CALL FOR PAPERS

                THE JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS

               Invites manuscripts for a Conference on

        CURRENT ISSUES IN ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION
                    DURING RECESSIONARY PERIODS

                Saturday-Sunday, October 2 and 3, 2010
                      Kellogg School of Management
                        Northwestern University


     The JAE invites papers that apply economic analysis to
     further our understanding of accounting phenomena. We
     encourage researchers (both within and outside accounting)
     to address new, unexplored accounting-related topics, to
     apply emerging theories or empirical methods, and to
     challenge conventional wisdom using rigorous analyses. If
     new, perhaps proprietary, data sets would help achieve
     these goals, we encourage researchers to seek them out and
     use them.


     TOPICS:

     While we invite papers on all topics of contemporary
     interest, we hope to attract enough manuscripts on the role
     of financial information in the 2008 global bear market, to
     make that topic a sub-theme of the Conference. Examples of
     research topics related to the recent bear market include:

     - What was the role of financial information in the market
       performance leading up to, and during 2008 and in
       previous market downturns? To what extent was financial
       information timely in reflecting economic conditions? Was
       it ignored and if it was, why? Did differences between
       FASB versus IFRS standards have any discernible effect on
       firms' performance in the US versus internationally?

     - Several politicians and regulators have named accounting
       as contributing to the economic downturn and credit
       crisis. Did "fair value" accounting play a role in the
       run-up in market value prior to the bear market and in
       the subsequent bear market? For example, did fair value
       cause contagion and undervaluation of banks' sub-prime
       securities in the bear market or allow avoidance of
       write-downs and so cause or prolong the bubble?

     - Did management performance evaluation and compensation
       practices contribute to the market run-up, or the growth
       in sub-prime securities and the later bear market? Were
       there significant deficiencies in the shareholder
       management contracts that used accounting information for
       performance measurement?

     - Were there corporate governance problems in the financial
       services industry or more broadly in the corporate sector
       that contributed to the crisis? Is there evidence of
       weaknesses in risk management practices?

     - Did auditing fail to serve shareholder interests in the
       years leading up to the bear market?  Did lax auditing
       contribute to securities' over-valuation and failure?
       Are current auditing standards or practices failing to
       alert investors to potential problems?


     PAPER SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:

     Papers accepted for the Conference will be reviewed for the
     Journal of Accounting & Economics using its normal
     criteria. Accepted papers will be published in a special
     issue of the Journal although acceptance of papers for the
     conference does not necessarily imply ultimate publication
     in the Journal. The deadline for submission of papers is
     March 5, 2010. There is a submission fee of $350, payable
     by check or credit card. Checks should be made payable to
     The Journal of Accounting & Economics and mailed to:

     CONTACT:      Mrs. Gail L. Pratt
                   JAE Conference
                   William E. Simon Graduate School
                     of Business Administration
                   University of Rochester
                   Rochester, NY 14627

     Submissions to the JAE must be made electronically via:

                   http://www.ees.elsevier.com/jae/

     The conference is sponsored by the Zell Center for Risk
     Research at the Kellogg School, CRA International, and
     McGraw-Hill Irwin.




Posted 5/8/09