To read this content please select one of the options below:

Exploring accountability: memory, object, metaphor and common sense

Hasri Mustafa (Yunus Social Business Centre, School of Business and Economics, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Malaysia)

Journal of Islamic Accounting and Business Research

ISSN: 1759-0817

Article publication date: 12 July 2023

582

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to narrate the descriptions of accountability by which a pioneering Malaysian Islamic bank has come to be known and has become a specific model in many countries.

Design/methodology/approach

This study is based on a four-year ethnographic work from 2002 to 2006, as accessed and analysed by the researcher. The philosophy underpinning this ethnography is from Geertz’s “Common sense as a cultural system” (1975) and The Interpretation of Cultures (1973).

Findings

This study finds the religious metaphors of “Halal and Haram is not Only on Food” and “Bank for All” are the anticipated conception that envisages the institution of Bank Islam Malaysia Berhad (BIMB), especially the perspective of the Shariah Supervisory Council and the struggles of the assistant managers.

Research limitations/implications

The paper aligns with the concerns of McPhail et al. (2004) and calls for engagement in research projects on accounting and accountability related to theology but with an attempt to theorise the “engagement” within the components of human limitation and intelligence which require a narrative from the social and collective dimensions of the present and in the past.

Practical implications

By using various objects as symbol, metaphor and memory, such as “counter”, “branch”, “advertising” and “food”, the paper encourages readers to understand the objects as temporalities brought into being by a common sense consciousness and within a historical Malay context; one in which Malaysia is a Muslim society and a by-product of colonialism. This interpretation allows the issues raised by BIMB to represent an authentic Malaysian voice rather than to be read merely as an adjunct to western accounting history.

Originality/value

The paper explores the translations of concepts that the self probes and attempts to describe accountability, as well as how these translate into common sense.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author is grateful to the Visiting Research Fellowship programme of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies (OCIS), University of Oxford, under the Asia-Pacific Interdisciplinary Research in Accounting 2007 Emerging Scholars Fund (Reference No: 4001996) and the Research University Grant Scheme of Universiti Putra Malaysia (Vote No: 91392) for enabling him to have the time and space to work further on the paper. This paper has benefited from inputs and commentaries received at the OCIS Fellows’ seminar series in November 2008, where the author was a visiting scholar. The author thanks Farhan Ahmad Nizami for his helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper. A preliminary version of this paper was presented at the IIUM International Accounting Conference III, Kuala Lumpur, 26–28 June 2006, Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Accounting Conference 2009, Innsbruck, Austria, 09–11 July 2009, and the 9th Islamic Banking Accounting and Finance International Conference, Nilai, 10–11 November 2020. The author thanks Maliah Sulaiman, Chris Chapman and Hasnah Haron for the useful suggestions, encouragement and insights at the conferences.

Citation

Mustafa, H. (2023), "Exploring accountability: memory, object, metaphor and common sense", Journal of Islamic Accounting and Business Research, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JIABR-06-2022-0156

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles