Lars Östman towards a general theory of financial control
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Research
It cannot be ignored during the early 21 st century that among accounting researchers there is growing interest in the relationships between “real world problems” and academic research – perhaps even a questioning attitude. Most research efforts have a specific and rather limited perspective – partitioning is common in research, too. Insights may no doubt be gained within such frames. However, clarifying perspectives and approaching integrative, linking issues are important strategies, if complicated real-world problems should be based on social research. Conventions and models beyond inter-subjective empirical rigour need to be approached in an analytical spirit; the actual, current roles of researchers often seem to be supporting and inventing new conventions and models. Often, explicit conclusions are too far-reaching, especially if they are transformed into something that is communicable to larger audiences. Social research, like other informational activities, includes story-telling exercised by a profession in relation to target groups in lecture rooms, media of various kinds – including academic journals – and the world of practical conduct. At abstract levels, the everyday logic of ordinary people sometimes coincides with simplifications within narrow professional frames, especially if such professional views are transformed into a public form and underline popular concepts that have strong rhetorical power, like “greed” and “transparency”. Complexity, rather than over-relativistic simplicity, should be a line for descriptions in social research, especially with respect to long-term effects. In many ways, research is exposed to the same mechanisms as other informational ventures that have been described above.
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