Accounting for Natural Disasters: An Historical Perspective

IF 1.7 Q3 BUSINESS, FINANCE
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Abstract

In prior centuries, natural disasters have struck different territories, organisations and societies, thus challenging the existence of human beings, businesses, local, regional, national and global systems. Indeed, the rhythm of lives of prior centuries have been punctuated by the ‘sudden, rapid and destructive effects’ of natural disasters, like earthquakes, tsunamis, hurricanes, bushfires, floods, and volcanic eruptions. Regrettably, besides these, there are also natural ‘slow moving’ catastrophic events, such as droughts and epidemics (plague, cholera, typhoid fever, Spanish flu, and similar) which have marked the calendar of global history, provoking death tolls and economic and social impacts, which are certainly comparable – if not worse – than the current Covid-19 disaster. Suffice to say that in 1347–1351, although there are no exact figures, the bubonic plague provoked a death toll of around 200 million people, who were 30 per cent of the world population at the time. Indeed, in Europe the so-called ‘Black Death’ killed an estimated 25–30 million people and, for example, 60 per cent of Florence’s population died from the plague. Moreover, and in a related manner, it is worthy to note that often natural disasters are interconnected: for example, the US Dust Bowl in the mid-1930s unleashed plagues of jackrabbits and grasshoppers and triggered influenza, dust pneumonia, and lung diseases which often proved fatal. History is rich with evidence of natural disasters, however, to date, a few scattered studies in accounting history have closely examined the relationships between accounting and these catastrophic events. This special issue seeks for historical contributions that include, but are not limited to the following topics:
自然灾害核算的历史视角
在过去的几个世纪里,自然灾害袭击了不同的地区、组织和社会,从而挑战了人类、企业、地方、区域、国家和全球系统的存在。事实上,过去几个世纪的生活节奏一直被自然灾害的“突然、迅速和破坏性影响”所打断,比如地震、海啸、飓风、森林大火、洪水和火山爆发。遗憾的是,除了这些之外,还有一些自然的“缓慢移动”的灾难性事件,如干旱和流行病(瘟疫、霍乱、伤寒、西班牙流感等),它们在全球历史的日历上留下了印记,造成了死亡人数和经济和社会影响,这些灾难当然可以与当前的Covid-19灾难相提并论,如果不是更糟的话。我只想说,在1347年至1351年,虽然没有确切的数字,但黑死病造成了大约2亿人死亡,占当时世界人口的30%。事实上,在欧洲,所谓的"黑死病"造成了大约2至3千万人死亡,例如,佛罗伦萨60%的人口死于鼠疫。此外,值得注意的是,自然灾害往往是相互关联的:例如,20世纪30年代中期的美国沙尘暴引发了大野兔和蚱蜢的瘟疫,引发了流感、沙尘肺炎和肺部疾病,这些疾病往往被证明是致命的。历史上有很多自然灾害的证据,然而,到目前为止,会计史上一些零散的研究已经仔细研究了会计与这些灾难性事件之间的关系。本期特刊寻求包括但不限于以下主题的历史贡献:
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来源期刊
Accounting History
Accounting History BUSINESS, FINANCE-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
20.00%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: Accounting History is an international peer reviewed journal that aims to publish high quality historical papers. These could be concerned with exploring the advent and development of accounting bodies, conventions, ideas, practices and rules. They should attempt to identify the individuals and also the local, time-specific environmental factors which affected accounting, and should endeavour to assess accounting"s impact on organisational and social functioning.
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