Investigating the backstage of audit engagements: the paradox of team diversity
Purpose: There has been very little qualitative “fieldwork” of audit practice. This is especially the case in relation to investigations into how audit engagements proceed. The purpose of this paper is to engage with audit practice in order to explore and explain the internal dynamics and paradoxical conditions within audit engagement teams. Design/methodology/approach: The research adopts a qualitative methodology, framed around an intensive case study that involves several methods of data collection and analysis including interviews, observation and document analysis. The authors observe audit team practices, work programmes and organisation including observations of individual and teams involved in audit engagements. Findings: Using the lens of paradox theory, the authors explore the backstage of audit work, where audit teams are challenged with recurring contradictory requirements and opposing demands. The authors provide insight on the complexity associated with inadequate resourcing and planning that tend to stimulate the emergence of paradoxes in audit engagement work in a government audit context. As a result, the authors identify the occurrence of cascading reduced audit quality practices (RAQP) as the teams respond to the paradoxes they face. Originality/value: The authors reveal the interlinked and cumulative coping strategies, namely, downplaying responsibility and downscaling audit processes. These strategies are performed concurrently by team leaders and audit members to manage paradoxical tensions. The authors also identified superficial audit supervision as another type of RAQP performed by team leaders.
Year of publication: |
2019
|
---|---|
Authors: | Amyar, Firdaus ; Hidayah, Nunung Nurul ; Lowe, Alan ; Woods, Margaret |
Published in: |
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal. - Emerald, ISSN 0951-3574, ZDB-ID 2018956-4. - Vol. 32.2019, 2 (18.02.), p. 378-400
|
Publisher: |
Emerald |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Accounting and pseudo spirituality in Islamic financial institutions
Hidayah, Nunung Nurul, (2019)
-
A shared boundary object : financial innovation and engineering in Islamic financial institutions
Alamad, Samir, (2021)
-
Identity drift : the multivocality of ethical identity in Islamic financial institution
Hidayah, Nunung Nurul, (2021)
- More ...