prof. khaled hussainy
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How to write and publish international researchTRANSCRIPT
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How to Write & Publish a Critical Literature Review?
Professor Khaled HussaineyProfessor Khaled HussaineyPlymouth UniversityPlymouth University
77thth February 2014 February 2014
Topics to be coveredTopics to be covered
Content of a critical literature review
Purpose of a critical literature review
Types of Literature Review
Review of Lectures 1&2
Example from Accounting literature
Publishing the literature review chapter/paper
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* Evidence-based Chiropractic4
Meta-analysis Quantitatively combines the results of studies that are the result of a systematic literature review. Capable of performing a statistical analysis of the pooled results of relevant studies.
Types of literature review *
Narrative Review Selective review of the literature that broadly covers a specific topic. Does not follow strict systematic methods to locate and synthesize articles.
Systematic Review Utilizes exacting search strategies to make certain that the maximum extent of relevant research has been considered. Original articles are methodologically appraised and synthesized.
Financial Reporting:
Textual Analysis of Corporate Disclosures: A Survey of Literature Corporate Reporting Using Graphs: A Review and Synthesis Management Discussion and Analysis: A Review and Implications for Future Research The Corporate Governance Mosaic and Financial Reporting Quality Environmental Disclosure Research: Review and Synthesis A Synthesis of Cultural Studies in Accounting Accounting Narratives: A Review of Empirical Studies of Content and Readability
Earnings Management: Target Shooting: Review of Earnings Management around Earnings Benchmarks Review of Real Earnings Management Literature
Auditing/Governance: A Review of Academic Literature on Internal Control Reporting Under SOX The Causes and Consequences of Auditor Switching: A Review of the Literature Non-Audit Services and Auditor Independence: A Review of the Literature Audit Quality: A Synthesis of Theory and Empirical Evidence Audit Committee Effectiveness: A Synthesis of the Empirical Audit Committee Literature Audit Firm Industry Expertise: A Review and Synthesis of the Archival Literature Review and Synthesis of Audit Structure Literature A Review of the Literature in Audit Litigation
British Accounting Review- Estimating economic performance from accounting data – a review and
synthesis
Journal of Accounting and Economics- A Review of the Empirical Disclosure Literature: Discussion.
- ‘Information Asymmetry, Corporate Disclosure, and the Capital Markets: A Review of the Empirical Disclosure Literature
- The Financial Reporting Environment: Review of the Recent Literature
Accounting and Business Research- Motives for disclosure and non-disclosure: A framework and review of the
evidence.
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“Meta-analysis is an alternative to narrative literature review and can be defined as (Green and Hall 1984, pp. 37–38):
“. . . the use of quantitative methods to summarize and analyse research literature . . . which treats the study as the unit of analysis and is entirely based on quantitatively expressed study attributes and outcomes”.
“One of the advantages of using meta-analysis is that we can derive statistically strong conclusions from the collected empirical evidence. In addition, meta-analysis provides more objective results compared to traditional literature reviews. Scholars also highlight advantages of meta-analysis include stressing gaps in the literature, offering new guidelines for research, and identifying ambiguous relationships among variables (Wolf 1986)”.
Source: Abdul Rahim et al (2014:388)
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“Associations Between Corporate Characteristics and Disclosure Levels in Annual Reports: A Meta-analysis.” The British Accounting Review
Wealth effects of convertible-bond and warrant-bond offerings: a meta-analysis, European Journal of Finance
“Corporate Responsibility Reporting and its Determinants in Comparative Perspective – a Review of the Empirical Literature and a Meta-analysis.” Business Strategy and the Environment .
- A Meta-analysis of IFRS Adoption Effects. International Journal of Accounting
- An analysis (meta- and otherwise) of multinational transfer pricing research. International Journal of Accounting
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* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 17
is NOT to provide a summary of everything written on a research topic◦ IS to review the most relevant and significant
research on your topic
to help you◦ develop a good understanding of prior research
and trends◦ avoid repeating work already done◦ highlight research possibilities◦ refine your research question(s) and objectives◦ identify research methods appropriate to these
research questions
* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 18
Combine theories and ideasEvaluate prior research Draw out key points and trends (noting omissions and bias)Present in a logical way, showing relationship to own researchProvide reader with necessary background knowledge to research questions and objectivesEstablish boundaries of own researchMay be critical of earlier research
* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 19
Include key academic theories Demonstrate up-to date knowledge Clear referencing: allow reader to find the
original publications cited
* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 20
refer to/assess research by recognised experts in chosen area
consider/discuss research that supports and that opposes your ideas
juxtapose different authors’ ideas make reasoned judgements about the value
of others’ research, showing clearly how it relates to your research
justify your arguments with valid evidence in a logical manner
distinguish clearly between fact and opinion[Saunders et al., 2012]
* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 23
Description and critical analysis of what others have written
How far does previous research go in answering your research questions?
Literature review often in a single chapter, but key issues will be referred to again in discussion (and conclusions)
(Don’t just list previous research) (Start early)
* Alan Goodacre, Stirling University 24
start general before narrowing down to specific research question(s) and objectives
brief overview of key ideas and themes summarise, compare & contrast research of key
writers narrow down to highlight prior research most
relevant to your topic detailed account of findings of this research and
how they are related◦ highlight those aspects where your research will provide
fresh insights lead reader into subsequent sections of
dissertation
Dear Professor [The Editor] I am pleased to send you a paper that we wish you to consider
for possible publication in …………………. This is an entirely new paper that represents a significant
contribution to ……….. literature. It introduces …………….. Our results have not been demonstrated in any other paper.
We strongly believe that ………. would be the best place to publish our paper. This paper is our original unpublished work and it has not been submitted to any other journal for review.
The title of the paper is: ………………………………………..
Looking forward to your response in due course.
Kind regards,