Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/10929
Appears in Collections:Accounting and Finance Working Papers
Title: Publication Records of Faculty Promoted to Professor: Evidence from the UK Accounting and Finance Academic Community
Author(s): Beattie, Vivien
Goodacre, Alan
Contact Email: alan.goodacre@stir.ac.uk
Citation: Beattie V & Goodacre A (2010) Publication Records of Faculty Promoted to Professor: Evidence from the UK Accounting and Finance Academic Community. University of Stirling, Department of Accounting, Finance & Law, Working Paper. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1639882
Keywords: faculty
journals
professor
promotion
publication
JEL Code(s): M40: Accounting and Auditing: General
M49: Accounting: Other
Issue Date: 31-Jul-2010
Date Deposited: 11-Feb-2013
Publisher: University of Stirling
Series/Report no.: University of Stirling, Department of Accounting, Finance & Law, Working Paper
Abstract: This study investigates the publication profiles of 140 accounting and finance faculty promoted to the senior rank of professor at UK and Irish universities during the period 1992 to 2007. On average, approximately 9 papers in Association of Business Schools (ABS) (2008)-listed journals, with 5 at the highest 3*/4* quality levels in a portfolio of 20 outputs are required for promotion to professor. Multivariate analysis provides evidence that publication requirements in terms of ABS ranked journal papers have increased over time, an effect attributed to the government research assessment exercise. There is no evidence that requirements differ for: internal versus external promotion, male versus female candidates; accounting versus finance professors, research intensity of institution peer group; or government research ranking of unit. There is also no evidence of a substitution effect in relation to increased recent publication history, quantity of non-ABS outputs or sole-authorship, all of which show a significant complementary effect. It is noted that there is very limited overlap in the UK and US publication journal sets, suggesting underlying geographically-based paradigm differences. The benchmarks provided in this study are informative in a range of decision settings: recruitment; those considering making an application for promotion to a chair and those involved in promotion panels; cross-disciplinary comparisons; and resource allocation. The evidence presented also contributes to the emerging policy debates concerning the aging demographic profile of accounting faculty, the management of academic labour and the Research Excellence Framework.
Type: Working Paper
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/10929
URL: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1639882
Affiliation: University of Glasgow
Accounting & Finance

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