The recognition and negotiation of class-based barriers to progression and inclusion in accounting professional services firms

IF 3.6 2区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE Accounting Organizations and Society Pub Date : 2024-05-03 DOI:10.1016/j.aos.2024.101551
Christopher Flanagan, Yvonne Joyce
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Abstract

Drawing on interviews with accountants working at professional services firms (PSFs) in the UK, we explore how reflexivity enables accountants to recognise and negotiate class-based barriers to progression and inclusion. We identify a range of reflexive practices (including conversations with colleagues and clients, observations, mentoring, mulling over, and imagining) and show how these interact with habitus to structure the individual (mis)recognition of class-based barriers in the workplace. We find that reflexivity can engender an awareness of ‘difference’ and sense of inferiority relative to others, primarily for those from less privileged backgrounds. We provide evidence of the enabling role of reflexive practices which lead to purposive action for negotiating class-based barriers. However, we also find that reflexivity can lead to idiosyncratic strategies which support assimilation to (rather than challenging) existing practices in the accounting field. We find contradictory accounts of the effects of class, where class is recognised as a barrier, yet individuals are thought to progress through merit. We explain this tension through the limitations of reflexivity, restricted opportunities for reflexivity, and misrecognition of the effects of class in a seemingly meritocratic system. We provide examples of enduring and unrecognised class-based inequalities in accounting PSFs, including team composition and work allocation, class-segmented service lines, and the long-term consequences for those from less privileged backgrounds of having to work harder to ‘reach the same level’. Our findings suggest that PSFs must facilitate ‘difficult’ conversations aimed at breaking the culture of silence around class.

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认识并协商会计专业服务公司中基于阶级的进步和包容障碍
通过对在英国专业服务公司(PSFs)工作的会计师的访谈,我们探讨了反思性如何使会计师认识到并协商基于阶级的障碍,从而实现进步和融入。我们确定了一系列反思性实践(包括与同事和客户的对话、观察、指导、琢磨和想象),并展示了这些实践如何与习惯相互作用,以构建个人对工作场所中基于阶级的障碍的(错误)认识。我们发现,反思性会让人意识到 "差异",并产生相对于他人的自卑感,这主要是对那些出身较差的人而言。我们提供的证据表明,反思性实践具有促进作用,可导致采取有目的的行动来谈判阶级障碍。然而,我们也发现,反思性可能导致支持同化(而不是挑战)会计领域现有做法的特异策略。我们发现,关于阶级影响的说法自相矛盾,阶级被认为是一种障碍,但个人又被认为是通过成绩取得进步的。我们通过反思的局限性、反思机会的限制以及在看似任人唯贤的制度中对阶级影响的错误认识来解释这种矛盾。我们举例说明了在会计专业的私营机构中,长期存在的、未被认识到的基于阶级的不平等现象,包括团队构成和工作分配、阶级划分的服务项目,以及出身较差者不得不付出更多努力才能 "达到相同水平 "的长期后果。我们的研究结果表明,私营部门基金必须促进 "艰难 "的对话,以打破围绕阶级的沉默文化。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
6.40%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: Accounting, Organizations & Society is a major international journal concerned with all aspects of the relationship between accounting and human behaviour, organizational structures and processes, and the changing social and political environment of the enterprise.
期刊最新文献
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