Advances in Management Accounting (AIMA) is a publication of quality applied research in management accounting. The journal’s purpose is to publish thought-provoking articles that advance knowledge in the management accounting discipline and are of interest to both academics and
practitioners. As one of the premier management accounting research journals, AIMA is well-poised to meet the needs of management accounting scholars. Featured in Volume 30 are articles on:
Risk management and internal control:
A study of management accounting practice; Properties of performance measurement and management systems used dialogically between parent companies and foreign subsidiaries; CEO turnover and major business restructurings; The effect of informed outside directors on investment efficiency; Proactive
strategic responses to corporate sustainability pressures: A sustainability control system framework; On the interplay between strategic performance and managerial accounting.
Advances in Management Accounting (AIMA) is a publication of quality applied research in management accounting. The journal’s purpose is to publish thought-provoking articles that advance knowledge in the management accounting discipline and are of interest to both academics and practitioners.
The journal seeks thoughtful, well-developed articles on a variety of current topics in management accounting, broadly defined. All research methods including survey research, field tests, corporate case studies, experiments, meta-analyses, and modeling are welcome. Some speculative articles,
research notes, critiques, and survey pieces will be included where appropriate.
Articles may range from purely empirical to purely theoretical, from practice-based applications to speculation on the development of new techniques and frameworks. Empirical articles must present sound research designs and well-explained execution. Theoretical arguments must present reasonable
assumptions and logical development of ideas. All articles should include well-defined problems, concise presentations, and succinct conclusions that follow logically from the data.
This volume is a publication of quality applied
research in management accounting. The volumes
purpose is to publish thought-provoking articles that advance knowledge in the
management accounting discipline and are of interest to both academics and
practitioners. The book seeks
thoughtful, well-developed articles on a variety of current topics in
management accounting, broadly defined. All research methods including survey
research, field tests, corporate case studies, experiments, meta-analyses, and
modeling are welcome. Some speculative
articles, research notes, critiques, and survey pieces will be included where
appropriate. Articles may range from purely empirical to purely theoretical,
from practice-based applications to speculation on the development of new
techniques and frameworks. Empirical
articles must present sound research designs and well-explained execution. Theoretical arguments must present reasonable
assumptions and logical development of ideas.
All articles should include well-defined problems, concise
presentations, and succinct conclusions that follow logically from the data.
This volume intends to provide authors with timely reviews clearly indicating
the acceptance status of the manuscript.
The results of initial reviews normally will be reported to authors
within eight weeks from the date the manuscript is received. The author will be expected to work with the
Editor, who will act as a liaison between the author and the reviewers to
resolve areas of concern. To ensure publication,
it is the author’s responsibility to make necessary revisions in a timely and
satisfactory manner.
Advances in Management Accounting (AIMA) is a publication of quality applied research in management accounting. The journal's purpose is to publish thought-provoking articles that advance knowledge in the management accounting discipline and are of interest to both academics and practitioners. As
one of the premier management accounting research journals, AIMA is well-poised to meet the needs of management accounting scholars.
Featured in Volume 31 are articles on:
Competitor monitor and revenue management in hotels; The tie between CEO compensation and the 2008 financial crisis; The inclusion of qualitative measures in CEO incentive compensation; The association between performance-based pay and employee honesty; Managerial ability’s linkage to earnings
management within discontinued operations; Cash-to-cash and its association with long-term profitability in the manufacturing industry.