posted on 2022-10-06, 22:10authored bySally Matthews
<p>The purpose of this study was to analyse the Executive Summaries of assurance and advisory reports submitted by Professional Service Firms (PSF) as evidence to the Australian 2018 – 2019 Royal Commission into the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry. The 32 Word and PowerPoint documents in this dataset were reviews by PSFs of large corporations’ financial controls, policies and procedures and are often relied on by regulators and stakeholders to ensure the integrity and reliability of financial institutions. Following CGA principles, a variety of research methods were employed to investigate this hard to access but influential discourse community, including genre analysis, multimodal analysis and interviews. Results indicated that the Executive Summaries are a pliable and hybrid genre, made up of mainly optional stages which are sequenced in a variety of patterns to meet the writers’ surface and private purposes. Their writers collaborate with their clients to write the reports, although the tenor of the documents is impersonal and objective. Visual semiotics are used, particularly in the PowerPoint documents, however language is the main meaning making resource. These results were taken as evidence of the value of CGA in helping to investigate the discursive practices of an opaque but essential professional community.</p>
History
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Literature Review -- Chapter 3: Methodology -- Chapter 4: Results -- Chapter 5: Discussion -- Chapter 6: Conclusion – References -- Appendix A - Summary of Stages by Report -- Appendix B - Word and PowerPoint Artefacts -- Appendix C - Interview Guides -- Appendix D - Example Text for each Stage -- Appendix E - Linguistic Features of Each Stage -- Appendix F - Multimodal Analysis Observations -- Appendix G – Example of Traffic Light Semiotic
Notes
This thesis is presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Research at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis MRes
Degree
Thesis (MRes), Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences, Macquarie University
Department, Centre or School
Department of Linguistics
Year of Award
2021
Principal Supervisor
Stephen Moore
Rights
Copyright: The Author
Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer