YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :An Evaluation of Sarbanes Oxley
Essays 1 - 30
(Sun, 2006). The author remarks that internal auditors now have rock star status (Sun, 2006). Clearly, auditors are revered and ha...
the case of the Basel Committee, on organizations audit committees. Attention to Enhanced Corporate Governance Corporate go...
it is involved with (Marlin, 2005). Indeed, not only has Sarbanes Oxley impacted peer review, but also it has impacted the entire ...
creating the situation present in todays economy. In addition, one could argue that this Act, if implanted earlier, would have hel...
is the economic reality of a company. This leads to a lack of transparency and deception in the structuring of financial transact...
is likely to impact on internal controls and protecting cash come under section 404 (Bryan and Lilien, 2005). Under this section ...
for major corporations took place in 2004 (Borrus, 2005). Impact on Accounting Controls The Act, for the most part, has...
signed into law in 2002 as a response to the number of corporate corruption cases and accounting scandals. The primary purpose of ...
not been given any authority greater than that which resides in with the Security and Exchanges Commission (SEC), which can cause ...
(2003) commented that the sweeping criminal provisions in the act apply to everyone, including nonprofit organizations. For exampl...
The writer explains to core elements of the accounting regulatory framework in the US; GAAP and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Each is ex...
Covers two sections of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002; that of outside auditors and Section 404, Internal Reporting. There are 4 s...
receives any federal money at all, no matter how little or how much (Hamel, 2003) Four years after this Act was passed, controve...
audit functions were in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), hiding debt in dummy corporations, as wel...
included in this Act is criminal provisions that aimed at preserving evidence of fraud (Leahy, 2003). This means that CPAs and aud...
the creation of a Public Co. Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). One year later, during 2003, the American Institute of Ce...
demands by the federal government to comply with the internal control systems which were really designed with the larger publicly ...
of the marketplace by big business (Bittlingmayer, 2002). Catanzaro (2000) accuses President Richard Nixon of using antitrust law ...
perception of the regulatory environment is one that inspires confidence that the results and basis of the valuation accurate and...
long-term ramifications of the Act will be (as its still so new), some of the literature on Sarbanes-Oxley has made some predictio...
be realized that internal controls, in and of themselves, are not a goal, but rather, are there to help ensure that an organizatio...
any federal money at all, no matter how little or how much (Hamel, 2003) The implications for nonprofit organizations is signifi...
financial information and balance sheet, its first a good idea to examine what, exactly, compliance means under Sarbanes-Oxley and...
positivistic rather than classical criminal justice theories. Classical criminal justice theory states that if a person is...
Texas, Greece, and African states. All of these laws will affect American companies. The most important of the new laws is the fed...
the long term. A third hypothesis is that these sustainably-minded organizations outperform non-Index firms over the long t...
There will be clear and well defined goals, set and understood procedures, the roles of those involved will be clear and there wil...
in how organizations can categorize and classify their financial results, each organization is required to maintain uniform intern...
(Nyberg, 2003). However, when we learn that the claim was made with a demand for $45 million the integrity appears to lose...
This 4 page paper looks at information technology in financial institutions and considers influences such as the Sarbanes-Oxley, v...