Sarbanes - Oxley Act of 2002 vs. the 8th Company Law Directive
Abstract
In 2001 and 2002 a wave of corporate and accounting scandals became
known to the public. As a direct consequence of these frauds the Sarbanes
- Oxley Act of 2002, also known as the Public Company Accounting Reform
and Investor Protection Act of 2002, was signed in to law. The main focus of
Sarbanes - Oxley compliance is to ensure the accuracy of financial reporting
and the systems that support this data. The law directly affected all US public
traded companies and was costing millions to comply with. These costs
led the European public companies to consider unlisting from the American
stock market, not knowing that a European version (The 8th Company Law
Directive) of the Act would come into force four years later. This project will
focus on the comparison of these two laws using promise theory as a model
to better see the similarities and differences and understand the relationship
between the affected parties of both laws in the eyes of promises. We will finally
relate the Sarbanes - Oxley to technology, more specifically policy based
configuration management.
Description
Master i nettverks- og systemadministrasjon
Publisher
Høgskolen i Oslo. Avdeling for ingeniørutdanningUniversitetet i Oslo