BarnesP (2007) Minsky’s financial instability hypothesis, information asymmetry and accounting information: The UK financial crises of 1866 and 1987. Accounting History12(1): 29–53.
2.
BismanJE(2012) Budgeting for famine in Tudor England, 1527–1528: Social and policy perspectives. Accounting History Review22(2): 105–126
3.
CarnegieGDNapierCJ (2012) Accounting’s past, present and future: The unifying power of history. Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal25(2): 328–369.
4.
GaffikinM (1998) History is dead, long live history. Critical Perspectives on Accounting9(6): 631–639.
5.
MathiasP (1993) Business history and accounting history: A neighbourly relationship. Accounting, Business and Financial History3(3): 253–273.
6.
RichardsonAJ (2008) Strategies in the development of accounting history as an academic discipline. Accounting History13(3): 247–280.