{"title":"小保罗·j·米兰蒂·瓦尔","authors":"D. Collier","doi":"10.1177/10323732221091860","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The world of accounting and business history suffered a large and sad loss when Paul J. Miranti, Jr. died on January 13, 2022, from complications related to contracting Covid 19 on Christmas Eve, 2021. Paul, a professor of accounting at the Rutgers School of Business in New Jersey, was 78 years old. Paul’s younger brother, Dr Richard Miranti, died on the same day in the same New Jersey hospital, also because of the global pandemic. Paul is survived by his youngest brother, Robert, and his former wife, Adrienne, whom he knew from childhood. Paul received the bulk of his academic training at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland. As an undergraduate and later as a graduate student, he studied under renowned business scholar Alfred D. Chandler, receiving a BA in history in 1965 and then graduating with his MA in 1968. He ultimately pursued his doctorate under the direction of Louis Galambos at Johns Hopkins, receiving his degree in 1985, when he was awarded the Herman Kroos Memorial Prize for his dissertation. In between his times at Hopkins, Paul attended New York University, where he received his MBA in 1974 (awarded the Kolodny Prize for his master’s thesis) and an Advanced Professional Certificate in International Finance in 1979. During these years, Paul worked at various firms as an auditor and analyst; he obtained his CPA credentials in 1976 while employed by Arthur Young & Co. in New York City. In 1981, Paul began to explore an academic career in earnest by serving as a part-time instructor at Rutgers Business School, part of the state university of New Jersey. Indeed, he never left Rutgers. Paul served as an adjunct lecturer at the Business School while pursuing his doctorate. After achieving his terminal degree, he joined the faculty as an assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in 1991 and then to full professor in 1999. For the next 3 years, Paul served as the Business School’s Associate Dean for Faculty and Research; he returned to the classroom in 2002, and he was scheduled to teach in Spring 2022. Paul felt it imperative for individuals to develop their natural scholarly abilities to their fullest. This belief found expression in his tireless work as a researcher. Over his long and distinguished career, Paul published 20 book chapters or encyclopedia articles and roughly 50 papers in refereed journals including Accounting History; Accounting, Organizations and Society; Business History Review; and Enterprise & Society. He was author or coauthor of four books. One book, A History of Corporate Finance (Baskin and Miranti, 1999) was widely read and translated into Chinese, Italian and Japanese. His last book, Years of Transition, The American Accounting Association, 1991–2016 (Miranti et al., 2016) was commissioned by the American Accounting Association as part of the celebration of its centennial. At the time of his death, Paul was involved with co-authors in two more book projects as well as several papers. He was always on the lookout for his next project or two. Paul found the discipline of accounting history underdeveloped, in part because of an ideological split in researchers between those employing an economic lens and those using a sociological one to Special Issue: Accounting and Work in Historical Perspective","PeriodicalId":45774,"journal":{"name":"Accounting History","volume":"27 1","pages":"185 - 187"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Vale, Paul J. Miranti, Jr.\",\"authors\":\"D. Collier\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/10323732221091860\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The world of accounting and business history suffered a large and sad loss when Paul J. Miranti, Jr. died on January 13, 2022, from complications related to contracting Covid 19 on Christmas Eve, 2021. Paul, a professor of accounting at the Rutgers School of Business in New Jersey, was 78 years old. Paul’s younger brother, Dr Richard Miranti, died on the same day in the same New Jersey hospital, also because of the global pandemic. Paul is survived by his youngest brother, Robert, and his former wife, Adrienne, whom he knew from childhood. Paul received the bulk of his academic training at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland. As an undergraduate and later as a graduate student, he studied under renowned business scholar Alfred D. Chandler, receiving a BA in history in 1965 and then graduating with his MA in 1968. He ultimately pursued his doctorate under the direction of Louis Galambos at Johns Hopkins, receiving his degree in 1985, when he was awarded the Herman Kroos Memorial Prize for his dissertation. In between his times at Hopkins, Paul attended New York University, where he received his MBA in 1974 (awarded the Kolodny Prize for his master’s thesis) and an Advanced Professional Certificate in International Finance in 1979. During these years, Paul worked at various firms as an auditor and analyst; he obtained his CPA credentials in 1976 while employed by Arthur Young & Co. in New York City. In 1981, Paul began to explore an academic career in earnest by serving as a part-time instructor at Rutgers Business School, part of the state university of New Jersey. Indeed, he never left Rutgers. Paul served as an adjunct lecturer at the Business School while pursuing his doctorate. After achieving his terminal degree, he joined the faculty as an assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in 1991 and then to full professor in 1999. For the next 3 years, Paul served as the Business School’s Associate Dean for Faculty and Research; he returned to the classroom in 2002, and he was scheduled to teach in Spring 2022. Paul felt it imperative for individuals to develop their natural scholarly abilities to their fullest. This belief found expression in his tireless work as a researcher. Over his long and distinguished career, Paul published 20 book chapters or encyclopedia articles and roughly 50 papers in refereed journals including Accounting History; Accounting, Organizations and Society; Business History Review; and Enterprise & Society. He was author or coauthor of four books. One book, A History of Corporate Finance (Baskin and Miranti, 1999) was widely read and translated into Chinese, Italian and Japanese. His last book, Years of Transition, The American Accounting Association, 1991–2016 (Miranti et al., 2016) was commissioned by the American Accounting Association as part of the celebration of its centennial. At the time of his death, Paul was involved with co-authors in two more book projects as well as several papers. He was always on the lookout for his next project or two. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
2022年1月13日,小保罗·J·米兰蒂(Paul J.Miranti,Jr.)因在2021年圣诞节前夕感染新冠肺炎19而并发症去世,会计界和商业史界遭受了巨大而悲伤的损失。保罗是新泽西州罗格斯商学院的会计学教授,享年78岁。保罗的弟弟Richard Miranti医生于同一天在新泽西州的同一家医院去世,也是因为全球疫情。保罗的弟弟罗伯特和他从小就认识的前妻阿德里安在世。保罗在马里兰州巴尔的摩的约翰斯·霍普金斯大学接受了大部分学术培训。本科和研究生期间,他师从著名商业学者阿尔弗雷德·D·钱德勒,1965年获得历史学士学位,1968年毕业,获得文学硕士学位。他最终在约翰·霍普金斯大学的Louis Galambos指导下攻读博士学位,并于1985年获得学位,当时他因论文获得赫尔曼·克罗斯纪念奖。在霍普金斯大学期间,保罗就读于纽约大学,1974年获得MBA学位(因其硕士论文获得科洛德尼奖),1979年获得国际金融高级专业证书。在这些年里,Paul在多家公司担任审计师和分析师;1976年,他受雇于纽约市的Arthur Young&Co.,获得了注册会计师资格证书。1981年,保罗在新泽西州立大学罗格斯商学院担任兼职讲师,开始认真探索学术生涯。事实上,他从未离开过罗格斯大学。保罗在攻读博士学位期间曾在商学院担任兼职讲师。在获得最终学位后,他加入了学院,担任助理教授。1991年晋升为副教授,1999年晋升为正教授。在接下来的3年里,Paul担任了商学院的学院和研究副院长;他于2002年重返课堂,计划于2022年春季授课。保罗认为个人必须充分发展他们天生的学术能力。这种信念体现在他作为一名研究人员所做的不懈努力中。在他漫长而杰出的职业生涯中,保罗出版了20本书或百科全书文章,在包括《会计史》在内的参考期刊上发表了大约50篇论文;会计、组织和社会;业务历史回顾;以及企业与社会。他是四本书的作者或合著者。其中一本书《企业融资史》(Baskin和Miranti,1999)被广泛阅读并翻译成中文、意大利语和日语。他的最后一本书《转型的岁月》,美国会计协会,1991-2016(Miranti et al.,2016)是美国会计协会委托出版的,作为其百年庆典的一部分。在他去世时,保罗与合著者一起参与了另外两个图书项目以及几篇论文。他一直在为下一两个项目做准备。保罗发现会计史学科不发达,部分原因是研究人员在《特刊:历史视野中的会计与工作》中使用经济视角和使用社会视角的人之间存在意识形态分歧
The world of accounting and business history suffered a large and sad loss when Paul J. Miranti, Jr. died on January 13, 2022, from complications related to contracting Covid 19 on Christmas Eve, 2021. Paul, a professor of accounting at the Rutgers School of Business in New Jersey, was 78 years old. Paul’s younger brother, Dr Richard Miranti, died on the same day in the same New Jersey hospital, also because of the global pandemic. Paul is survived by his youngest brother, Robert, and his former wife, Adrienne, whom he knew from childhood. Paul received the bulk of his academic training at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland. As an undergraduate and later as a graduate student, he studied under renowned business scholar Alfred D. Chandler, receiving a BA in history in 1965 and then graduating with his MA in 1968. He ultimately pursued his doctorate under the direction of Louis Galambos at Johns Hopkins, receiving his degree in 1985, when he was awarded the Herman Kroos Memorial Prize for his dissertation. In between his times at Hopkins, Paul attended New York University, where he received his MBA in 1974 (awarded the Kolodny Prize for his master’s thesis) and an Advanced Professional Certificate in International Finance in 1979. During these years, Paul worked at various firms as an auditor and analyst; he obtained his CPA credentials in 1976 while employed by Arthur Young & Co. in New York City. In 1981, Paul began to explore an academic career in earnest by serving as a part-time instructor at Rutgers Business School, part of the state university of New Jersey. Indeed, he never left Rutgers. Paul served as an adjunct lecturer at the Business School while pursuing his doctorate. After achieving his terminal degree, he joined the faculty as an assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in 1991 and then to full professor in 1999. For the next 3 years, Paul served as the Business School’s Associate Dean for Faculty and Research; he returned to the classroom in 2002, and he was scheduled to teach in Spring 2022. Paul felt it imperative for individuals to develop their natural scholarly abilities to their fullest. This belief found expression in his tireless work as a researcher. Over his long and distinguished career, Paul published 20 book chapters or encyclopedia articles and roughly 50 papers in refereed journals including Accounting History; Accounting, Organizations and Society; Business History Review; and Enterprise & Society. He was author or coauthor of four books. One book, A History of Corporate Finance (Baskin and Miranti, 1999) was widely read and translated into Chinese, Italian and Japanese. His last book, Years of Transition, The American Accounting Association, 1991–2016 (Miranti et al., 2016) was commissioned by the American Accounting Association as part of the celebration of its centennial. At the time of his death, Paul was involved with co-authors in two more book projects as well as several papers. He was always on the lookout for his next project or two. Paul found the discipline of accounting history underdeveloped, in part because of an ideological split in researchers between those employing an economic lens and those using a sociological one to Special Issue: Accounting and Work in Historical Perspective
期刊介绍:
Accounting History is an international peer reviewed journal that aims to publish high quality historical papers. These could be concerned with exploring the advent and development of accounting bodies, conventions, ideas, practices and rules. They should attempt to identify the individuals and also the local, time-specific environmental factors which affected accounting, and should endeavour to assess accounting"s impact on organisational and social functioning.