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Featured researches published by Dianne Thomson.


International Review of Financial Analysis | 2001

Banking regulation and market forces in Australia

Dianne Thomson; Malcolm Abbott

The purpose of this paper is to use Kanes notion of the regulatory dialectic to analyse the changing nature of bank regulation in Australia. Throughout Australias economic history, economic regulation of the Australian banking system has not been static but has responded to changes in technology, market forces, and the behaviour of regulated institutions. From this analysis, some inferences about general banking principles and policy can be made.


Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education | 2012

Engagement and learning through social software in finance: a retrospective on the Trading Room experience

Ameeta Jain; Dianne Thomson; Alan Farley; Pamela Mulready

The introduction of a social software blog space called the Trading Room in an undergraduate finance unit generated a great deal of activity to support student learning. A subsequent evaluation of this innovation, viewed through the lens of Activity Theory, demonstrated that students perceived high value in the opportunity it provided for them to reaffirm theories, obtain individualised feedback and benchmark their work against others. While assessment is generally seen as the carrot and the stick of learning; students in the study reported that they would still participate in reading and posting to the Trading Room even if there was no assessment requirement. Students did not see any value in the environment as a purely social space, reporting that they saw it primarily as a professional educational community. It would appear that just as there are different communities in the real world social space, there are also different types of communities in the online space.


Accounting, Business and Financial History | 1998

The life and death of the Australian permanent building societies

Dianne Thomson; Malcolm Abbott

Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries permanent building societies have been important providers of housing finance in Australia. Despite their long history Australian building societies have been disappearing at a steady rate since the early 1980s as they have converted into banks or become involved in mergers. The purpose of this paper is to give a background account of the history of Australian building societies and put forward explanations for their past popularity and more recent disappearance from Australian housing finance markets.


Social Responsibility Journal | 2015

Voluntary CSR disclosure works! Evidence from Asia-Pacific banks

Ameeta Jain; Monica Keneley; Dianne Thomson

Purpose - – The purpose of this paper is to evaluate corporate social responsibility (CSR) reporting in six large banks each from Japan, China, Australia and India over the period of 2005-2011. Design/methodology/approach - – CSR and banks’ annual reports and websites were analysed using a comprehensive disclosure framework to evaluate the themes of ethical standards, extent of CSR reporting, environment, products, community, employees, supply chain management and benchmarking. Findings - – Over the seven years, bank CSR disclosure improved in all four countries. Australian banks were found to have the best scores and Indian banks demonstrated maximum improvement. Despite the absence of legislative requirements or standards for CSR, this paper finds that CSR reporting continued to improve in quality and quantity in the region on a purely voluntary basis. Research limitations/implications - – This study indicates that financial institutions have a commitment to CSR activities. The comparison between financial institutions in developed and developing economies suggests that the motivation for such activities is complex. A review of the studied banks suggests that strategic rather than economic drivers are an important influence. Practical implications - – Asia-Pacific Governments need not mandate bank CSR reporting standards as the banks improved their CSR reporting consistently over the seven years despite the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Originality/value - – A disclosure framework index is used to assess the comprehensiveness of bank practice in relation to CSR reporting. This approach enables cross-sectional and cross-country comparisons over time and the ability to replicate and apply to other industries or sectors.


Australasian Journal of Environmental Management | 2016

Does the global reporting initiative influence sustainability disclosures in Asia-Pacific banks?

Muhammad Azizul Islam; Ameeta Jain; Dianne Thomson

ABSTRACT This article examines sustainability disclosures by the major banks in the Asia-Pacific region (the six largest banks from each of four countries: Australia, Japan, China and India) during the period 2005–2012. The findings show sustainability disclosures by banks that participate in the global reporting initiative (GRI) are significantly higher than disclosures by those banks that have not participated in the GRI. Amongst those banks that have participated in the GRI there is a higher rate of disclosure by externally assured banks than by non-externally assured banks. Among the GRI participating banks, there was significant variation of disclosures between countries. Disclosures by Australian banks appeared to be significantly higher than disclosures by banks in any other countries under observation. The findings are discussed from a moral legitimacy perspective. Consistent with this view, the banks under study were responsive to the GRI, which is seen as an influential actor that shapes and reflects the expectations of the broader community. However, the role of the GRI in minimising country differences in disclosure by banks is not significant.


Economic Papers: A journal of applied economics and policy | 2011

Blended Learning in Finance: Comparing Student Perceptions of Lectures, Tutorials and Online Learning Environments Across Different Year Levels

Alan Farley; Ameeta Jain; Dianne Thomson


Journal of Business Case Studies | 2011

Corporate governance failure and its impact on National Australia Bank's performance

Dianne Thomson; Ameeta Jain


Applied Economics Letters | 2011

The relationship between exchange rates, interest rates and Australian bank returns

Ameeta Jain; Paresh Kumar Kumar Narayan; Dianne Thomson


Economic Papers: A journal of applied economics and policy | 2012

Insuring for a Crisis: Deposit Insurance and the GFC, the Australian and New Zealand Experience*

Ameeta Jain; Monica Keneley; Dianne Thomson


Corporate Ownership and Control | 2008

Corporate Governance, Board Responsibilities, and Financial Performance: The National Bank of Australia

Ameeta Jain; Dianne Thomson

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Muhammad Azizul Islam

Queensland University of Technology

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