Abstract

Orientation: Conventional accounting education is presented from a business perspective that rationalises the prioritisation of shareholder interests. Such a paradigm, viewed as the hegemony of business, fails to deliver on the emancipatory intent of social and environmental justice. Research purpose: To determine whether a postgraduate diploma in integrated reporting (PGDIR) (advancing the principles of social and environmental justice) offered participants an explicitly transformative experience. Motivation for the study: As educators, first, the authors set out to determine whether graduates of the PGDIR achieved a critical awareness of the tension between sustainability and the hegemony of business, and second, they wanted to determine whether the PGDIR prepared students to deal with hegemonic domination in practice. Research approach/design and method: In this qualitative study, the first 4 years PGDIR graduates were interviewed. Main findings: Postgraduate diploma in integrated reporting graduates, after critical self-reflection, expressed a sense of disillusionment arising from having attempted to implement the theory presented in the PGDIR. Whilst prior studies have identified critical thinking skills as necessary components of critical accounting education, this study suggests the need for emotional intelligence, and skills in consultation and negotiation as equally important tools to empower graduates to deal with hegemonic tension in practice. Practical/managerial implications: The findings of the study could inform accounting pedagogies, as it explains how integrated reporting, with its purpose of advancing the principles of social and environmental justice, was taught in the PGDIR. Contribution/value-add: The PGDIR, the object of the study, is based on the principles of social and environmental justice and provides insights into the way that these concepts can be taught in a progressive way.

Highlights

  • OrientationConventional accounting education is presented from a business perspective that rationalises the prioritisation of shareholder interests (Gray, Bebbington & McPhail 1994; Gray & Collison 2002; Saravanamuthu 2015)

  • It aimed to determine whether graduates of the PGDIR, aiming to advance the principles of social and environmental justice, offered an explicitly transformative experience

  • This objective was reached by determining whether the graduates obtained a critical awareness of the tension between sustainability and the hegemony of business, and were prepared to deal with hegemonic domination in practice

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Summary

Introduction

Conventional accounting education is presented from a business perspective that rationalises the prioritisation of shareholder interests (Gray, Bebbington & McPhail 1994; Gray & Collison 2002; Saravanamuthu 2015). Such a paradigm, viewed as the hegemony of business, fails to deliver on the emancipatory intent of social and environmental justice (Spence 2009). This study focuses on a postgraduate programme (postgraduate diploma in integrated reporting [PGDIR]) that is based on principles of social and environmental justice – and starkly different from ‘normal’ business values. To assess whether the purpose was achieved, the study answered two research questions: First, did graduates of the PGDIR achieve a critical awareness of the tension between https://www.jefjournal.org.za

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