Zabihollah Rezaee

Zabihollah Rezaee (Persian: ذبیح الله رضایی) (born 1954) is an Iranian-born/American accountant, the Thompson-Hill Chair of Excellence and Professor of Accounting at the University of Memphis, USA.

Zabihollah Rezaee
Born1954
NationalityAmerican (from Iran)
Alma materTarleton State University and the University of Mississippi
Scientific career
FieldsAccountancy, Auditing, Corporate Governance, Ethics, Anti-Fraud
InstitutionsThe Thompson-Hill Chair of Excellence and Professor of Accountancy at the University of Memphis

Life and work

Rezaee obtained his BS in accounting at the N.I.O.C. School of Accounting and Finance in Iran, his MBA from Tarleton State University and his Ph.D. in accounting at the University of Mississippi.

Currently, he is the secretary of the Forensic and Investigative Accounting Section of the American Accounting Association. He served two years on the Standing Advisory Group of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.[1]

Selected publications

  • Financial Institutions, Valuations, Mergers, and Acquisitions: The Fair Value Approach
  • Financial Statement Fraud: Prevention and Detection
  • U.S. Master Auditing Guide (3rd edition)
  • Audit Committee Oversight Effectiveness Post-Sarbanes-Oxley Act;
  • Corporate Governance Post-Sarbanes-Oxley: Regulations, Requirements, and Integrated Processes
  • Corporate Governance and Business Ethics
  • Financial Services Firms: Governance, regulations, Valuations, Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Corporate Sustainability: Integrating Performance and Reporting
  • "Chapter 2: IRAN" (Gholam Hossein Davani and Zabihollah Rezaee) in A Global History of Accounting, Financial Reporting and Public Policy, edited by Gary John Previts, Peter J. Walton, P. W. Wolnizer, Emerald Group Publishing Limited (July 17, 2012)
gollark: Well, Google and Bing have 18246184618746128471289471289 employees ~~who actually know what they're doing~~ and postgres is likely better than the simple thing OSEv1 used.
gollark: What? No. Search engines are hard.
gollark: osmarks.net™ search engine™ plus™ will of course:- have working crawler logic probably- be faster somehow, as opposed to slower- use postgres FTS instead of a homegrown and not very good inverted index
gollark: So the crawler got links slightly wrong in certain situations and also it took 60 seconds to search anything.
gollark: It worked fine on osmarks.net, but then I ~~dug too deep~~ indexed half of the esolangs.org wiki without fixing some things (like redirects) and ensuring performance was okay.

References


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