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THE PUBLIC POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF AUDIT REGULATION: THREE STUDIES RELATED TO THE PASSAGE OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
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Title
THE
PUBLIC
POLICY
IMPLICATIONS
OF
AUDIT
REGULATION:
THREE
STUDIES
RELATED
TO THE
PASSAGE
OF THE
SARBANES-OXLEY
ACT
OF
2002
Author
Thornburg, Steven
Keywords
audit regulation
sarbanes-oxley
pac contributions
Abstract
This
dissertation
documents
and
evaluates
certain
financial
and
non-financial
strategies
used
by the
public
accounting
profession
to
influence
audit
regulation
during
the
policy
formation
period
of the
Sarbanes-Oxley
Act
of
2002
(SOX).
The
dissertation
is
comprised
of
three
separate
, but
related
studies.
Each
study
uses
prior
research
in
accounting
and
related
disciplines
to
investigate
significant
aspects
the
profession's
strategies.
The
first
study
evaluates
the
rationality
and
effectiveness
of
political
action
committee
(PAC)
contributions
paid
by the
accounting
profession
to
members
of
Congress.
The
study
finds
that the
accounting
profession
rationally
allocated
more
PAC
contributions
to
top
congressional
leaders
and to
members
of
committees
having
jurisdiction
over
SOX.
The
study
also
finds
that the
accounting
profession
allocated
more
PAC
contributions
to
legislators
with a
history
of
pro-business
roll
call
voting
behavior
and to
candidates
in
close
electoral
races.
This
evidence
suggests
that the
profession
is
motivated
to
contribute
cash
to
legislators
in
order
to
gain
access
to
lobby
and to
influence
the
ideological
composition
of the
legislature.
A
voting
model
also
finds
a
positive
relationship
in
two
instances
between
PAC
contributions
and
roll
call
voting
favorable
to the
economic
interests
of the
profession
in the
House
of
Representatives.
The
second
study
evaluates
the
effect
of these
PAC
contributions
on
Committee
members'
frequency
and
mode
of
speech
during
public
hearings
related
to
SOX.
Using
computerized
computational
linguistics
, the
study
finds
a
significant
positive
association
between
PAC
contributions
and
speech
performance.
The
study
also
finds
differential
uses
of
modals
and
certain
verbs
between
legislators
depending
upon
party
affiliation.
The
third
paper
explores
the
rhetoric
of the
accounting
profession's
public
interest
ideal
and the
profession's
motivation
to
invoke
public
interest
arguments
in
various
contexts.
I
approach
my
analysis
from
three
different
perspectives.
The
first
perspective
analyzes
the
public
interest
language
of the
profession
as
well-intentioned
rhetoric.
The
second
approach
eschews
any
well-intentioned
motivations
on
behalf
of the
profession
and
casts
public
interest
arguments
as
propaganda
cloaking
self-interested
action.
The
third
approach
deconstructs
the
public
interest
ideal
as
myth
,
embodying
a
constellation
of
elements
including
cultural
values
,
political
doctrine
and
contingent
interests.
Adviser
Roberts, Robin
Publisher
University
of
Central
Florida
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Discipline
School of Accounting
Degree Grantor
Business Administration
Degree Program
Business Administration: Ph.D.
Graduation Date
2005-05-01
Type
Doctoral dissertation
Access Level
Campus - Allow Only UCF Community Access
Release Date
2015-01-31
Repository
University Archives
Repository Collection
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Identifier
CFE0000540
Access Link
http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0000540
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