审计师对其他综合收益的隐喻意义

Sylvain Durocher, Claire-France Picard, Léa Dugal
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摘要

本文旨在研究审计师如何理解其他综合收入(OCI)这个理论化不佳且有争议的概念,特别是通过揭示他们使用隐喻来使OCI变得合理和可理解。设计/方法/方法这篇解释性论文收集了21位经验丰富的审计师的访谈。分析首先揭示了在听析者关于OCI的谈话和语义表达中自然出现的隐喻(引出的隐喻)。然后,作者将这些引出的隐喻封装为二级结构(投射隐喻),以综合和进一步解释审计师的实际意义。审计人员将OCI视为确保公允价值会计运作良好的“安全保障”,隐喻地将这一概念定性为“必要之恶”、“通道义务”和解决公允价值相关问题和偏差的“停车场”。审计人员还将OCI比喻为一个“净化器”,允许“被污染”、“嘈杂”和“不受欢迎”的项目“停”在净收入之外。实践意义本研究的发现进一步加深了对审计师在整个意义构建过程中保持不批判倾向的理解。通过隐喻来理解专业的实践标准无疑会遮蔽和压制其他世界观。原创性/价值本文扩展了审计师的意义建构知识,具体展示了审计师如何在缺乏概念基础的情况下轻松理解复杂的概念。本研究还强调,隐喻是一种强大的意义表达工具,审计师可以利用它使复杂的概念变得易于理解,并减轻国际财务报告准则的不一致性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Auditors' sensemaking of other comprehensive income through metaphors
PurposeThis paper aims to examine how auditors make sense of the ill-theorized and contentious notion of other comprehensive income (OCI), specifically by uncovering their use of metaphors to make OCI plausible and intelligible.Design/methodology/approachThis interpretative paper draws on a collection of 21 interviews with experienced auditors. The analysis first uncovers metaphors that naturally surface within the talk and sensemaking of auditors about OCI (elicited metaphors). The authors then encapsulate these elicited metaphors into second-order constructs (projected metaphors) to synthesize and further explain auditors’ practical sensemaking.FindingsAuditors conceive OCI as a “safety” that ensures the well-functioning of fair value accounting, metaphorically qualifying this notion as a “necessary evil”, a “passage obligé”, and a “parking lot” resolving fair value-related issues and aberrations. Auditors also metaphorize OCI as a “purifier” that allows “polluted”, “noisy”, and “unloved” items to be “parked” outside net income.Practical implicationsThe study’s findings further the understanding of auditors’ tendency to remain uncritical throughout their sensemaking process. Making sense of professional standards of practice through metaphors indubitably involves shadowing and silencing other worldviews.Originality/valueThis paper extends knowledge of auditors’ sensemaking, specifically showing how auditors easily make sense of complex notions even in the absence of conceptual grounds. This study also highlights that metaphors are a powerful sensemaking device that auditors mobilize to render complex notions intelligible and mitigate IFRS inconsistencies.
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