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This volume offers new, convincing empirical evidence on topical risk- and risk management-related issues in diverse settings, using an interdisciplinary approach. The authors advance compelling arguments, firmly anchored to well-accepted theoretical frameworks, while adopting either qualitative or quantitative research methodologies. The book presents interviews and surveys with risk managers to gather insights on risk management and risk disclosure in practice. Additionally, the book collects and analyzes information contained in public reports to capture risk disclosure and perceptions on risk management impacts on companies' internal organization. It sheds light on financial and market values to understand the effect of risk management on actual and perceived firm's performance, respectively. Further, it examines the impacts of risk and risk management on society and the economy.
The book improves awareness and advances knowledge on the complex and changeable risk and riskmanagement fields of study. It interweaves among topical, up-to-date issues, peculiar, under-investigated contexts, and differentiated, complementary viewpoints on the same themes. Therefore, the book is a must-read for scholars and researchers, as well as practitioners and policy makers, interested in a better understanding of risk and risk management studies in different fields.
Offers an interdisciplinary perspective on risk and risk management Examines the impact of risk and risk management on society and the economy Based on theoretical frameworks, as well as qualitative and quantitative research methodologies
Auteur
Cristina Florio is an Associate Professor of Accounting at the University of Verona, Italy. Her research interests and expertise focus on accounting, auditing, integrated reporting, disclosure around sustainability scandals, and enterprise risk management. She serves the American Accounting Association as International Council Member-at-Large. Cristina lectures in financial accounting and coordinates a laboratory on research methods.
Monika Wieczorek-Kosmala is an Associate Professor and Researcher at the University of Economics in Katowice, Poland. Her research interests and expertise merge risk management and financial management, with a special interest in the buffering role of financial slack, financial outcomes of business interruptions, and environmental risks. She gained professional experience in risk management and property insurance as an insurance broker.
Philip Linsley is a Professor of Accounting and Risk at the YorkManagement School, University of York, UK. His research interests are risk-related and include investigating risk disclosure, and risk and culture. He is particularly interested in applying the ideas of Mary Douglas to accounting. Philip is also a qualified chartered accountant and has significant experience as an academic lecturer and researcher.
Philip Shrives is Emeritus Professor of Accounting and Corporate Governance at Northumbria University, UK. He is a Chartered Accountant and a Fellow of the UK Higher Education Academy. Prior to his retirement he lectured in accounting, risk reporting, corporate governance, impression management, and research methods. He was previously Director of Academic Staff Development. He has authored articles in prestigious journals including The British Accounting Review, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, and Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal.
Contenu
Understanding risk debates through Mary Douglas: environment, inequality and COVID-19.- Analyzing model risks in risk aggregation of non-financial corporations.- The interruptive power of COVID-19 under a business continuity perspective.- Modelling the risk and reward trade-off for SMEs: a case study.- The relationship between ERM and performance revisited: empirical evidence from SMEs.- Risk management implementation by SMEs investigated through a lens of ERM maturity models.- Drivers of ERM in SMEs: which corporate governance features matter?.- Insights from the boardroom: opening the 'black box' of board risk oversight.- Supervisory pressure and risk management systems: empirical evidence from the banking context.- Setting up risk disclosure: case study insights from an integrated reporting pioneer.- Integrated report and credit risk: empirical evidence from a mandatory integrated reporting setting.- Lessons learnt and directions for future research on risk and risk management in diverse settings.
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