7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
1/32Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1337755Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1337755
ACCOUNTING PROGRAM RESEARCH RANKINGS BY TOPICAL AREA AND
METHODOLOGY
Joshua G. CoyneBrigham Young University
Scott L. SummersBrigham Young University
Brady WilliamsBrigham Young University
David A. WoodBrigham Young University
515 TNRBProvo, UT 84602
Telephone: (801) 422-8642Fax: (801) [email protected]
May 2010
We express our thanks to Derek Oler, Mitch Oler, and Chris Skousen for sharing data with us . Wethank George Foster, Jeff Hoopes, Robert Jensen, Steve Kachelmeier, Jagan Krishnan, JeffMcMullin, Eric Press, Kari Olsen, Chad Simon, Jason Smith, Nate Stephens, Stanley Veliotis,and participants at the 2008 BYU Accounting Research Symposium for helpful comments andsuggestions.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
2/32Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1337755Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1337755
ACCOUNTING PROGRAM RESEARCH RANKINGS BY TOPICAL AREA AND
METHODOLOGY
ABSTRACT:This paper makes two novel contributions to ranking accounting research programs constructedfrom publication counts in top journals (AOS, Auditing, BRIA, CAR, JAE, JAR, JATA, JIS,JMAR, RAST, and TAR). In contrast to previous studies, we recognize the mobility ofintellectual assets tied to the human capital of accounting researchers and therefore base ourrankings on the researchers' current affiliations, rather than their affiliations at the time ofpublication. Also, we categorize each article written by topical area (auditing, financial,managerial, accounting information systems, tax, and other) and by methodology (analytical,archival, experimental, and other) and provide separate accounting program rankings by topicalarea and by methodology. These two innovations provide a rich, centralized information resourcefor decision-makersboth institutional and individualin choosing how to allocate time,
resources, and expertise.
Key Words: Accounting Research Rankings, Accounting Research Methodology, AccountingResearch Topical Areas
JEL Descriptors: M4, M40, M41, M42, M49
Data Availability: Requests for data may be made to the authors.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
3/32
1
INTRODUCTION
Some of the most important career decisions made by academic accountants are made in
an environment that is distinctly lacking in transparent, reliable, and relevant information. Those
deciding where to pursue a Ph.D. or seek employment in accounting academia have traditionally
relied on informal inquiries about the reputations of institutions and their faculties, or other
measures of quality such as surveys of perceptions and accounting rankings that reduce all
accounting topical and methodological research production into a single ranking number. Given
that most academic accountants specialize in a particular sub-discipline of accounting, decisions
based on overarching reputations, broad surveys, and singular rankings suffer from a lack of
specialized, granular information that could better inform decision-makers. We contribute to
knowledge in the field of accounting academics by providing granular, quantitative information
to these decision-makers.
We propose a unique design for measuring the intellectual assets held by accounting
research programs that will enhance the current body of ranking literature in two ways. First, we
assume that the intellectual assets of a researcher stay with that researcher when moving from
institution to institution1. Second, recognizing specialty areas (both topical and methodological)
within the accounting disciplinea similar concept currently exists in other business school
disciplines (e.g. management)we report rankings by methodology and topical area that allow
institutions to be recognized for their expertise in specialty areas.2
1 Crediting a publication to the author's current institution allows a universitys research ranking to change based onthe addition or loss of a distinguished researcher. Creating rankings in this way measures the impact of theintellectual assets (contributions) of the individual researcher by tying those assets to the present institution ratherthan ascribing intellectual assets to an entity incapable of reasoninga university.2
Previous research (cf. Bazley et al. 1975; Andrews and McKenzie 1978; Windall 1981; Zivney and Thomas 1985;Hasselback and Reinstein 1995; Fogarty 1995; Trieschmann et al. 2000; Brown 2003; Chan et al. 2007) has rankedresearch programs, but not by topicaccounting information systems (AIS)/auditing/financial/managerial/taxormethodology archival/analytical/experimental; We note that Brown and Laksmana (2004) break rankings of Ph.D.
programs into two categories, financial and non-financial.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
4/32
2
In regards to the second contribution, since the most influential accounting journals
publish a disproportionately high number of articles in the financial specialty area (Bonner et al.
2006), parties interested in expertise in other specialty areas may make sub-optimal decisions by
relying on ratings heavily influenced by the financial accounting specialty. The creation of
accounting research program rankings by specialty area allows universities to compare and
contrast their programs with programs that are focusing on the same specialties. It also allows
individual academics to recognize pockets of specialty where they might choose to network and
it allows future academics to evaluate the depth and breadth of research coming from universities
where they might pursue their terminal degree.
These rankings significantly increase the amount of available information that could be
used by multiple decision-makers, including:
Prospective Ph.D. students. Each student or accounting professional that decides to
pursue a Ph.D. in accounting is immediately faced with the challenge of finding a university with
programs, faculty, and expectations that match the applicants needs, wants, and career goals.
This decision is often multifaceted and complex. Providing rankings by topical area and
methodology will allow prospective Ph.D. students to better target programs which are best able
to support their research interests.3
Ph.D. graduates. Rankings decomposed by discipline and based on current location of
human capital will also benefit Ph.D. candidates as they graduate and enter the job market. They
will be able to use these rankings to target positions at universities that fit their career goals. This
3 We note from a survey we conducted of 15 (11 respondents) pre-doctoral students invited to an informationaldoctoral program meeting by the IS section of the AAA, all potential doctoral students indicated they would consulttopical and methodological ranking results, if available, when making their decision about which programs to applyto and to attend. Furthermore, they ranked topical and methodological expertise as the most important criteria offactors in deciding which programs they would apply to and attend (other factors ranked were financial aid,graduation rates, time to graduate, placement, physical location, and overall rankings).
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
5/32
3
study identifies top programs in each specialty area, which is especially valuable if these
programs do not register highly in general ranking studies.
Research institutions. Accounting department heads, business school administrators,
and university leadership may find these results useful in establishing legitimacyboth internal
and external. This study recognizes those schools that have been and are making a concerted
effort to specialize and improve their research reputation. A school that has never placed highly
in general rankings may be able to use these rankings to demonstrate credibility in certain
specialty areas or methodologies. This credibility can help justify internal funding for materials,
technology, or additional research and help attract external funding. Also, these rankings could
be used as evidence for accreditation purposes of the research production of an institutions
faculty.
Professional organizations. In July 2008, the AICPA announced the introduction of a
$15 million fund designed to send experienced practitioners back to school to get Ph.D.s to help
fill the shortage of audit and tax faculty (AICPA 2008). This fund, which is made up of donations
from many of the largest accounting firms and many state accounting associations, is designed to
send professionals back for audit and tax training in Ph.D. programs. The rankings provided in
this paper will highlight programs that specialize in research related to audit and tax. In this way,
the effectiveness of the fund could be enhanced by allowing these individuals to target programs
where they will get the best audit- and tax-specific training and by helping fund administrators to
know where to direct additional funds.
This paper proceeds as follows. First, we discuss our sample and then methodology.
Next, we present the ranking results with some commentary on how these ranking may be used.
Finally, we conclude by discussing the implications of our research and the consequences of
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
6/32
4
design choices we made in our study. We note that we include an Appendix discussing a
companion website that provides additional information that could not be included in the article
because of space constraints.
SAMPLE DESCRIPTION
To create our rankings, we index all peer-reviewed articles inAccounting, Organizations,
and Society (AOS); Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory (Auditing); Behavioral Research
in Accounting (BRIA); Contemporary Accounting Research (CAR); Journal of Accounting &
Economics (JAE); Journal of Information Systems (JIS);Journal of Accounting Research (JAR);
Journal of Management Accounting Research (JMAR); Journal of the American Taxation
Association (JATA); Review of Accounting Studies (RAST); andThe Accounting Review (TAR).4
We chose these journals because previous research has shown that six of these journals (AOS,
CAR, JAE, JAR, RAST, and TAR) are considered the highest rated accounting journals (cf.
Glover et al. 2006; Bonner et al. 2006; Lowensohn and Samelson 2006).
Studies have also provided evidence that these journals may not provide representative
coverage of accounting methodologies and topical areas (Bonner et al. 2006). Using the results
of a survey of 517 academics from various American Accounting Association (AAA) sections
(Lowensohn and Samelson 2006), we selected the journals perceived to be the best by
methodology (behavioral) and topical area (tax, managerial, and AIS).5 By this process we add
BRIA, JATA, JMAR, and JIS. We add Auditing to this list as it is regularly considered to be the
top journal for publishing audit research aside from those already mentioned. Including these
4 We do not include articles that were invited by the editor or conference discussant papers (such as JAR or CARconference discussion papers) since these articles are not required to go through the peer-review process. Also, weexclude articles written directly to a professional audience and educational cases.5 Although the survey included the topical areas of government and non-profit, we do not employ these topics in ourrankings, so we did not include them in the journal selection process.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
7/32
5
additional journals should provide greater coverage of topical areas and methodologies that are
not adequately represented in the traditional top six journals.
Our rankings do not explicitly recognize top-tier contributions of researchers in
supporting disciplines (e.g., finance, economics, psychology, etc). We made this choice because
of our interest in identifying top accounting research programs and because of the time intensive
nature of creating these rankings. While contributions in the top-tier of supporting journals are
important and contribute to the academic prestige of the researcher, we believe they are less
relevant to identifying accounting expertise than an evaluation of research published in
accounting journals.
6
METHODOLOGY
To create our rankings, we index all articles published in the aforementioned journals
between 1990 and 2009 and categorize them based on topic and methodology. Because of the
time-intensive nature involved in creating these rankings, we limit our analysis to a 20-year
window, which effectively covers three tenure cycles. We note that authors who were prolific
researchers before 1990 but have not continued to actively research since 1990 likely have fewer
current intellectual research assets to share with colleagues.7
We categorize each article by methodological category: analytical, archival,
experimental, or other; however, our methodological categories are not mutually exclusive.8 For
example, Hodder et al. (2008) employ an experiment as well as archival tests in their paper. We
6 Glover et al. (2006) examine the publication records of faculty promoted at the top 75 research schools. Inunreported analyses, the correlation between publishing in the top 3 accounting journals (TAR, JAR, and JAE) and
publishing in other top business journals is 0.86 when considered at the school portfolio level. This suggests thatwhile our results will not provide a complete picture of the articles published by accounting scholars, they areunlikely to be biased by excluding articles published in other top business journals.7 We explore the importance of currency in more depth later in the paper.8 Although the decision to allow for multiple methodological and/or topical categorizations per article causes somearticles to be counted in multiple rankings, we argue that this more accurately captures the authors' potential tocontribute in multiple areas.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
8/32
6
categorize this article as both archival and experimental for purposes of our rankings. We define
our methodological classifications as follows:
Analytical: studies whose analyses and conclusions are based on the act of formally
modeling theories or substantiating ideas in mathematical terms. These studies use analytic
devices to predict, explain, or give substance to theory.
Archival: studies whose analyses and conclusions are based on objective data collected
from repositories. Also included are studies in which the researchers, or another third party,
collected the research data and in which the data has objective amounts such as net income,
sales, fees, etc. (i.e., the researcher creates an objective repository of data).
Experimental: studies whose analyses and conclusions are based on data the researcher
gathered by administering treatments to subjects. Usually these studies employ random
assignment; however, if the researcher selected different populations in an attempt to
manipulate a variable (e.g., participants of different experience levels were selected for
participation), we also consider these experimental in nature.
Other: studies that did not fit into one of the other methodological categories. The
methodologies in these studies vary significantly and include such things as surveys, case
studies, field studies, simulations, persuasive arguments, etc.
Similar to our categorization by methodology, our categorization by topical area allows
for multiple categories per article. If an article sheds light on multiple topical areas, it is
categorized as providing a contribution to each area (e.g., Prawitt, et al. [2009] examine how
internal audit quality [audit] impacts earnings management [financial]). In categorizing articles
by topical area, we employ the following definitions:
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
9/32
7
AIS: studies which address issues related to the systems and the users of systems that
collect, store, and generate accounting information. Users are defined broadly to include those
involved in collection, storage, or use of accounting information or even the implementation of
the system. These systems may be electronic or not. Research streams include, but are not
limited to design science, ontological investigations, expert systems, decision aides, support
systems, processing assurance, security, controls, system usability, and system performance.
Auditing: studies in which the topical content involves an audit topic. These studies vary
widely and include, but are not limited to, the study of the audit environmentexternal and
internal, auditor decision making, auditor independence, the effects of auditing on the financial
reporting process, and auditor fees.
Financial: studies that address the topical content of financial accounting, financial
markets, and decision making based on financial accounting information.
Managerial: studies that examine issues regarding budgeting, compensation, decision-
making within an enterprise, incentives, and the allocation of resources within an enterprise.
Tax: studies that examine issues related to taxpayer decision-making, tax allocations, tax
computations, structuring of accounting transactions to meet tax goals, tax incentives, or market
reactions to tax disclosures.
Other: studies that do not fit into one of the other topical areas. The topical areas in these
studies vary significantly and include such things as education, methodologies, law, psychology,
history, the accounting profession, work environment, etc.
We use data previously categorized by Oler et al. (2009) as a starting point for
categorizing articles appearing in AOS, CAR, JAE, JAR, RAST and TAR journals. For this data,
one of the authors on this project reviewed each article categorization made by the Oler et al.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
10/32
8
(2009) team and made changes as deemed appropriate to fit our categorization scheme. For the
other journals, two of the authors on this project categorized each article. All discrepancies in
ratings were resolved through discussion.
After categorizing each article, we identified the authors current school affiliation by
first searching in the 2008 Hasselback directory (Hasselback 2008). We then visited the website
of the university listed in the Hasselback directory and verified that the professor was listed as
being employed at the institution (this, and the article listings, were last updated in December
2009). If the author was not listed in the Hasselback directory, or if we could not find them on
the website of the institution listed by the Hasselback directory, we searched the internet for the
author and recorded the authors current university affiliation.9 If professors were listed as
holding joint appointments or were listed as visiting scholars, we credited the home school for
those publications. We created initial rankings after performing this step; subsequently, for all
schools that were listed in the top 50 of any of these initial rankings, we revisited the school's
faculty website, verified that the authors listed belong to that school, and searched for any
professors listed on the school website that had not been categorized in our database. If we could
not find a professors affiliation after performing all these steps, we considered that professor to
be no longer employed in academia and, therefore, we gave no credit to any institution for that
individual's research.10
To create our rankings, we gave each author full credit for each article published in these
journals (i.e., for coauthored papers, all institutions of the authors received credit for the
9 To conduct our internet search, we searched for the researchers name or their name and special key words (e.g.,accounting, university, etc.). If we found initial evidence of a professor at a university (e.g., a paper listed on SSRN),we then visited that university website to verify the faculty member was employed at the school. If we could notlocate a professor on a universitys directory, they were not included in this study.10 We gave credit to a school for authors outside of accounting departments yet who publish in accounting journals ifwe could locate them in their current school affiliation web directory as described in the text.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
11/32
9
publication and if multiple authors were from the same institution, the institution received credit
for each author).11
We then summed the number of total publications for each school by
methodology and by topical area. Finally, we ranked schools by the total productivity of the
faculty currently at that school.12
We take four additional steps to maximize the usefulness of this data. First, for all
rankings we provide the number of distinct professors that contribute to each ranking. Given our
methodology, schools that have larger faculties are more likely to be ranked higher because they
employ more individuals who have the possibility of publishing articles. However, we do not
scale our rankings by faculty size four several reasons.
First, our objective is ranking the intellectual assets available at institutions rather than
ranking the average productivity of faculty. Further, choosing to scale by faculty size is
problematic due to the difficult nature of determining faculty size, especially in specialty areas.
Several possible ways to scale the data by size include scaling by the size of the department,
number of authors who published the articles, or the number of professors who research in an
area (or use that methodology). We noticed as we categorized articles that many schools do not
have a separate accounting department or combine the accounting department with finance,
information systems, or the entire business school. In addition, many accounting academics work
in administrative positions making it difficult to choose whether to include them in the
department. These problems make scaling by the count of faculty in the department problematic
and subjective. Scaling by the number of authors who published articles in this index is
11 We chose to give each author full credit because we view each author as likely to have increased their intellectualassets by working on the project. We also did not want to introduce noise or bias by attempting to create a subjectiveweighting scheme of the value of different journal articles. If high quality outcome data becomes available in thefuture for which reliable and theoretically justified weightings could be created, then future researchers shouldreexamine these rankings using those weights. However, to our knowledge, we are unaware of a high qualityweighting based on empirical data.12 If we discovered that a professor had retired, was emeritus, or had died we did not include them in the rankings.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
12/32
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
13/32
11
promising young scholars who are highly productive but have not been employed a sufficient
length of time to produce a tremendous quantity of research.
Finally, we create a website with additional functionality to increase the usefulness of the
rankings (see the Appendix for additional discussion of the website).
RESULTS
Table 1 presents descriptive statistics of the sample. Panel A shows the percentage of
articles by topical area for each different journal. It is apparent that journals have very different
tastes in terms of topics of articles published. Of the traditional big 3 accounting journals (TAR,
JAR, and JAE), TAR publishes the broadest topical scope of articles. AOS and BRIA are the only
non-specialty-topic journals that publish a higher percentage of articles in an area other than
financial (AOS publishes more managerial than any other topical area and BRIA publishes more
other research and auditing than any other topical area). Also of note is the almost complete
lack of publication of AIS research in any journal other than JIS. We note that Table 1 does not
consider the quantity of different types of articles submitted to the journals; therefore, we cannot
conclude from this table that there is an editorial or reviewer bias against certain topical areas or
methodologies.13
Panel B shows the percentage of articles by methodology for each different journal. With
the exception of AOS, BRIA, JIS, and JMAR, archival research is the dominant methodology
published. BRIA publishes a higher percentage of experimental research than other
methodologies, and JIS, JMAR, and AOS publish a higher percentage of other methodologies
than analytical, archival, or experimental. Although these descriptive statistics provide evidence
13 As an example of the importance of considering the rate of submission before determining bias, the 2007Contemporary Accounting Research Editors Report reveals that only 5 of 258 submissions to the journal were inthe area of tax. Thus, even if CAR published all of these articles, it would still show a low percentage of publishedtax studies in a presentation similar to Table 1. Thus, the results in Table 1 do not necessarily suggest editor/reviewer
bias but may be explained by unknown submission rates to the journals.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
14/32
12
that all research methodologies can be published somewhere, it also shows that specific journals
may have defined methodological and/or topical area tastes in terms of research they have
published in the past.
Panel C of Table 1 shows the percentage of articles by methodology for each topical area.
Managerial research has the greatest distribution of methodologies as each methodology is used
at least 16 percent of the time in managerial publications. Financial has the least distribution of
methodologies as archival is used 76 percent of the time and the next highest used methodology
is analytical, used 12 percent of the time. Audit research uses a relatively equal blend of archival,
experimental, and other methodologies but lags behind in employing the analytical methodology.
Tax is reasonably diverse in terms of methodology as the lowest methodology, other, is used in
10 percent of publications. Finally, AIS uses primarily experimental and other methodologies
to address research questions.
(Insert Table 1 about here)
Table 2 presents rankings based on raw total counts of total articles published. This
ranking is comparable to most previous accounting program rankings. The particular institutions
that rank highly in this ranking are similar to past studieswhich provides some face validity to
the methodology we employ as the results are consistent with past studies. However, one can see
how our decision to only credit an institution for faculty currently at the institution influences
rankings. For example, the University of Michigan has traditionally been one of the top
producers of accounting research; however, in our rankings they appear as only the 18th ranked
school in the last 6 years. This is largely due to the loss of key researchers in recent years.
Although giving credit to an institution for faculty currently at the institution produces some
changes in rankings, the main contribution of this paper is to provide evidence of expertise in
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
15/32
13
particular accounting research topical areas and methodologies, which we do in subsequent
tables. By including the total rankings in Table 2, one can compare topical and methodological
rankings to this table to get some idea of how well the overall rankings represent each individual
topical and methodological area ranking.
(Insert Table 2 about here)
Table 3 presents the rankings of universities broken down by topical area. We list the top
40 schools for each topical area and present three rankings: rankings over the previous 6, 12, or
full year range (rankings are sorted by the 6 year column). We list each topical area
alphabetically.
There are several interesting things to note from the rankings other than just the rank
ordering of the universities. The trend of universities rankings from 6 years to 20 years is
valuable information. For example, a school like Florida International in the audit rankings is
ranked first over the 6 year window but eighth over the 20-year window. This suggests that
Florida International has been very active in the recent past and is the top producer of audit
research in the last 6 years.
Analyzing the trends of publications also reveals interesting findings when looking at an
entire topical areas rankings. For example, the top 10 schools in financial over the 6 year
window were all in the top 25 over the full year window. In Managerial and Auditing, four and
three schools in the top 10 during the 6 year window were not in the top 25 schools over the full
year window. This suggests that there is significant change in rankings for some topical areas
relative to the other topical areas.
These rankings are also useful to non-US schools. Note in the managerial rankings that
10 of the top 40 schools in the 6 year window are international schools. In the audit rankings, 11
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
16/32
14
of the top 40 schools are international schools. These rankings help to give credibility to these
institutions in terms of their ability to produce top quality research in given topical areas. Also of
interest in these rankings is the number of faculty whose published articles have contributed to a
given ranking. For example, in the managerial rankings, Stanford is rated first over the full year
range even though only 5 different authors published managerial articles. The second ranked
university, Michigan State, has twice as many authors. This information could be used by
potential Ph.D. students (current doctoral students) in targeting which school to attend (work
for). Whereas Stanford appears to have fewer researchers publishing managerial research, these
researchers are publishing a very high volume of articles. Michigan State, the second ranked
school, has more researchers, but they do not appear to be producing at a rate as fast as Stanford.
(Insert Table 3 about here)
Table 4 is very similar to Table 3 except Table 4 presents rankings by research
methodology rather than by topical area. We note that users may benefit from interpreting Table
4 in similar fashion to the way we discussed interpreting Table 3.
(Insert Table 4 about here)
Table 5 presents three different rankings that provide information about which schools
provide the greatest breadth of research expertise. In Table 4 we provide the results of averaging
the topical area rankings, averaging the methodology rankings, or averaging the topical area and
methodology rankings. Schools that focus on one or two topical areas or on a single
methodology will not rank as highly in these rankings.
As would be expected, large schools fair particularly well in the breadth rankings.
These schools likely have great breadth because their size allows professors to specialize their
teaching and thus their research in areas other than financial accounting. As with Table 2, 3, and
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
17/32
15
4, we provide rankings over different time horizons so users can make informed decision using
these rankings.
(Insert Table 5 about here)
CONCLUSIONS
This study ranks all accounting research programs by considering publication counts in
top accounting journals. These rankings differ from most prior rankings in two important ways.
First, we provide separate research rankings by topical area (AIS, auditing, financial, managerial,
and tax) and by methodology (analytical, archival, and experimental). Second, we give
institutions credit for all research published by professors currently employed at the institution
rather than giving institutions credit for publications of faculty who published at the university
but no longer work there. These rankings should be useful to decision-makers in multiple
settings (e.g., prospective Ph.D. students, doctoral students, faculty, accounting departments,
business schools, and universities).
This study is not without limitations. We highlight the most important limitations and
caution decision-makers to consider how these limitations may impact their decision-making
setting. First, using counts to rank accounting research programs treats all articles as making
equal contributions to the literature. Counts do not take into consideration level of impact of a
particular article. Thus, faculty at an institution that produces few, highly innovative and
paradigm-altering articles may not rank as highly in these rankings as an institution that focuses
on producing a large quantity of research publications. Whether one of these strategies is better
in terms of producing accounting knowledge is debatable, and this research does not provide
evidence for either side of this debate.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
18/32
16
Second, we consider a basket of accounting journals that likely vary in terms of perceived
and actual quality. We do not attempt to weight articles published in different journals as being
worth more or less than other articles due to the subjective nature of determining weightings. We
carefully selected journals, choosing only those of perceived high quality (Lowensohn and
Samelson 2006; Herron and Hall 2004; Chan et al. 2009) while balancing this with the
publication patterns that previous researchers have noted some journals exhibit (Bonner et al.
2006).
Third, we do not explicitly take into account faculty size in determining our rankings; we
also employ a methodology that does not explicitly consider an institutions ability to influence
researchers ability to publish by having access to such things as more and/or better databases,
providing more talented research assistants, decreasing teaching loads, or other similar
characteristics that likely improve research productivity. However, our methodology does
indirectly capture this ability as the most prolific researchers are likely aware of these
institutional advantages and more likely to work at schools that offer these advantages.
Finally, by recognizing the mobility of human capital, an excellent research school
recently raided of talent may receive a low ranking. It is likely that a school that establishes the
culture and financial means to be a top-tier research school will likely be able to attract high
quality researchers even if it was recently raided. Thus, some schools may appear low in our
rankings because at the time of this study they have not been able to rebuild their faculty. We
combat this problem by providing a companion website that provides regular updates of the
rankings (see Appendix for more details).
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
19/32
17
Even with the limitations to this research, we view this study as providing an important
incremental contribution to the prior research ranking literature. In addition, we believe this
study will be highly useful to the academy and the professional community of accountants.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
20/32
18
REFERENCES
Andrews, W. T., and P. B. McKenzie. 1978. Leading accounting departments revisited. TheAccounting Review (January): 135-138.
Bazley, J. D., and L. A. Nikolai. 1975. A comparison of published accounting research andqualities of accounting faculty and doctoral programs. The Accounting Review (July):605-610.
Bonner, S. E., J. W. Hesford, W. A. Van der Stede, and S. M. Young. 2006. The most influentialjournals in academic accounting.Accounting, Organizations and Society 31: 663-685.
Brown, L. D. 2003. Ranking journals using social science research network downloads. Reviewof Quantitative Finance and Accounting 20 (3): 291-307.
_______, and J. C. Gardner. 1985. Applying citation analysis to evaluate the research
contributions of accounting faculty and doctoral programs. The Accounting Review 60(2): 262-277.
_______, and I. Laksmana. 2004. Ranking accounting Ph.D. programs and faculties using socialscience research network downloads.Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting 22(3): 249-266.
Chan, K. C., C. R. Chen, and L. T. W. Cheng. 2005. Ranking research productivity in accountingfor Asia-Pacific universities.Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting 24: 47-64.
_______, _______, and _______. 2007. Global ranking of accounting programmes and the eliteeffect in accounting research.Accounting & Finance 47 (2): 187-220.
_______, _______, and _______. 2009. Ranking accounting journals using dissertation citationanalysis: A research note.Accounting Organizations and Society article in press.
Contemporary Accounting Research 2007 Editors Report. 2007. Available online athttp://www.caaa.ca/CAR/EditorRpt/index.html.
Ellison, G. 2002. Evolving standards for academic publishing: A q-r theory.Journal of PoliticalEconomy 110 (5): 1053-1079.
Fogarty, T. 1995. A ranking to end all rankings: A meta-analysis and critique of studies rankingacademic accounting departments.Accounting Perspectives 1: 1-22.
Glover, S. M., D. F. Prawitt, and D. A. Wood. 2006. Publication records of faculty promoted atthe top 75 accounting research programs.Issues in Accounting Education 21 (3): 195-218.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
21/32
19
Hasselback, J. R. 2008.Accounting Faculty Directory 2008-2009. Upper Saddle River, NJ:Pearson Prentice Hall.
_______, and A. Reinstein. 1995. A proposal for measuring the scholarly productivity ofaccounting faculty.Issues in Accounting Education (Fall): 269-306.
Herron, T. L., and T. W. Hall. 2004. Faculty perceptions of journals: Quality and publishingfeasibility.Journal of Accounting Education 22 (3): 175-210.
Hodder, L., P. E. Hopkins, and D. A. Wood. 2008. The effects of financial statement andinformational complexity on analysts cash flow forecasts. The Accounting Review 83 (4):915-956.
Lowensohn, S., and D. P. Samelson. 2006. An examination of faculty perceptions of academicjournal quality within five specialized areas of accounting research.Issues in AccountingEducation 21 (3): 219-239.
Oler, D. K., M. J. Oler, and C. J. Skousen. 2009. Characterizing accounting research. WorkingPaper, Indiana University, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, Utah StateUniversity.
Prawitt, D. F., J. L. Smith, and D. A. Wood. 2009. Internal audit quality and earningsmanagement. The Accounting Review 84 (4): 1255-1280.
Reinstein, A., and J. R. Hasselback. 1997. A literature review of articles assessing theproductivity of accounting faculty.Journal of Accounting Education 15 (3): 425-455.
Swanson, E. 2004. Publishing in the majors: A comparison of accounting, finance, management,and marketing. Contemporary Accounting Research 21 (1): 223-255.
_______, C. J. Wolfe, and A. Zardkoohi. 2007. Concentration in publishing at top-tier businessjournals: Evidence and potential explanations. Contemporary Accounting Research 24(4): 1255-1289.
Trieschmann, J. S., A. R. Dennis, G. B. Northcraft, and A. W. Niemi. 2000. Serving multipleconstituencies in the business school: MBA program versus research performance.Academy of Management Journal
Windall, F. W. 1981. Publishing for a varied public: An empirical study. The Accounting Review(July): 653-658.
Zivney, T. L., and A. G. Thomas. 1985. A comprehensive examination of accounting facultypublishing.Issues in Accounting Education (Spring): 1-25.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
22/32
20
TABLE 1
Descriptive Statistics
Panel A: Percentage of articles by topical area published in different journals
Journal AIS Audit Financial Managerial Tax Other
AOS 1% 13% 16% 39% 2% 33%Auditing 3% 97% 19% 1% 0% 13%
BRIA 1% 35% 13% 19% 5% 37%
CAR 1% 28% 54% 15% 8% 12%
JAE 0% 6% 78% 16% 8% 5%
JAR 1% 18% 70% 13% 7% 3%
JIS 100% 18% 10% 5% 0% 0%
JMAR 0% 1% 1% 98% 1% 3%
JATA 0% 1% 28% 4% 96% 7%
RAST 0% 6% 79% 16% 4% 0%
TAR 1% 21% 58% 18% 10% 6%
Panel B: Percentage of articles by methodology published in different journals
Journal Analytical Archival Experimental Other
AOS 1% 10% 13% 77%
Auditing 3% 38% 33% 30%
BRIA 2% 1% 59% 38%
CAR 20% 52% 18% 12%
JAE 13% 83% 1% 3%JAR 21% 64% 13% 3%
JIS 3% 12% 39% 47%
JMAR 19% 16% 16% 51%
JATA 14% 53% 21% 18%
RAST 36% 62% 3% 0%
TAR 14% 63% 21% 4%
(Continued on next page)
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
23/32
21
TABLE 1 Continued
Panel C: Percentage of articles by methodology per topical area
Topical Area Analytical Archival Experimental Other
AIS 4% 12% 36% 48%Audit 8% 32% 38% 23%
Financial 12% 76% 7% 5%
Managerial 22% 22% 16% 40%
Tax 13% 58% 19% 10%
Other 4% 22% 16% 59%
Panel A and Panel B percentages do not add up to 100 percent as topical area and methodologycategorizations are not mutually exclusive (e.g., an article can be both financial and audit or use
both experimental and archival methodologies).
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
24/32
22
TABLE 2
Rankings of Accounting Institutions by Raw Total Article Counts
Rankings for the top 40 schools based on the 6 year window are presented. The number of authors who contributed to the rankingalso presented (i.e., number after #). If there were ties at the cutoff amount, the school that is presented was the highest in the 12 ycategory or if still a tie then the all year category (or if still a tie, alphabetically). Time windows represent all articles published in
previous 6, 12, or 19 years
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Stanford 1 #13 1 #14 1 #16
Tx-Austin 2 #16 4 #21 3 #25
Chicago 2 #19 6 #22 9 #26
U of Washington 4 #10 4 #12 7 #18
So Calif 5 #13 6 #20 2 #24
Texas A&M 5 #12 9 #16 8 #23
Penn 7 #13 2 #17 4 #18
M ichigan St 7 #13 3 #19 6 #27
Duke 7 #12 11 #14 21 #15
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 7 #18 12 #21 18 #24
Indiana Bloomington 11 #14 8 #17 9 #22
Ariz ona 12 #14 17 #16 20 #17
M IT 12 #10 25 #13 36 #13
Penn St 14 #12 10 #14 12 #16
Cornell 14 #8 14 #11 14 #13
New York U 16 #12 19 #15 15 #16
Iowa 16 #13 27 #14 23 #17
M ichigan 18 #11 14 #15 21 #16
Ohio St 19 #12 14 #17 13 #23
M issouri 19 #10 25 #12 41 #13
Toront o 19 #11 29 #11 29 #16
Fla Internat 22 #7 34 #9 55 #9
CUNY-Baruch 22 #13 35 #18 29 #23
London Bus 22 #6 52 #9 55 #10
No Carol 25 #9 13 #10 11 #12
Wisconsin 25 #10 17 #15 15 #16
Columbia 25 #10 21 #14 19 #14
Ariz St 25 #11 23 #18 4 #25
UCLA 25 #7 27 #8 25 #11
Northwestern 30 #11 23 #13 17 #20
Alberta 30 #10 35 #15 36 #16
So Carol 30 #10 43 #11 53 #12
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 30 #7 48 #10 67 #11
Berkeley 34 #7 30 #7 27 #10
Utah 34 #9 39 #12 51 #12
Brigham Young U 36 #9 19 #17 24 #19
Bentley 36 #7 22 #9 33 #9
Nanyang Tech 36 #7 41 #10 67 #10
Florida St 36 #10 45 #13 53 #16
Georgia St 36 #9 48 #11 39 #15
Total
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
25/32
23
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Rutgers 1 #3 2 #4 2 #5
Florida St 1 #2 9 #2 9 #3No Carol St 3 #3 10 #3 19 #3
Cen Fla 4 #2 4 #2 4 #3
So Illinois 4 #3 4 #4 5 #6
Tx Tech 4 #3 6 #4 8 #4
Portland St 4 #3 10 #3 9 #4
Cal St Long Bch 4 #1 10 #2 19 #2
No Arizona 4 #2 17 #2 14 #2
Auburn 4 #2 17 #2 19 #3
Tulsa 4 #3 17 #3 28 #3
Ghent U 4 #3 17 #3 28 #3
Bentley 13 #2 1 #4 1 #4
Ariz St 13 #1 6 #3 3 #5M ichigan St 13 #2 10 #2 9 #3
Texas A&M 13 #1 10 #1 14 #2
Georgia St 13 #2 10 #3 14 #3
Arkansas 13 #1 10 #1 19 #1
Okla St 13 #1 26 #1 19 #2
Tennessee 13 #2 26 #2 28 #3
Houston-Cl L 13 #2 26 #2 40 #2
No Colo 13 #2 26 #2 40 #2
Emory 13 #1 26 #1 40 #1
M aastricht 13 #2 26 #2 40 #2
Akron 13 #1 26 #1 40 #1
Kent St 13 #2 26 #2 40 #2Hawaii-Manoa 13 #1 26 #1 40 #1
Queensland 13 #2 26 #2 40 #2
M issouri 29 #1 3 #3 5 #3
So Florida 29 #1 6 #4 7 #4
Kansas 29 #1 17 #3 19 #4
Virg Comm 29 #1 17 #2 28 #2
Delaware 29 #1 26 #1 40 #1
Temple 29 #1 26 #2 40 #2
Utah 29 #1 47 #1 14 #1
Iowa State 29 #1 47 #1 28 #1
Denver U 29 #1 47 #1 28 #3
Brock U 29 #1 47 #1 40 #2Cal St Northridge 29 #1 47 #1 40 #1
Fla Atlantic 29 #1 47 #1 68 #1
AIS
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Fla Internat 1 #4 2 #5 8 #5
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 2 #9 5 #11 4 #13Northeastern 3 #6 3 #6 3 #6
Rutgers 4 #6 11 #7 15 #9
Bentley 5 #5 4 #6 6 #6
New So Wales 5 #6 6 #10 9 #11
M issouri 5 #2 7 #2 15 #2
Nanyang Tech 8 #4 7 #6 15 #6
Texas A&M 9 #3 16 #4 10 #9
Kentucky 9 #3 21 #3 15 #4
Queens 9 #4 24 #5 39 #5
Fla Atlantic 9 #6 36 #7 32 #9
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 9 #2 36 #2 50 #3
Brigham Young U 14 #4 7 #8 13 #8Tennessee 14 #5 7 #5 13 #5
Tx-Austin 14 #3 13 #6 2 #10
Indiana Indianap olis 14 #2 14 #4 20 #5
HongKong PolyTechnic U 14 #4 14 #7 24 #7
Temple 14 #3 21 #4 34 #4
So Carol 14 #4 24 #4 39 #5
Wisconsin 21 #3 1 #6 5 #9
Alabama 21 #3 12 #4 24 #4
Kansas 21 #3 16 #4 24 #4
So Calif 21 #4 19 #6 6 #9
Florida 21 #2 19 #4 10 #5
Alberta 21 #3 30 #4 34 #6M ass 21 #3 30 #3 50 #3
Georgia 21 #4 36 #4 29 #5
Auckland 21 #4 50 #4 81 #4
Athens 21 #4 59 #4 100 #4
Georgia St 31 #4 24 #5 15 #6
Indiana Bloomington 31 #3 24 #5 34 #8
Toronto 31 #2 30 #2 29 #5
Virginia Tech 31 #2 30 #4 44 #5
Chinese HK U 31 #2 30 #5 50 #5
Auburn 31 #3 42 #3 58 #5
No Texas 31 #3 50 #3 44 #6
Nat T aiwan U 31 #4 50 #4 68 #5Cornell 31 #2 59 #2 12 #3
SUNY-Bingham 31 #3 59 #4 100 #4
Audit
TABLE 3
Rankings of Accounting Institutions by Topical Area
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
26/32
24
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Chicago 1 #18 3 #19 5 #21
U of Washington 2 #10 1 #12 1 #18
Stanford 3 #13 2 #14 2 #15
Tx-Austin 4 #13 5 #18 5 #20Duke 4 #10 7 #10 10 #10
M IT 6 #10 13 #13 15 #13
Penn 7 #11 4 #15 3 #17
New York U 8 #11 6 #14 4 #15
Penn St 9 #9 9 #11 11 #12
So Calif 9 #9 12 #15 8 #19
Texas A&M 9 #9 14 #12 9 #15
Iowa 9 #11 20 #11 24 #13
Arizona 9 #10 20 #11 24 #13
London Bus 14 #6 29 #8 31 #8
Cornell 15 #6 8 #9 16 #9
Indiana Bloomington 16 #10 15 #13 13 #16No Carol 17 #9 10 #10 7 #11
Northwestern 17 #10 10 #12 11 #12
M ichigan 17 #9 17 #11 16 #14
Toronto 17 #8 23 #9 27 #11
CUNY-Baruch 17 #11 25 #15 21 #22
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 17 #8 31 #9 32 #13
Ohio St 23 #9 15 #15 19 #17
Rochester 23 #7 41 #7 36 #9
Columbia 25 #8 19 #11 14 #11
Wisconsin 25 #6 35 #9 34 #9
Utah 27 #6 30 #8 41 #8
M issouri 27 #8 37 #9 45 #10UCLA 29 #5 17 #7 18 #9
M ichigan St 29 #7 22 #12 26 #17
Ariz St 29 #7 32 #9 20 #15
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 29 #7 32 #10 39 #11
Harvard 33 #8 23 #14 29 #17
Berkeley 33 #6 25 #6 21 #7
Yale 33 #4 37 #5 44 #5
Lancaster 33 #8 47 #8 60 #8
M iami 33 #5 48 #5 64 #5
M innesota 38 #6 32 #8 32 #9
Houston 38 #7 37 #9 34 #10
Georgia 40 #5 28 #9 28 #10
Financial
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Stanford 1 #5 2 #5 1 #5
Michigan St 2 #6 1 #9 2 #10
London SchEcon 3 #5 5 #8 7 #10
Ohio St 4 #4 5 #7 4 #10Tilburg U 4 #5 13 #6 29 #6
UCLA 4 #5 17 #5 27 #6
Indiana Bloomington 7 #5 4 #6 7 #6
Berkeley 7 #4 10 #5 10 #7
Pittsburgh 7 #4 13 #6 17 #6
Tx-Austin 7 #6 20 #7 37 #7
University of Navarra IES 7 #2 20 #2 40 #2
Michigan 12 #4 5 #6 11 #6
So Carol 13 #5 29 #6 46 #6
So Calif 14 #4 8 #8 4 #8
Melbourne 14 #3 10 #4 7 #7
Rice 14 #1 12 #2 21 #2Temple 14 #2 13 #3 6 #4
Penn St 14 #4 17 #7 21 #9
Miami 14 #4 17 #4 29 #5
Monash U 14 #1 20 #2 14 #3
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 14 #4 26 #6 37 #8
Emory 14 #2 26 #3 40 #4
Duke 14 #2 29 #4 29 #5
Georgia St 14 #2 29 #4 46 #5
Car Mellon 14 #3 37 #3 20 #7
Yale 14 #1 37 #3 40 #4
Maastricht 14 #2 37 #2 55 #3
Leuven 14 #3 37 #3 63 #3Louisiana Tech 14 #3 51 #3 78 #3
MIT 14 #3 51 #3 78 #3
Twente 14 #2 62 #2 95 #2
Miss St 14 #2 62 #2 95 #2
Penn 33 #2 3 #7 3 #9
Columbia 33 #1 8 #4 14 #4
Manchester 33 #2 20 #7 21 #9
Iowa 33 #2 29 #3 12 #5
Queens 33 #2 29 #3 21 #6
Utah 33 #3 29 #4 46 #4
Chicago 33 #3 37 #5 37 #5
Warwick 33 #1 37 #3 40 #3
Managerial
TABLE 3 - Continued
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
27/32
25
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Arizona 1 #3 1 #3 2 #3
Dartmouth 2 #2 5 #2 5 #2
Chicago 3 #3 6 #4 6 #5
Iowa 3 #3 8 #3 16 #4
Texas A&M 5 #2 2 #8 4 #9
Tx-Austin 5 #2 4 #3 2 #5
Oregon 5 #2 10 #4 11 #4
Georgia 8 #2 11 #3 16 #3
Geo Mason 8 #2 11 #4 24 #4
So Carol 8 #2 19 #2 24 #4
U of Washington 8 #1 19 #1 24 #2
M ichigan 8 #1 19 #1 34 #2
M issouri 8 #4 34 #4 53 #4
No Carol 14 #2 2 #5 1 #6
Brigham Young U 14 #3 7 #6 9 #6
Conn 14 #3 8 #3 8 #3
Columbia 14 #2 11 #7 21 #7
Virginia Tech 14 #3 14 #3 14 #3
Tx Tech 14 #3 15 #4 16 #5
Lingnan U 14 #3 15 #3 29 #3
Notre Dame 14 #2 19 #2 29 #3
Alabama 14 #1 19 #2 34 #3
Indiana Bloomington 14 #2 28 #4 14 #8
Virg-Grad 14 #2 28 #2 46 #2
Idaho State 14 #1 34 #1 40 #1
Kansas 14 #3 34 #3 46 #4
Laval 14 #3 34 #3 53 #3
Cen Fla 28 #1 15 #4 34 #4
M ichigan St 28 #2 19 #4 9 #8
Houston 28 #1 19 #1 16 #3
Florida St 28 #2 28 #3 40 #4
Rochester 28 #1 34 #2 53 #2
Arkansas 28 #2 34 #4 53 #4
Cal Davis 28 #1 34 #1 53 #1
Ariz St 28 #2 44 #3 13 #7
No Texas 28 #2 44 #2 65 #2
Tilburg U 28 #1 44 #1 65 #1
Pittsburgh 28 #2 58 #2 53 #2
Wyoming 28 #2 58 #2 84 #2
M iami 28 #1 58 #1 84 #1
Tax
TABLE 3 - Continued
Rankings for the top 40 schools based on the 6 yearwindow are presented. The number of authors whocontributed to the rankings are also presented (i.e.,
number after #). If there were ties at the cutoff amount,the school that is presented was the highest in the 12 yearcategory or if still a tie then the all year category (or ifstill a tie, alphabetically). Time windows represent allarticles published in the previous 6, 12, or 19 years.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
28/32
26
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Stanford 1 #4 1 #5 1 #7
Ohio St 2 #3 2 #5 4 #5
Berkeley 2 #4 4 #4 10 #5
Dartmouth 4 #3 5 #3 8 #3
UCLA 4 #4 6 #5 6 #6
Yale 4 #1 13 #2 13 #4
Car Mellon 7 #3 9 #4 11 #5
Minnesota 7 #3 10 #4 6 #7
Indiana Indianap olis 7 #2 10 #3 15 #3
Houston 7 #5 12 #5 8 #5
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 7 #4 13 #4 18 #5
Columbia 12 #2 2 #5 5 #6
Penn 12 #4 6 #4 2 #4
Northwestern 12 #2 6 #4 2 #6
Chicago 12 #4 16 #4 27 #5
Tilburg U 12 #2 16 #3 32 #3
British Colu 17 #4 23 #5 38 #5
Duke 17 #3 23 #3 39 #3
Tel Aviv Un 17 #1 34 #1 46 #1
Ariz St 20 #1 13 #3 11 #5
Purdue West Lafay et te 20 #3 23 #4 27 #4
Tx-Austin 20 #2 28 #2 32 #2
Georgetown 20 #1 37 #1 58 #1
Florida 24 #2 16 #2 15 #2
Illinios at Chicago 24 #2 16 #4 20 #6
Penn St 24 #2 16 #2 22 #3
Michigan 24 #2 23 #4 14 #6
Toronto 24 #2 28 #2 20 #6
New York U 24 #2 28 #4 32 #4
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 24 #2 28 #3 43 #3
CUNY-Baruch 24 #2 34 #2 24 #3
Pittsburgh 24 #2 37 #2 27 #3
Alberta 24 #1 37 #2 39 #2
Princeton 24 #1 37 #2 58 #2
Utah 24 #2 49 #2 46 #2
Nat T aiwan U 24 #2 49 #2 66 #2
Clark U 24 #1 49 #1 66 #1
Fla Atlantic 24 #2 49 #2 66 #2
Aarhus Universitet 39 #1 21 #2 27 #2
Sungky unkwan University 39 #1 21 #1 32 #1
Analytical
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Chicago 1 #15 3 #16 3 #19
MIT 2 #10 15 #12 14 #12
Stanford 3 #11 1 #12 1 #13
Penn 3 #10 2 #14 7 #16
U of Washington 3 #7 4 #10 4 #15
Texas A&M 3 #12 5 #15 5 #18
Duke 3 #10 6 #10 10 #10
Arizona 3 #11 13 #12 13 #15
So Calif 9 #11 8 #13 5 #17
Iowa 10 #13 16 #13 17 #13
New York U 11 #11 10 #15 8 #15
Penn St 12 #9 10 #13 10 #14
London Bus 13 #5 34 #6 38 #6
No Carol 14 #9 6 #10 2 #12
M ichigan 14 #9 12 #13 16 #14
Tx-Austin 14 #9 14 #12 12 #13
CUNY-Baruch 14 #12 23 #15 19 #22
M ichigan St 18 #9 9 #16 9 #20
Fla Internat 18 #6 20 #8 34 #8
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 18 #7 31 #9 37 #10
Indiana Bloomington 21 #10 18 #12 22 #13
Toronto 21 #9 22 #9 26 #9
M issouri 21 #8 23 #10 34 #11
Rochester 24 #7 37 #7 39 #9
Wisconsin 25 #7 17 #12 21 #13
Utah 26 #7 27 #9 41 #9
Temple 27 #7 18 #10 17 #11
Harvard 27 #10 20 #17 25 #19
Columbia 27 #7 25 #9 22 #10
Ohio St 27 #9 30 #11 34 #12
Northwestern 31 #8 25 #10 28 #11
UCLA 31 #5 27 #6 28 #8
Miami 31 #6 37 #6 60 #6
So M ethodist 34 #7 36 #9 28 #12
Georgia 35 #6 31 #9 20 #10
Tx-Dallas 35 #6 31 #12 27 #12
Berkeley 35 #4 35 #5 24 #6
HongKong PolyTechnic U 35 #6 37 #9 50 #10
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 35 #7 59 #8 50 #11
Geo Wash 40 #7 51 #9 41 #12
Archival
TABLE 4
Rankings of Accounting Institutions by Research Methodology
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
29/32
27
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Tx-Austin 1 #6 3 #10 1 #12
Cornell 1 #5 5 #5 3 #6
Indiana Bloomington 3 #6 2 #8 4 #10
Northeastern 3 #7 3 #8 5 #8
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 5 #6 6 #12 7 #13
Michigan St 5 #6 8 #6 8 #7
So Carol 5 #5 11 #5 9 #6
Brigham Young U 8 #6 1 #11 6 #11
Alabama 8 #4 7 #5 12 #5
Nanyang Tech 10 #4 8 #6 14 #6
Ariz St 10 #4 11 #8 2 #10
Emory 10 #5 13 #6 23 #6
Georgia St 13 #6 16 #6 19 #7
U of Washington 14 #3 13 #5 12 #7
Bentley 15 #2 10 #3 9 #4
Florida St 15 #4 22 #7 30 #7
Kansas 15 #3 22 #3 34 #3
Texas A&M 15 #2 26 #3 29 #6
Kentucky 19 #3 16 #4 9 #6
Mass 19 #3 18 #4 27 #4
So Illinois 19 #3 26 #4 33 #4
Georgia Tech 19 #3 31 #4 27 #4
Auburn 19 #3 33 #3 47 #4
Cen Fla 24 #3 15 #4 21 #7
Pittsburgh 24 #4 26 #4 15 #5
Georgia 24 #4 36 #5 43 #5
Leuven 24 #3 36 #3 58 #3
York U (Canada) 24 #3 36 #3 58 #3
Tilburg U 24 #2 45 #2 67 #2
New So Wales 30 #1 19 #6 16 #7
Oklahoma 30 #2 19 #6 16 #6
Wisconsin 30 #3 19 #6 16 #7
Virginia Tech 30 #2 22 #4 25 #5
Tx Tech 30 #3 22 #5 31 #5
Melbourne 30 #1 26 #3 36 #3
Missouri 30 #2 26 #3 36 #3
So Florida 30 #3 36 #5 47 #6
Iowa State 30 #2 55 #3 34 #6
No Carol St 30 #3 55 #3 36 #7
Louisiana Tech 30 #1 55 #1 67 #2
Experimental
TABLE 4 - Continued
Rankings for the top 40 schools based on the 6 year windoware presented. The number of authors who contributed to therankings are also presented (i.e., number after #). If there wereties at the cutoff amount, the school that is presented was thehighest in the 12 year category or if still a tie then the all year
category (or if still a tie, alphabetically). Time windowsrepresent all articles published in the previous 6, 12, or 19years.
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
30/32
28
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Texas A&M 1 #3 1 #5 1 #6
Tx-Austin 2 #5 4 #6 4 #7Michigan St 3 #4 2 #5 3 #6
Indiana Bloomington 4 #4 6 #5 8 #6
So Calif 5 #4 3 #5 2 #6
Stanford 6 #4 14 #4 15 #5
So Carol 7 #3 5 #4 7 #4
Missouri 8 #3 7 #4 9 #4
Georgia St 9 #3 10 #3 11 #4
Iowa 10 #3 17 #4 20 #4
Emory 11 #3 9 #3 13 #4
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 12 #4 8 #5 6 #6
Michigan 13 #3 13 #4 17 #4
Chicago 13 #5 18 #6 24 #6U of Washington 15 #3 15 #4 16 #5
Temple 16 #2 11 #3 10 #3
Ariz St 17 #3 12 #4 5 #5
MIT 18 #3 28 #3 47 #4
Utah 19 #2 21 #3 19 #3
Miami 20 #2 30 #2 52 #2
Fla Internat 20 #2 39 #2 58 #2
Arizona 22 #3 23 #4 22 #4
Cornell 23 #2 37 #2 34 #3
Penn 24 #3 22 #4 21 #5
Toronto 24 #3 29 #3 26 #3
No Carol 26 #3 24 #3 28 #4Penn St 27 #3 19 #4 18 #5
Wisconsin 28 #2 16 #3 12 #4
Richmond 29 #2 45 #2 64 #2
HongKong PolyTechnic U 30 #2 43 #3 43 #4
Laval 30 #2 54 #2 63 #2
Ohio St 32 #3 20 #4 14 #5
Rice 33 #1 41 #2 54 #2
Queens 34 #2 31 #2 37 #3
Pittsburgh 35 #2 42 #2 39 #3
Oklahoma 36 #1 25 #2 23 #2
Duke 37 #3 32 #3 36 #4
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 38 #2 52 #2 59 #3Alabama 39 #1 33 #2 40 #3
Melbourne 40 #2 35 #2 32 #3
Average of Topic
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Tx-Austin 1 #6 1 #7 1 #8
Illinois at Urb. Cham. 2 #6 2 #7 2 #8U of Washington 3 #4 3 #4 2 #6
Pittsburgh 4 #4 7 #4 12 #4
Ariz St 5 #4 5 #5 4 #7
Texas A&M 6 #5 14 #5 20 #6
Wisconsin 7 #4 6 #5 6 #6
Ohio St 8 #4 4 #5 5 #6
Michigan St 9 #5 9 #6 9 #7
Indiana Bloomington 10 #5 10 #6 8 #7
Florida 11 #2 10 #2 10 #3
Alberta 11 #4 12 #4 13 #5
Arizona 13 #4 19 #4 18 #5
Missouri 14 #3 13 #4 14 #4Stanford 15 #5 28 #5 42 #6
Florida St 16 #3 16 #4 16 #5
Cornell 16 #3 20 #4 17 #4
Georgia 18 #3 27 #4 39 #4
Chicago 19 #6 17 #7 23 #7
Miami 20 #3 32 #3 52 #3
Brigham Young U 21 #4 24 #5 34 #6
Penn 21 #5 32 #5 46 #6
HongKong PolyTechnic U 23 #3 38 #4 33 #4
Duke 24 #4 14 #5 11 #5
Georgia St 24 #3 21 #4 21 #4
Tilburg U 26 #2 35 #2 47 #3Nanyang Tech 27 #3 25 #3 32 #4
Emory 27 #4 29 #4 40 #4
Oklahoma 27 #2 34 #3 26 #4
So Calif 30 #4 8 #6 7 #7
Kansas 30 #2 22 #2 22 #3
Fla Atlantic 32 #3 55 #3 56 #3
UCLA 33 #3 47 #3 43 #4
New York U 33 #4 50 #5 61 #6
Penn St 35 #4 22 #4 19 #5
Notre Dame 36 #2 30 #3 24 #4
Berkeley 36 #3 53 #3 60 #3
CUNY-Baruch 38 #5 30 #5 29 #7Michigan 38 #4 50 #5 44 #5
Columbia 40 #3 45 #4 57 #4
Average of Method
TABLE 5
Rankings of Accounting Institutions by Averaging Rankings of Topical Areas, Research Methodologies, or Topic and
Methodology Combined
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
31/32
29
University 6 Yrs 12 Yrs All
Tx-Austin 1 #5 1 #6 1 #7
Texas A&M 2 #4 2 #5 4 #6
Michigan St 3 #4 3 #6 3 #7
Indiana Bloomington 4 #4 7 #5 8 #6Illinois at Urb. Cham. 5 #5 4 #6 6 #7
U of Washington 6 #3 6 #4 9 #5
Stanford 7 #4 16 #5 19 #5
Missouri 8 #3 9 #4 11 #4
So Calif 9 #4 5 #5 2 #6
Ariz St 9 #3 8 #4 5 #6
Georgia St 11 #3 12 #3 12 #4
Emory 12 #3 13 #4 16 #4
Chicago 13 #6 15 #6 21 #6
So Carol 14 #3 14 #4 17 #4
Wisconsin 15 #3 11 #4 10 #5
Arizona 16 #4 19 #4 15 #4Michigan 16 #3 20 #4 22 #5
Cornell 18 #2 32 #3 30 #3
Ohio St 19 #3 10 #4 7 #5
Pittsburgh 19 #2 24 #3 29 #4
Miami 19 #2 34 #2 49 #2
Penn 22 #4 21 #5 28 #5
Iowa 23 #4 29 #4 25 #4
Utah 24 #3 22 #3 18 #3
Penn St 25 #3 17 #4 14 #5
Alberta 26 #2 33 #3 41 #4
Toronto 27 #3 25 #3 20 #4
HongKong PolyTechnic U 28 #3 41 #3 39 #4MIT 29 #3 44 #4 59 #4
Duke 30 #3 23 #4 27 #4
Oklahoma 31 #2 27 #2 24 #3
Temple 32 #2 18 #3 13 #4
Nanyang Tech 33 #2 43 #3 57 #3
Fla Internat 34 #2 58 #2 69 #2
No Carol 35 #3 36 #3 37 #4
Florida St 36 #3 28 #3 32 #4
Georgia 37 #3 49 #3 36 #4
Hong Kong Uni. of S&T 37 #2 54 #3 61 #3
UCLA 39 #2 56 #3 56 #3
Columbia 40 #2 47 #4 46 #4
Average of Topic and Method
TABLE 5 - Continued
Rankings for the top 40 schools based on the 6 year window arepresented. The number of authors who contributed to therankings are also presented (i.e., number after #). If there wereties at the cutoff amount, the school that is presented was the
highest in the 12 year category or if still a tie then the all yearcategory (or if still a tie, alphabetically). Time windowsrepresent all articles published in the previous 6, 12, or 19 years
7/27/2019 coyne et al accounting research areas.pdf
32/32