Title of article :
Accounting and accountability in ancient civilizations: Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt
Author/Authors :
Salvador Carmona، نويسنده , , Mahmoud Ezzamel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to analyze and critique the growing literature on
record-keeping practices in Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt with a particular focus on processes of
ancient accountability, and provide a research agenda for future work.
Design/methodology/approach – Analyzes the contributions of accounting historians in this area
as well as the research conducted by Assyriologists and Egyptologists. Our analysis emphasizes the
embeddeness of ancient processes of accounting and accountability in their wider contexts.
Findings – A framework is proposed comprising levels and spheres of accountability. The levels of
accountability consist of: hierarchical; horizontal; and self, all entailing both accounting and
non-accounting elements. Furthermore, accountability is analyzed at three spheres: the
individual-state, the state-individual, and the individual-individual.
Originality/value – Further research in this area might examine issues such as the temporal
dimension of accountability and whether more precise time measures than those reported in the extant
literature were enforced in ancient economies; how the ancients dealt with differences between actual
and expected measures; examination on the extent to which accountability exerted an impact on, and
the role of accounting in, ordering the lives of individuals and communities; and examination of the
trajectories of accounting and accountability across different historical episodes.
Keywords :
Accounting history , Ancient history , Accounting , Egypt , ExchangePaper type Research paper
Journal title :
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal
Journal title :
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal