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Welcome to the website of Professor
Stephen A. Zeff's Henry Rand Hatfield, Humanist, Scholar, and
Accounting Educator. This book is a biographical study of the first
full-time accounting professor in a U.S. university, Henry Rand Hatfield (1866-1945).
The book is the first in the Development of Accounting
Thought series, the first of the new JAI/Elsevier Science book series.
This book is now available.
Choose one of these selections to learn more about Hatfield or the
Zeff book. A book overview is presented below.
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Henry Rand Hatfield,
This book is a biographical study of the
first full-time accounting professor in a U.S. university. Henry
Rand Hatfield (1866-1945) was the first dean of the Chicago business
school and the second dean of the Berkeley business school, and he
was long regarded as the dean of accounting teachers everywhere. His
two textbooks, Modern Accounting (1909) and
Accounting(1927), were among the most respected reference works in
the first half century, and they and his articles continue to be
cited today. His textbooks and carefully crafted articles were
veritable annotations on the accounting literature and drew
extensively on accounting and legal authorities in the U.S. and
overseas. He exemplified a principled approach to accounting debate
and discussion, and he skewered sloppy and imprecise terminology and
shoddy thinking. He did not propound any grand theories but was
instead an astute critic of the literature, a delectable writer,
and, above all, a consummate scholar.
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