Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia

Purpose- The main purpose of the paper is to understand and report the nature of management control systems (MCS) that is designed and used by the business organizations in the traditional clannish society of Somalia. Design/methodology/approach- A qualitative case study of a telecommunication compa...

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Main Authors: Hared, Bashir Abdisamad, Abdullah, Zarifah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IISTE 2017
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/1/RJFA%208%202%202017%20103%20116.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/
http://iiste.org/Journals/index.php/RJFA/article/view/35052
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spelling my.uum.repo.218682017-04-27T04:01:36Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/ Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia Hared, Bashir Abdisamad Abdullah, Zarifah HT Communities. Classes. Races Purpose- The main purpose of the paper is to understand and report the nature of management control systems (MCS) that is designed and used by the business organizations in the traditional clannish society of Somalia. Design/methodology/approach- A qualitative case study of a telecommunication company was adopted to gather both primary and secondary data. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with the executive directors of the main divisions. To triangulate the data sources, observations and document analysis were also used. Findings- The findings of the study reveal that the MCS of the case organization is extremely affected by the traditional norms of the Somali clannish environment.Although, the company practices some formal MCS techniques; i.e. budgeting and performance evaluation, compensation management and financial reporting, however, the role of the traditional clanism is visible in all aspects of the company’s daily operations. Hence, the main patterns of MCS include: clannish ownership, selective staffing and investors, collective responsibility of the clan/sub-clan members, personal trust and friendship, horizontal relationships and verbal communication. These control patterns have rendered the formal MCS techniques to become less relevant. Originality/value- The paper adds to the literature of MCS in the traditional societies especially in the African social context. Furthermore, the paper offers an insight to the academicians and practitioners about the business practices in the African traditional environments. Finally, the results of the study call for further researches, particularly in the traditional social settings that are mostly found in the less developed countries. IISTE 2017 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/1/RJFA%208%202%202017%20103%20116.pdf Hared, Bashir Abdisamad and Abdullah, Zarifah (2017) Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia. Research Journal of Finance and Accounting, 8 (2). pp. 103-116. ISSN 2222-1697 http://iiste.org/Journals/index.php/RJFA/article/view/35052
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HT Communities. Classes. Races
spellingShingle HT Communities. Classes. Races
Hared, Bashir Abdisamad
Abdullah, Zarifah
Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
description Purpose- The main purpose of the paper is to understand and report the nature of management control systems (MCS) that is designed and used by the business organizations in the traditional clannish society of Somalia. Design/methodology/approach- A qualitative case study of a telecommunication company was adopted to gather both primary and secondary data. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with the executive directors of the main divisions. To triangulate the data sources, observations and document analysis were also used. Findings- The findings of the study reveal that the MCS of the case organization is extremely affected by the traditional norms of the Somali clannish environment.Although, the company practices some formal MCS techniques; i.e. budgeting and performance evaluation, compensation management and financial reporting, however, the role of the traditional clanism is visible in all aspects of the company’s daily operations. Hence, the main patterns of MCS include: clannish ownership, selective staffing and investors, collective responsibility of the clan/sub-clan members, personal trust and friendship, horizontal relationships and verbal communication. These control patterns have rendered the formal MCS techniques to become less relevant. Originality/value- The paper adds to the literature of MCS in the traditional societies especially in the African social context. Furthermore, the paper offers an insight to the academicians and practitioners about the business practices in the African traditional environments. Finally, the results of the study call for further researches, particularly in the traditional social settings that are mostly found in the less developed countries.
format Article
author Hared, Bashir Abdisamad
Abdullah, Zarifah
author_facet Hared, Bashir Abdisamad
Abdullah, Zarifah
author_sort Hared, Bashir Abdisamad
title Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
title_short Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
title_full Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
title_fullStr Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
title_full_unstemmed Understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in Somalia
title_sort understanding management control systems in a traditional clannish society: an interpretive case study in somalia
publisher IISTE
publishDate 2017
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/1/RJFA%208%202%202017%20103%20116.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/21868/
http://iiste.org/Journals/index.php/RJFA/article/view/35052
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score 13.153044