Directory
Timothy Keune
Associate Professor & Chairperson, Department of Accounting
Full-Time Faculty
School of Business Administration: Accounting
Profile
Dr. Timothy Keune is an Associate Professor in the Department of Accounting at the University of Dayton. His research centers on manager discretion and how it is affected by accounting information and performance measurement. His work has been published in The Accounting Review, Journal of Accounting and Economics, and Journal of Accounting Literature. Dr. Keune has received teaching awards at two universities as well as two research awards from the Management Accounting Section of the American Accounting Association. Prior to entering the Ph.D. program at the University of Wisconsin, Dr. Keune was a Division Controller for a Fortune 500 Company.
Degrees
- University of Wisconsin, PhD
- Butler University, BS (Accounting major)
Licenses/Certifications
- CPA in Arizona
Teaching Interests
- Managerial Accounting
- Cost Accounting
Research Interests
- Manager discretion and responses to incentives
- Compensation design
- Budgeting,
- Manager discretion in financial accounting choices
Selected Publications
- Keune, M. and T. Keune. 2018. Do Companies Make Voluntary Accounting Changes in Response to a Material Weakness in Internal Control? Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory 37 (2): 107-137.
- Keune, M., T. Keune, and L. Quick. 2017. Voluntary Changes in Accounting Principle: Literature Review, Descriptive Data, and Opportunities for Future Research. Journal of Accounting Literature 39: 52-81.
- Carrillo, H., J.F. Castellano, and T. M. Keune. 2017. Employee engagement in public accounting firms: Getting millennial staff excited about the work environment. The CPA Journal 87(12): 36-41.
- Jackson, S.B., T.M. Keune, and L. Salzsieder. 2013. Debt, Equity, and Capital Investment. Journal of Accounting and Economics 56: 291-310.
- Bol, J.C., T.M. Keune, E.M. Matsumura, and J.Y. Shin. 2010. Supervisor Discretion in Target Setting: An Empirical Investigation. The Accounting Review 85 (6): 1861-1886