Professionalization in Action: Accountants' Attempt at Building a Network of Support for the WebTrust Seal of Assurance

This paper examines the attempts by the North American accounting institutes to develop a new market in e‐commerce assurance based on their claims to professional expertise through the WebTrust project. Employing actor‐network theory in an in‐depth longitudinal field study, we investigate how WebTru...

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Published in:Contemporary accounting research Vol. 21; no. 3; pp. 563 - 602
Main Authors: GENDRON, YVES, BARRETT, MICHAEL
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-09-2004
Canadian Academic Accounting Association
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Summary:This paper examines the attempts by the North American accounting institutes to develop a new market in e‐commerce assurance based on their claims to professional expertise through the WebTrust project. Employing actor‐network theory in an in‐depth longitudinal field study, we investigate how WebTrust was originally developed and promoted as a seal of business‐to‐consumer assurance, which largely failed to generate support in the marketplace. Proponents were subsequently able to generate more interest in the eyes of managers of online organizations by reshaping WebTrust as a flexible set of principles and criteria for systems advice and business‐to‐business assurance. Our analysis suggests that attempts to expand the accounting profession's domain of expertise reflect a trial‐and‐error process where the outcome achieved may be far from the vision that motivated the institutes into undertaking the project in the first place. We further show that the initial network of support for such projects can be quite fragile and dynamic as various actors reposition themselves around the shifting meanings attributed to the project.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-M3RW0RWK-R
ArticleID:CARE288
istex:07CF4886F97158EB2E00327AB3A10F5DB0D2B017
Accepted by Steve Salterio. We would especially like to thank the following individuals for the comments that they provided on prior versions of the paper: Jean Bédard, David Cooper, John Gray, Timothy Louwers, Joane Martel, Janet Morrill, Eivor Oborn, Geoff Walsham, Hugh Willmott, two anonymous reviewers, and associate editor Steve Salterio. We also acknowledge the comments from workshop participants at Université Laval and attendees at the 1999 Knowledge and Professional Organizations Conference (University of Alberta), the 2000 Canadian Academic Accounting Association Conference (Halifax), and the 2001 American Accounting Association annual meeting (Atlanta). Finally, the first author acknowledges the financial support of the Francis G. Winspear Endowment; the second author acknowledges the financial support of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Alberta and the collegial support of staff at the University of Alberta.
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ISSN:0823-9150
1911-3846
DOI:10.1506/H1C0-EU27-UU2K-8EC8