
In: Social responsibility journal: the official journal of the Social Responsibility Research Network (SRRNet), Band 2, Heft 3/4, S. 251-260
ISSN: 1758-857X
This paper was motivated by the current debate over the voluntary approach to environmental disclosures in corporate annual reports and assesses the effectiveness of the current policy of voluntarism in the UK. A brief review of the relevant theories, which explain why managers might choose to voluntarily provide environmental responsibility information to parties outside the organisation, is presented. With this background, the paper then questions whether the UK government's faith in voluntarism and the pursuit of best practice will be enough to generate any real change in current environmental reporting practices. We argue that voluntarism is not effective and that there is an urgent need to introduce strict governmental regulations on the information that must be disclosed and the form in which it should be presented in corporate annual reports as have been established in several other countries. In addition, further consideration is needed to achieve reforms in academic accounting education in order to improve corporate accountability and transparency in corporate annual reports. Organisations need to respond to the growing demands for corporate social and environmental responsibility and this will be possible with the support of an accounting profession that takes a more proactive approach to engaging with stakeholders. For this to happen, we need to rethink the focus of accounting and business education. We must move away from the dominant model, which treats accountancy as a set of techniques, towards a more holistic approach which recognises the social and environmental impacts of organisational activity.