“…Several of them make explicit references to key methodological principles associated with ANT, such as the need to follow multiple human and non-human actors as they go about constructing actor-networks, to advance highly descriptive, open-ended process accounts of how accounting becomes performative (Skaerbaek, 2009;Skaerbaek and Tryggestad, 2010;Vinnari and Skaerbaek, 2014;Georg and Justesen, 2017;Themsen and Skaerbaek, 2018;Kastberg and Lagstr€ om, 2019;Pucci and Skaerbaek, 2020). Other papers are less explicitly grounded in these principles (Christensen and Skaerbaek, 2007;Revellino and Mouritsen, 2015;Ferreira, 2017;Jollands et al, 2018;Boedker et al, 2020;Lassila et al, 2019;McLaren and Appleyard, 2020) or only offer limited, if any, methodological reflections (MacKenzie, 2009;Millo and MacKenzie, 2009;Roberts and Jones, 2009;Kastberg, 2014;Cuckston, 2018) but still remain relatively faithful to the methodological tenets of "classic ANT". The empirical accounts in these papers generally have a highly descriptive flavor and document how the performative effects of accounting emerge and unfold although the depth of their process analyses varies somewhat.…”