Prem sikka biography of christopher

  • Using Prem Sikka's writings, the paper argues that accounting communications have become distorted thereby failing to live up to their potential.
  • The accounting academic formerly known as Prem Sikka gave his maiden speech to fellow peers as Lord Sikka this week.
  • Read the latest articles of Critical Perspectives on Accounting at ScienceDirect.com, Elsevier's leading platform of peer-reviewed scholarly literature.
  • How Corrupt is Britain?

    Banks accused of rate-fixing. Members of Parliament cooking the books. Major defence contractors investigated over suspect arms deals. Police accused of being paid off by tabloids. The headlines are unrelenting these days. Perhaps it's high time we ask: just exactly how corrupt is Britain?

    David Whyte brings together a wide range of leading commentators and campaigners, offering a series of troubling answers. Unflinchingly facing the corruption in British public life, they show that it is no longer tenable to assume that corruption is something that happens elsewhere; corrupt practices are revealed across a wide range of venerated institutions, from local government to big business. These powerful exposes shine a light on the corruption fundamentally embedded in UK politics, police and finance.

    David Whyte is Professor of Socio-Legal Studies at the University of Liverpool where he researches issues related to corporate violence and corporate corrupti

    Christophe PrematAssociate Professor

    About me

     

    "Where danger arises, so too grows what saves us," wrote Hölderlin about the challenges that technological developments pose to human societies. inom adopt this motto as my own and complement it with a quote from Rita Mestokosho:
    "The other path fryst vatten invisible. It is illuminated by / life /. It can be reached through the power of one's Mistapéo. / These two paths are connected somewhere in the world / where we live and in the spirit world / where we travel through our dreams. / When the two paths unite, then / the Innu will find themselves again."
    (Rita Mestokosho, How inom See Life, Grandmother, Eshi Uapataman Nukum, (Gothenburg: Beijboom Books AB, 2010), p. 30).

    These two principles have, in fact, guided my research journey, which, alongside enriching experiences outside academia, has focused on issues of inclusion for populations erased from history. fyra key research areas characterize my current work on these questions

    Photograph by Elias Williams

    I'm an American artist based in Miza, Abu Dhabi working in socially engaged art and installation. I collaborate with academics, architects, scientists, and everyday people to imagine new ways of living and create new sites of knowledge production. Inspired by my 11 years living in the United Arab Emirates, I like to research how the homeland endures inside immigrant populations.

     

    Current long-term artistic research projects include spearheading an archive of Black dance with scientists from MIT’s Immersion Lab with funding from Meta and Brooklyn Museum; designing a public park for the government of Abu Dhabi; and heading a team of architects and urbanists to re-imagine overcrowded low-income housing in the United Arab Emirates.

     

    My exhibitions have been presented at museums, biennials and art fairs around the world including the Public Art Abu Dhabi Biennial, Fikra Graphic Design Biennial (Sharjah, UAE), and Abu Dhabi Art

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