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Accounting, identity, autopoiesis + sustainability: A comment, development and expansion on Lawrence, Botes, Collins and Roper (2013)

Tehmina Khan (School of Accounting, RMIT, Melbourne, Australia)
Rob Gray (School of Management, University of St Andrews, Fife, UK)

Meditari Accountancy Research

ISSN: 2049-372X

Article publication date: 11 April 2016

513

Abstract

Purpose

This paper is prompted by an analysis of accounting and accounting education by Lawrence et al. (2013) in this journal. In that paper, the authors use the theory of autopoiesis to articulate and explore, what they argue is, an inappropriate conservatism in accounting. This aims to develop the insights offered by Lawrence et al., to advance the understanding of autopoiesis and to use the insights from the theory of autopoiesis to try and confront (what we see as) the resistance shown in business and accounting to the possibilities of a more substantive sustainability agenda.

Design/methodology/approach

The essay takes its departure point as the paper by Lawrence et al. and uses the theory of autopoiesis as a metaphorical lens through which to re-examine accounting, business and educational practice with respect to sustainability.

Findings

This paper depart somewhat from Lawrence et al.’s arguments and inferences but broadly supports their contentions that accounting and accounting education are autopoietic. Some advances are offered to the theory and some issues for future research are briefly speculated upon. The analysis succeeds in highlighting that the accounting, business and educational systems may well be protecting their “cores” but are doing so by ignoring crucial and life-threatening information. In autopoietic terms, the sub-systems are behaving as closed systems that are causing self-harm and are being psychopathic. It is speculate that accounting educators may be, themselves, acting as autopoietic persons.

Research limitations/implications

The essay, in identifying some of the empirical weaknesses inherent in the theory of autopoiesis in a social science context, suggests that the persuasiveness or otherwise of the theory will probably lie in the extent to which a reader finds the heuristic plausible and not in any easily testable propositions. The implications, if this limitation is accepted, are, broadly, that accounting and accounting education are acting psychopathically in the face of (arguably) life-threatening data.

Practical Implications

There are extensive implications for research and policy but only those for education are explored here.

Social Implications

If the analysis is persuasive, the implication for engagement with the exigencies of sustainability is profound and disturbing.

Originality/value

The paper has two primary purposes: to challenge and develop debate around Lawrence et al.’s arguments and to use autopoiesis as one explanation for the inertia around sustainability, business and accounting. The paper extends the theory of autopoiesis as articulated in accounting to embrace both the issue of nesting systems and the autopoietic person. The combination of these contributions is combined with Lawrence et al., in offering a substantive challenge to accounting educators: albeit a substantively different one than those authors offered. It is these matters of difference that ultimately challenge the authors’ roles as educators, researchers and accountants.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to acknowledge a particular debt to Claire Kirman whose PhD thesis at Dundee University in 1999 was a major stimulus for initial interest in this area and, although unpublished, remains an important contribution to the field and a useful source of information. The authors would also like to acknowledge the very helpful suggestions and comments from Philip Roscoe, staff at an RMIT workshop, an anonymous referee for, as well as the delegates at, the A-CSEAR conference in Wollongong 2012. The authors are especially grateful to Richard Laughlin and Tom Lee for their thoughtful comments and suggestions on an earlier version of the paper which has since been greatly improved by the advice of anonymous reviewers. The authors are pleased to also acknowledge Sue Gray for her reading and advice.

Citation

Khan, T. and Gray, R. (2016), "Accounting, identity, autopoiesis + sustainability: A comment, development and expansion on Lawrence, Botes, Collins and Roper (2013)", Meditari Accountancy Research, Vol. 24 No. 1, pp. 36-55. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEDAR-06-2015-0032

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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