“…The media attention and subsequent investigations into corporate collapses left commentators questioning the ethics of the accounting profession resulting in an upsurge of accounting ethics education, inspiring research on the reasons and benefits of accounting ethics education (Bean & Bernardi, 2005;Costa, Pinheiro, & Ribeiro, 2016;Ferguson, Collison, Power, & Stevenson, 2011;Fisher, Swanson, & Schmidt, 2007;Fourie & Contogiannis, 2014;Gordon, 2011;Halbesleben, Wheeler, & Buckley, 2005;Koumbiadis & Okpara, 2008;Loeb, 2006;McManus & Subramaniam, 2009;Misiewicz, 2007;Ghazali, 2015;Saat et al, 2010a;ŞENGÜR, 2017;Sugahara & Boland, 2011;Van Hise & Massey, 2010;Win et al, 2014). Corporate scandals involving the accounting profession has thus become a major catalyst for accounting ethics education research (e.g.…”