The Accounting Historians Journal
December 2005
Volume 32, Number 2
The Birmingham Printing and Publishing Company
3101 6th Avenue South
Birmingham, AL 35233
ACCOUNTING HISTORIANS JOURNAL
Volume 32, Number 2 December 2005
CONTENTS
Articles
Constructing the ‘Well Qualified’ Chartered Accountant in England and Wales — Malcolm Anderson, John Richard Edwards and Roy A. Chandler
Accounting’s Uses in Exploitative Human Engineering: Theorizing Citizenship, Indirect Rule and Britain’s Imperial Expansion — Shanta S. K. Davie
The Bordázar Memorandum: Cost Calculation in Spanish Printing During the 18th Century — Jesús Martínez Guillén
The Role of Accounting Practices in the Disempowerment of the Coahuiltecan Indians — Sarah A. Holmes, Sandra T. Welch and Laura R. Knudson
Showing a Strong Front: Corporate Social Reporting and the ‘Business Case’ in Britain, 1914-1919 — Josephine Maltby
Accounting for a Disappearance: A Contribution to the History of the Value Added Statement in the UK — Chris Pong and Falconer Mitchell
Accounting, Coercion and Social Control During Apprenticeship: Converting Slave Workers to Wage Workers in the British West Indies c.1834-1838 — Thomas N. Tyson, David Oldroyd and Richard K. Fleischman
Interfaces
Accounting in History — Stephen P. Walker