Extending Schumacher's concept of total accounting and accountability into the 21st century [electronic resource] / edited by Kala Saravanamuthu, Cheryl R. Lehman.
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TextSeries: Advances in public interest accounting ; v. 14.Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2009Description: 1 online resource (xiv, 410 p.)ISBN: 9781848553019 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Business & Economics -- Accounting -- General | Accounting | Public finance | Accounting | FinanceAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 657 LOC classification: HF5635 | .E98 2009Online resources: Click here to access online | Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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A journey of socialising the risks associated with global warming : a Gandhian insight into Schumacher's total accounting and accountability / Kala Saravanamuthu -- Developments in the Schumacher ethos / Ian Roderick -- Sustainable atmospheric management / Barrie Pittock, G. Dale Hess -- Decentralised mega visioning : compiling a global scale, beautifully small vision for water / Roderic Gill -- Buddhist economics : a path from an amoral accounting toward a moral one / Jesse Dillard -- Reasons, means and consequences : monitoring soil condition for the proper use of land / Lisa Lobry de Bruyn -- The dilemma in monitoring voluntary labour standards : labour's muted consent to exploit itself / Alex Kaufman, Kala Saravanamuthu -- Developing Schumacher's total accounting into an accountability interface between the science of climate change and the sustainability discourse / Kala Saravanamuthu -- Social accounting for sufficiency : Buddhist principles and practices, and their application in Thailand / Gordon Boyce, Wanna Prayukvong, Apichai Puntasen.
A decade on from Schumacher's 1997 work, there are renewed calls for a paradigm shift from the metaphysics of materialism that informs conventional thinking, to holistic theorisations of how we should engage with the other. Twenty-first century frameworks of accountability should emancipate society from the hegemony of neoclassical economics. This special issue posits Schumacher's Middle Way thinking in the context of growing concerns about global warming and climatic changes and, teases out its implications for holistic accountability by introducing readers to the science of climate change and its implications for managing natural resources, and integrating 'western' and 'eastern' tenets of holistic knowledge without dichotomising them into 'either or' frameworks.
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