Browse by author
Lookup NU author(s): Professor Richard Fleischman, Professor Thomas Tyson
Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.
The paper considers the culpability of accounting in the practice of slavery in the British Empire and antebellum U.S. from the perspectives of modern professional ethics, notions of virtue in accounting, and the potential of accounting to support emancipation in society rather than repression. It argues that modern professional ethics would not have prohibited accountants from engaging in slavery as long as it had remained legal. Through the eyes of contemporaries it shows that accounting can be condemned as morally unjust in its support of slavery for its alienation of the intrinsic property rights of individuals. However, the role of accounting was not entirely negative. On the one hand, it attempted to align the objectives of the agents with the health and safety of the slaves in order to preserve the value of the inventory. On the other, it facilitated the emancipation of the slaves through the compensation process which was intended to align the objectives of the owners with those of the abolition movement.
Author(s): Oldroyd D, Fleischman RK, Tyson TN
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: Accounting, Business and Financial History Conference
Year of Conference: 2005