This book was originally published as a special issue of Accounting Education.
Maria Cadiz Dyball is Associate Professor of Accounting at Macquarie University, Australia. She has diverse research interests that explore differences and shifts in philosophies and traditions and how these are mediated through and reflected in accounting professionalisation projects, practices, and education. Professor Dyball has published widely in top-tier academic and professional journals and her research is supported by external, competitive grants.
Ian Thomson
is Professor of Accounting at the University of Strathclyde, UK. He has undertaken research into many different aspects of accounting and sustainability. These projects have included interdisciplinary studies on implementation of cleaner technology, establishing industrial ecologies, effective stakeholder engagement, risk governance in water and salmon farming, sustainable development indicators, government policy-making, external accounting and accounting education. In 2012, he was elected convener of the governing council of the Centre for Social and Environmental Accounting Research.Richard M S Wilson
is Emeritus Professor of Business Administration and Financial Management at Loughborough University, UK. He has devoted his career to boundary-spanning (e.g.as practitioner and professor, across disciplines, and in different jurisdictions). For 40 years he has been active nationally and internationally in educational policy-making on the interface of accounting education and training; has worked in more than a dozen countries; has published widely; is the founding editor of Accounting Education: an international journal; holds two Lifetime Achievement Awards (one specifically for his work on accounting education); and is an Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences.