In April 2016 Manchester eScholar was replaced by the University of Manchester’s new Research Information Management System, Pure. In the autumn the University’s research outputs will be available to search and browse via a new Research Portal. Until then the University’s full publication record can be accessed via a temporary portal and the old eScholar content is available to search and browse via this archive.

Related resources

Full-text held externally

University researcher(s)

    Management accounting change in a subsidiary organisation

    Yazdifar, Hassan; Zaman, Mahbub; Tsamenyi, Mathew; Askarany, Davood

    Critical Perspectives on Accounting. 2008;19(3):404-430.

    Access to files

    Abstract

    Parent-subsidiary relationships are commonplace nowadays, yet surprisingly there is a paucity of research analysing their dynamics over time. This paper presents a (longitudinal) case study, illuminating the dynamics implicated when a UK chemicals company imposed its systems and rules on a new subsidiary. Drawing on observations from a longitudinal case study (from 1993 to 2001), the study considers: (1) the extent to which a parent imposes its (management accounting) systems, rules and procedures on a subsidiary; (2) the role which (local) political, cultural and institutional factors in a subsidiary play in shaping the dynamics of such change implementation; (3) how new systems and practices become accepted and take root as values and beliefs and how they supplement earlier norms? The study provides insight for the questions above, and draws on institutional theories and a power mobilisation framework to assist in the interpretation of observations. We find that the operations of the subsidiary company are influenced by inter-related forces, both inside and outside the organisation encompassing issues of power, politics and culture. As such, existing institutions in a subsidiary organisation are influenced, sustained, and changed by the socio-economic context in which the subsidiary is located. Organisational practices designed to secure external legitimacy are not however always symbolic and decoupled from internal operations.

    Bibliographic metadata

    Type of resource:
    Content type:
    Publication type:
    Publication form:
    Published date:
    ISSN:
    Publisher:
    Volume:
    19
    Issue:
    3
    Start page:
    404
    End page:
    430
    Total:
    27
    Digital Object Identifier:
    10.1016/j.cpa.2006.08.004
    Access state:
    Active

    Institutional metadata

    University researcher(s):

    Record metadata

    Manchester eScholar ID:
    uk-ac-man-scw:1g153
    Created:
    21st September, 2009, 22:22:29
    Last modified by:
    Bentley, Hazel
    Last modified:
    1st October, 2014, 19:48:20

    Can we help?

    The library chat service will be available from 11am-3pm Monday to Friday (excluding Bank Holidays). You can also email your enquiry to us.