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Intellectual heritages of post-1990 public sector accounting research: an exploration

Hans-Jürgen Bruns (Institute of Human Resource Management, Leibniz University Hannover, Hannover, Germany)
Mark Christensen (Department of Accounting and Management Control, ESSEC Business School-Singapore Campus, Singapore, Singapore)
Alan Pilkington (Westminster Business School, University of Westminster, London, UK)

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal

ISSN: 0951-3574

Article publication date: 1 July 2020

Issue publication date: 4 November 2020

501

Abstract

Purpose

The article's aim is to refine prospects for theorising in public sector accounting (PSA) research in order to capture the methodological benefits promised by its multi-disciplinarity.

Design/methodology/approach

The study primarily employs a bibliometric analysis of research outputs invoking New Public Management (NPM). Applying a content analysis to Hood (1991), as the most cited NPM source, bibliographic methods and citation/co-citation analysis for the period 1991 to 2018 are mobilised to identify the disciplinary evolution of the NPM knowledge base from a structural and longitudinal perspective.

Findings

The analysis exhibits disciplinary branching of NPM over time and its imprints on post-1990 PSA research. Given the discourse about origins of NPM-based accounting research, there are research domains behind the obvious that indicate disciplinary fragmentations. For instance, novelty of PSA research is found in public value accounting, continuity is evidenced by transcending contextual antecedents. Interestingly, these domains are loosely coupled. Exploring the role of disciplinary imprints designates prospects for post-NPM PSA research that acknowledges multi-disciplinarity and branching in order to deploy insularity as a building block for its inquiries.

Research limitations/implications

Criteria for assessing the limitations and credibility of an explorative inquiry are used, especially on how the proposal to develop cumulative knowledge from post-1990 PSA research can be further developed.

Practical implications

A matrix suggesting a method of ordering disciplinary references enables positioning of research inquiries within PSA research.

Originality/value

By extending common taxonomies of PSA intellectual heritages, the study proposes the ‘inquiry-heritage’ matrix as a typology that displays patterns of theorisation for positioning an inquiry within PSA disciplinary groundings.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the thoughtful and generous encouragement of this project by the Late Kerry Jacobs. The paper has also benefited from comments and critiques offered through its presentation at the 2017 16th Biennial CIGAR Conference, Porto; the 2018 Public Management Research Conference, Singapore; and, the ESSEC Business School Cross Discipline Research Seminar series. Mark Christensen also acknowledges financial support for this project from ESSEC Business School. The insightful and encouraging advice from two anonymous reviewers and AAAJ Editor Distinguished Professor Lee Parker are also gratefully acknowledged.

Citation

Bruns, H.-J., Christensen, M. and Pilkington, A. (2020), "Intellectual heritages of post-1990 public sector accounting research: an exploration", Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, Vol. 33 No. 8, pp. 2077-2110. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-08-2018-3644

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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