Academic Advisory Group
Role and Purpose
The Academic Advisory Group (AAG) provides advice and input to the Board's technical decision-making.
The role and purpose of the AAG is to:
- provide specialist knowledge and technical advice on: the UKEB research agenda; the UKEB research programme; academic engagement activities; and academic developments on financial reporting issues.
- identify, highlight, and discuss topics of interest to the Board and its work.
- assist the UKEB in contacting IFRS related researchers to facilitate additional outreach.
- provide relevant and timely evidence on UKEB projects to support the Board in its decision-making.
- contribute examples of best practice, practical experience, and expertise as well as potential solutions that can improve the quality of information being reported.
- Raise awareness of the UKEB and its activities in the UK and international academic community.
- Comment on, and contribute to, the preparation of papers by the Secretariat.
Group Members
Chair
Michael Wells
Michael is Professor of Practice at Imperial College Business School and a consultant to development agencies, working to deepen understanding of requirements specified for the preparation of international general purpose financial reports and fostering capacity to make, audit and regulate the judgments necessary to prepare them. He also performs compliance reviews of corporate …
Michael is Professor of Practice at Imperial College Business School and a consultant to development agencies, working to deepen understanding of requirements specified for the preparation of international general purpose financial reports and fostering capacity to make, audit and regulate the judgments necessary to prepare them. He also performs compliance reviews of corporate financial statements for World Bank assessments of country compliance with financial reporting standards. He was Visiting Lecturer at London Business School from 2018 to 2020.
Michael is a chartered accountant. He qualified with EY in South Africa before joining the academic accounting world. He became the Associate Professor responsible for the financial accounting section of a South African university before moving to the UK to join the staff of the International Accounting Standards Committee Foundation (now IFRS Foundation) in London.
Michael led the IASB’s IFRS Education Initiative for almost a decade. During this time IFRS Accounting Standards became widely adopted across the world.
Michael has experience in a range of accounting education advisory roles. While leading the IFRS Education Initiative he served as a member of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) International Accounting Education Standards Board (IAESB) Consultative Advisory Group (CAG) and the International Association for Accounting Education & Research (IAAER) Board of Advisors. He subsequently served on the American Accounting Association (AAA) Membership Advisory Committee. Before that he served as a member of the AAA Education Committee.
Michael is serving his second term which will end on 14 March 2026.
Members
Alan Jagolinzer
Alan Jagolinzer is the Professor of Financial Accounting, the Head of the Accounting Faculty Subject Group, and the Founder and co-Director of the Cambridge Centre for Financial Reporting & Accountability at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School. Alan is a former Academic Fellow with the IFRS Foundation, the lead co-Editor of the …
Alan Jagolinzer is the Professor of Financial Accounting, the Head of the Accounting Faculty Subject Group, and the Founder and co-Director of the Cambridge Centre for Financial Reporting & Accountability at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School. Alan is a former Academic Fellow with the IFRS Foundation, the lead co-Editor of the Journal of Financial Reporting, and has published research in top academic journals that relate to insider trading, executive compensation, corporate governance, and the implications of guidance within international financial reporting standards. His research has catalysed regulatory changes and enforcement actions in U.S. capital markets. His current research examines problems with governance structures of US universities and the societal implications of disinformation campaigns. Alan has earned teaching recognition at several universities including the 2010 Stanford University Graduate School of Business MBA Distinguished Teaching Award. Alan is a former U.S. Air Force E-3 AWACS aircraft commander and T-37 spin demonstration and evaluator pilot.
Christian Stadler
Christian Stadler is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting and Finance at Royal Holloway University of London. He holds a Diploma in Business Management from the University of Regensburg (Germany) and a PhD in Accounting from Royal Holloway. Prior to re-joining Royal Holloway, he was a Lecturer at Lancaster University. He is an editorial …
Christian Stadler is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting and Finance at Royal Holloway University of London. He holds a Diploma in Business Management from the University of Regensburg (Germany) and a PhD in Accounting from Royal Holloway. Prior to re-joining Royal Holloway, he was a Lecturer at Lancaster University. He is an editorial board member of Accounting and Business Research. His research areas are financial reporting and international accounting. His work on IFRS policy choice has been published in Abacus, Accounting and Business Research, Accounting, Organizations and Society and Journal of Accounting and Public Policy.
Francisco Urzua
Francisco Urzua is a Reader in Finance at Bayes Business School, City, University of London. He graduated from Tilburg (PhD), LSE (MSc), and PUC Chile (BA). Having published extensively in finance, he is currently working on understanding the real effects of accounting regulations. In particular, whether increased disclosure leads to more M&A activity …
Francisco Urzua is a Reader in Finance at Bayes Business School, City, University of London. He graduated from Tilburg (PhD), LSE (MSc), and PUC Chile (BA). Having published extensively in finance, he is currently working on understanding the real effects of accounting regulations. In particular, whether increased disclosure leads to more M&A activity and a better allocation of resources in the economy, and how disclosure and individual’s privacy concerns interact.
Hafez Abdo
Hafez Abdo is an associate professor of accounting at the University of Nottingham. His research is focused on Accounting and Taxation of the extractive industries with special interest in IFRS 6; he also researches energy policy topics. Prior to joining the University of Nottingham in January 2020, Hafez was a full professor of …
Hafez Abdo is an associate professor of accounting at the University of Nottingham. His research is focused on Accounting and Taxation of the extractive industries with special interest in IFRS 6; he also researches energy policy topics. Prior to joining the University of Nottingham in January 2020, Hafez was a full professor of accounting at Sheffield Hallam University (2018-2020), before which he worked at Nottingham Trent University (2005-2018) and the University of Sheffield (2002-2005). Hafez is an associate editor of two accounting journals: Journal of Financial Reporting and Accounting (JFRA) and Journal of Applied Accounting Research (JAAR). He is a member of the Committee for Departments of Accounting and Finance (CDAF) of BAFA and an External Examiner for the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT).
Ioannis Tsalavoutas
Ioannis Tsalavoutas is a professor of accounting and the leading founder of the Adam Smith Observatory of Corporate Reporting Practices at the University of Glasgow. His main area of expertise is financial accounting and reporting: in particular, investigating companies’ reporting practices under IFRS across different jurisdictions, along with any economic consequences that may …
Ioannis Tsalavoutas is a professor of accounting and the leading founder of the Adam Smith Observatory of Corporate Reporting Practices at the University of Glasgow. His main area of expertise is financial accounting and reporting: in particular, investigating companies’ reporting practices under IFRS across different jurisdictions, along with any economic consequences that may arise from divergence in practice. Ioannis' work experience includes positions as an accounting assistant (in Greece) and as a financial accounting and reporting analyst at Company Reporting Ltd in Edinburgh. Before joining the University of Glasgow in January 2015, Ioannis was a lecturer in accounting at the University of Stirling.
Janice Denoncourt
Dr Janice Denoncourt is Associate Professor of Law at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University where she leads the Intellectual Property and Innovation Research Group Janice’s multi-disciplinary research and teaching involves business law, corporate governance, emerging technology law, finance, innovation theory, intangibles, intellectual property and sustainability. She is the author of Intellectual Property, …
Dr Janice Denoncourt is Associate Professor of Law at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University where she leads the Intellectual Property and Innovation Research Group Janice’s multi-disciplinary research and teaching involves business law, corporate governance, emerging technology law, finance, innovation theory, intangibles, intellectual property and sustainability. She is the author of Intellectual Property, Finance and Corporate Governance (2018) Routledge Taylor-Francis. Prior to her academic career, Janice qualified as a solicitor in England and Wales; as a Barrister, Solicitor and Trade Mark Attorney in Western Australia. She practised law with Herbert Smith Freehills, Minter Ellison and was sole inhouse Counsel, Assistant Company Secretary and an alternate Director with the Brandrill Group (WA). On relocation to the UK, she became Head of Legal Affairs for Worlds Apart Ltd, a large private firm. Janice holds a BA from McGill University, Canada; completed her LLB at the University of Western Australia; and her PhD at the University of Nottingham. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts (RSA) and a member of the European Accounting Association (EAA). She is also a Director of the London-based Intellectual Property Awareness Network and member of their Business & Finance group.
Ronita Ram
Dr Ronita Ram is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Henley Business School, University of Reading UK since 2015. She is also the Director of Postgraduate Research in Accounting at Henley Business School. Dr Ram has a PhD in accounting from University of Sydney, Australia. Dr Ram’s research interest focuses on development of …
Dr Ronita Ram is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Henley Business School, University of Reading UK since 2015. She is also the Director of Postgraduate Research in Accounting at Henley Business School. Dr Ram has a PhD in accounting from University of Sydney, Australia. Dr Ram’s research interest focuses on development of IFRS, use of IFRS and sustainability reporting. She has published in international journals as well as being a reviewer for accounting journals. Dr Ram has over 15 years of teaching and research experience at the tertiary level, and she specializes in teaching IFRS at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. She has previously also taught as a lecturer at University of Sydney in Australia and at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji. Dr Ram is a qualified accountant and member of the Chartered Accountants Australia & New Zealand. She is also a member of the UK Endorsement Board (UKEB) Academic Advisory Group.
Stefano Cascino
Stefano Cascino is an Associate Professor of Accounting at the London School of Economics. His primary research interests include disclosure regulation, corporate governance, and credit markets. His research has been published in leading academic journals, such as Journal of Accounting Research, The Accounting Review, Review of Accounting Studies, and Management Science, and has …
Stefano Cascino is an Associate Professor of Accounting at the London School of Economics. His primary research interests include disclosure regulation, corporate governance, and credit markets. His research has been published in leading academic journals, such as Journal of Accounting Research, The Accounting Review, Review of Accounting Studies, and Management Science, and has generated the interest of practitioners and standard setters including the Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB), International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). His research has also been cited in several media outlets such as the Columbia Law School Blue Sky Blog, Harvard Law School Bankruptcy Roundtable, and LSE Business Review. He has received funding and research grants from the Institute of The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland (ICAS) and the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG). He serves as associate editor for Accounting and Business Research and is a member of the editorial board of Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, European Accounting Review, and Journal of International Accounting Research. He has been a visiting researcher at the Humboldt University of Berlin, LUISS Business School, and Queensland University of Technology. He teaches financial statement analysis and valuation to undergraduate students, financial accounting to master students, and empirical capital markets research to PhD students. For his dedication to teaching, he received the LSE Teaching Excellence Award in 2012, and the LSE Education Excellence Award in 2016, 2017, and 2018. He holds a PhD in Business Economics (Accounting) from the University of Naples Federico II and is a Certified Public Accountant and Statutory Auditor (Italy).
Wei Jiang
Dr Wei Jiang is currently a Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) of Accounting at Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester. Wei’s research investigates the use of accounting information by capital market participants, and the effects of corporate governance on firm performance and corporate policies. Her work has been published in a number of …
Dr Wei Jiang is currently a Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) of Accounting at Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester. Wei’s research investigates the use of accounting information by capital market participants, and the effects of corporate governance on firm performance and corporate policies. Her work has been published in a number of international peer-reviewed academic journals and the ‘Forbes’ online magazine. Prior to joining Alliance Manchester Business School, Wei held a position as an Assistant Professor of Accounting at Warwick Business School, the University of Warwick. Wei was a Dorothy Hodgkin Postgraduate Award Scholar for her PhD studies at the University of Manchester. Wei sits on the editorial board of Accounting and Business Research, and serves as an ad-hoc reviewer for a number of journals in the accounting, finance and management fields. Wei has experience teaching accounting courses at both the undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
Meeting Summaries
Document name | Date uploaded |
---|---|
Summary of the AAG Session 23 September 2024 | 18 October 2024 |
Summary of the AAG Session 12 April 2024 | 03 May 2024 |
Summary of the AAG Session 19 September 2023 | 16 October 2023 |
Summary of the AAG Session 25 April 2023 | 17 May 2023 |
Summary of the AAG Session 21 September 2022 | 13 October 2022 |