TY - JOUR
T1 - Governmentality, counter-conduct, and modes of governing
T2 - Accounting and the pursuit of municipal sustainable waste management
AU - Ahrens, Thomas
AU - Ferry, Laurence
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Canadian Academic Accounting Association.
PY - 2025/6/1
Y1 - 2025/6/1
N2 - Recent research into the uses of accounting as a technology of government has used Foucault's notion of “counter-conduct” to shed light on various ways in which the governed can seek to alter the regimes to which they are subjected. This paper unpacks the notion of counter-conduct further in order to develop a clearer conceptualization of how regimes of government can change over time, with or without clearly identifiable attempts by the governed to influence such changes. We develop our argument based on a longitudinal field study of sustainable waste management practices in a municipality in the English East Midlands. We track the municipality's attempts to become more sustainable in the context of an evolving central government performance management regime that went through a series of legislative and administrative iterations—namely, Best Value, Comprehensive Performance Assessment, and Comprehensive Area Assessment. We conceptualize these iterations of central performance management and the related changes in local government practices and technologies of governing as a series of overlapping “modes of governing” (Bulkeley et al., 2007, Environment and Planning A, 39(11), 2733–2753). We suggest that accounting research can benefit from the notion of modes of governing because it sheds light on the theoretically expected, but empirically underresearched, copresence of multiple rationales, programs, and technologies of governing, all operating at the same time.
AB - Recent research into the uses of accounting as a technology of government has used Foucault's notion of “counter-conduct” to shed light on various ways in which the governed can seek to alter the regimes to which they are subjected. This paper unpacks the notion of counter-conduct further in order to develop a clearer conceptualization of how regimes of government can change over time, with or without clearly identifiable attempts by the governed to influence such changes. We develop our argument based on a longitudinal field study of sustainable waste management practices in a municipality in the English East Midlands. We track the municipality's attempts to become more sustainable in the context of an evolving central government performance management regime that went through a series of legislative and administrative iterations—namely, Best Value, Comprehensive Performance Assessment, and Comprehensive Area Assessment. We conceptualize these iterations of central performance management and the related changes in local government practices and technologies of governing as a series of overlapping “modes of governing” (Bulkeley et al., 2007, Environment and Planning A, 39(11), 2733–2753). We suggest that accounting research can benefit from the notion of modes of governing because it sheds light on the theoretically expected, but empirically underresearched, copresence of multiple rationales, programs, and technologies of governing, all operating at the same time.
KW - counter-conduct
KW - field study
KW - governmentality
KW - local government
KW - public sector performance management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000253116&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=86000253116&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1911-3846.13026
DO - 10.1111/1911-3846.13026
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:86000253116
SN - 0823-9150
VL - 42
SP - 985
EP - 1012
JO - Contemporary Accounting Research
JF - Contemporary Accounting Research
IS - 2
ER -