2019
DOI: 10.1108/aaaj-10-2017-3185
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Agents of alienation: accountants and the land grab of Papua New Guinea

Abstract: Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore and examine the role of accounting and accountants in customary land transactions between Indigenous peoples and foreign corporate entities. The paper uses the case of two accountants who utilised accounting technologies in lease agreements to alienate customary land from Indigenous landowners in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Design/methodology/approach Employing a case study methodology, the paper draws on contemporary data sets of transcripts related to a Commissio… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
(126 reference statements)
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“…2015), to demonstrate First Nations peoples as agents rather than victims (Finau et al. 2019). This study's review of recent literature focused on First Nations peoples’ accounting experiences suggests this is an under‐researched field, with only nine research papers capturing the direct experiences of First Nations peoples or reporting entities with accounting and financial reporting published since 2000 (McNicholas et al.…”
Section: The Future Of First Nations‐led Research In Accountingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2015), to demonstrate First Nations peoples as agents rather than victims (Finau et al. 2019). This study's review of recent literature focused on First Nations peoples’ accounting experiences suggests this is an under‐researched field, with only nine research papers capturing the direct experiences of First Nations peoples or reporting entities with accounting and financial reporting published since 2000 (McNicholas et al.…”
Section: The Future Of First Nations‐led Research In Accountingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, royalties to landowners still act as an incentive, even if they flow to very few beneficiaries and cause considerable local conflict (Australian Conservation Foundation, 2006;Lattas, 2011). The forestry industry in PNG has been characterised by endemic corruption and, in recent years, has attempted to use Special Agricultural Business Leases as a means of alienating customary land (Filer, 2011;Filer and Numapo, 2017;Finau et al, 2019). Though PNG politicians have announced that these leases have been cancelled, in reality, the legal status of many Special Agricultural Business Lease agreements remain uncertain (Filer, 2019).…”
Section: Uneven Development and Rural Papua New Guineamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples of issues based research have included work that is motivated by particular concerns e.g. animal welfare (Laine and Vinnari 2017), human rights (McPhail and Ferguson 2016), Indigenous dispossession (Finau, Jacobs, and Chand 2019), and housing (Smyth, Cole, and Fields 2020). And while these issues have been introduced, there is always more to do within particular issues, as well as new issues that emerge.…”
Section: A Focus On Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%