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Beyond Competition: Institutional Isomorphism in U.S. Accounting Research

Accounting Horizons 21 (4), 387 (2007);
doi: 10.2308/acch.2007.21.4.387

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Brad Tuttle
University of South Carolina.

Jesse Dillard
Portland State University.
We propose remedies to the dramatic reduction in the diversity of research topics within the academic accounting literature. As a basis for our recommendations, we apply institutional theory in the field of academic accounting research and propose that responses to identifiable institutional influences rather than competitive forces account for the current exclusion of nonfinancial accounting topics. All three processes of institutional isomorphism (mimetic, coercive, and normative) appear to shape the organizational field of accounting research. However, the field has reached a stage where it is primarily, but not exclusively, motivated by the normative isomorphism. As such, institutional pressures often eclipse theoretical relevance, individual research preferences, and practical applicability. These effects pervade aspects of the accounting academy beyond publishing. We outline programs and propose actions for enhancing diversity as prescriptions for countering the institutional forces acting within the field of academic accounting research. ©2007 American Accounting Association
History: Submitted September 2006; accepted June 2007
Permalink: http://link.aip.org/link/ACHXXX/v21/i4/p387/s1

PUBLICATION DATA

ISSN:
0888-7993 (print)   1558-7975 (online)
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AIP is a member of CrossRef American Accounting Association

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