The Evolution of Accounting Science: COVID-19 Pandemic Lessons on Anti-Black Racism in Explorations of Accounting and Race.


Publication Type:
book chapters

Publication Year:
2024

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The COVID-19 pandemic has taught us four main lessons: supply chains matter, people can work from home and still be productive, wash your hands, and do not be racist. This chapter is about the last of these lessons, and reflects on my fledgling scholarship on anti-Black racism in the accounting profession, which coincidentally started in the winter of 2019. This chapter also introduces the five most commonly cited justifications for a lack of diversity and inertia or rationalization against diversity initiatives: public interest, equity, supply-side, temporal, and spatial (PESTS) rationales.

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Break down of publication data into fields

Publication Title:
The Evolution of Accounting Science: COVID-19 Pandemic Lessons on Anti-Black Racism in Explorations of Accounting and Race.

Author Name:
Akolisa Ufodike

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Conference Title:

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Title of Paper:

Chapter Title:
The Evolution of Accounting Science: COVID-19 Pandemic Lessons on Anti-Black Racism

Title of Journal:

Title of Book:
Explorations of Accounting and Race.

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Editor's Name (if different from Author's Name):
Anton Lewis, Joanne Sopt, Adam Saatkamp, and Jean Wells

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Publisher:
Bingley: Emerald Publishing.

City:
New York

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