Part 1 General studies: accounting in developing countries - a review of the literature, R.S.Olusegun Wallace; the Anglo-American influence on international accounting standards, Mfandaidza R.Hove; accounting for development - an alternative approach, John M.Samuels; managerial social accounting in developing countries - towards the operationalization of social reporting, Keith Maunders et al; accounting for national governments - the case of developing countries, John Craner and Rowan Jones. Part 2 Country studies: does training more accountants raise the standards of accounting in Third World countries? a study of Bangladesh, Michael J.Parry and Roger E.Groves; responsibility accounting during the economic transformation in the people's Republic of China, Richard A.Maschmeyer and Yang Ji-liang; auditing in China - recent developments and current problems, Clifford R.Skousen et al; development finance management in LDCs - the Indian experience, I.M.Pandey; accounting in developing countries - Indonesia and the Solomon Islands as case studies for regional co-operation, Richard J.Briston; the impact of the type of audit firms on the perception of investors and lenders - the case of Kuwait, Jasem al-Mudhaf; financial accounting and reporting in Lebanon - an exploratory study of accounting in hyperinflationary conditions, Nabil Baydoun and Robert Gray; the evolution of corporate reporting in Singapore, Richard J.Briston and Foo See Liang; accounting education and corporate disclosure regulations in Tanzania, Richard J.Briston and R.S.O.Wallace.