Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ

School of Business

Accounting and Finance Conference

An image of the front of Brookfield campus showing a large grassy area with a Victorian house and modern side extensionAccounting and Finance at ULSB invites submissions for its inaugural research conference 'The Future of Finance and Accounting: Digital Transformation, Innovation, and Systemic Change'.  This flagship event is intended to establish a recurring platform for high-quality research exchange, positioning Accounting and Finance at ULSB as a focal point for scholarly dialogue on the future of these disciplines in the UK and internationally.

The conference will be held on Thursday 4 June 2026 at the School of Business campus, Brookfield.

Call for papers

Rapid technological advancements - including artificial intelligence, machine learning, big data, blockchain, and digital platforms - are fundamentally reshaping financial systems, institutions, and markets, as well as the practice, and infrastructure of accounting.  These developments are transforming how financial and accounting information is generated, analysed, and communicated, while raising important questions for governance, transparency, accountability, and financial stability.

At the same time, these transformations are closely linked to broader challenges facing modern economies, including sustainability, financial inclusion, and the evolving role of accounting and finance in supporting responsible economic development.

The conference aims to bring together scholars working at the forefront of these developments and to foster dialogue across finance, accounting, and related disciplines.  It particularly welcomes interdisciplinary work bridging accounting and finance.

The programme will feature a keynote address by Professor Sheri Markose (University of Essex), titled “The Future of Digital Payments and the Role of Central Bank Digital Currency”, a panel discussion, and a PhD poster session, providing an opportunity for doctoral researchers to present their work in an informal and interactive setting.  Poster presentations will take place during the breaks, encouraging discussion and feedback from participants.

To recognise excellence across contributions, the conference will feature several awards including a Best Conference Paper Award, Best Accounting Paper Award, Best Finance Paper Award and a Best PhD Poster Award.

Keynote

Professor Sheri Markose

 

Sheri Markose is Professor of Economics at the University of Essex and holds a PhD from the London School of Economics. As Founder Director of the Centre for Computational Finance and Economic Agents (CCFEA), she has pioneered a multidisciplinary curriculum in FinTech and the digital economy. This has culminated in the AI-FincubeX | University of Essex Tech incubator, where students develop operationally relevant solutions for FinTech and the digital economy.

Her recent advisory roles include work on Central Bank Digital Currency with the Bank of England and a MENA central bank. She has developed data-driven, population-scale agent-based models to support CBDC adoption in economies dominated by bank deposit-based digital payments.

Her work has also contributed to mapping the Indian financial system using network modelling and the  stability index to . She has acted as a consultant to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on systemic risk from derivatives and served as an academic advisor to the G20 OTC Derivatives Regulatory Reforms.

Her longstanding interest in the foundations of Complexity Sciences, Computation Theory and Gödel Incompleteness results has helped her formulate the significance of  based on Godel’s Liar. These are shown to result in an arms race in novelty and surprises within a framework of a genomic self-referential blockchain. 

Since 2017, she has been an Associate Editor of Frontiers in Robotics and AI, and in 2025 she edited a  with leading computer scientists and neuroscientists.

Conference topics

We welcome theoretical and empirical contributions in, but not limited to, the following areas:

Digital finance, technology and data

  • FinTech, digital banking, and platform-based finance
  • Artificial intelligence and machine learning in finance and accounting
  • Blockchain, digital assets, and decentralised finance
  • Financial data analytics and algorithmic decision-making

Accounting transformation and the future of the profession

  • Digital reporting, real-time accounting, and data-driven transparency
  • The impact of AI and automation on the accounting profession and practice
  • The future of auditing, assurance, and risk assessment in digital environments
  • Data governance, accounting information systems, and digital control frameworks
  • Professional judgement, ethics, and accountability in technology-enabled environments

Banking, financial institutions, and system stability

  • Banking, financial intermediation, and the role of financial institutions
  • Financial regulation, governance, and stability in digital environments

Sustainability, inclusion and societal impact

  • ESG, sustainability reporting, and climate finance
  • Environmental accounting and sustainable investment
  • Financial inclusion and access to finance
  • SME finance and entrepreneurial ecosystems
  • The role of financial and accounting information in reducing inequalities

Panel Discussion

Digital Payments, CBDCs and the Future Architecture of Financial Systems

The conference will conclude with a high-level panel discussion exploring the future of digital payments, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), financial market infrastructure, and the broader transformation of financial systems. Bringing together leading academic, policy, and financial-sector perspectives, the discussion will examine some of the most important challenges and opportunities currently reshaping banking, payments, regulation, and monetary systems worldwide.

Panel Chair

Panicos DemtriadesPanicos Demetriades
Emeritus Professor of Financial Economics, Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ
Former Governor, Central Bank of Cyprus

Panicos Demetriades is Emeritus Professor of Financial Economics at the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ and former Governor of the Central Bank of Cyprus and member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank. His research has focused on financial development, financial stability, monetary policy, and banking systems, with publications in leading international journals and extensive policy and consultancy experience with central banks and international institutions worldwide.

Panellists

Sheri Markose

Professor of Economics, University of Essex

Sheri Markose is Professor of Economics at the University of Essex and a member of the Bank of England CBDC Academic Advisory Group. Her work spans monetary economics, digital currencies, financial networks, and systemic risk, with particular expertise in the implications of digital transformation for financial systems and central banking.

 

David Llewellyn

Emeritus Professor of Money and Banking, Loughborough University

David Llewellyn is Emeritus Professor of Money and Banking at Loughborough University and External Member at the Centre for Cooperative Studies, Kellogg College, University of Oxford. He is a leading expert in banking regulation, financial institutions, and financial stability, and has served as consultant and adviser to regulatory agencies internationally, including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. He has also served as Public Interest Director of the Personal Investment Authority and Chair of the Banking Stakeholder Group at the European Banking Authority (EBA).

 

Bazil Sansom

Research Fellow, Gillmore Centre for Financial Technology, Warwick Business School

Bazil Sansom is a Research Fellow at the Gillmore Centre for Financial Technology at Warwick Business School. His research focuses on money, payments, and financial market infrastructure, combining theoretical work on the foundations of monetary and settlement systems with analysis of emerging innovations in digital finance and payments.

 

 

Submission guidelines

  • Full papers or extended abstracts (2-3 pages) are welcome.
  • Submissions should be in PDF format.
  • Submissions should include author names, affiliations and contact details.
  • Please also indicate the thematic area that best fits the submission (e.g. digital finance, accounting innovation, sustainability, banking) to support the review process and session organisation.

Submission deadline: 8 May 2026
Notification of acceptance: 15 May 2026
Conference registration deadline: 25 May 2026

Conference registration and fee

The conference is open to both internal and external participants and online registration is now available.

  • Standard delegate fee: £50
  • PhD student fee: £25

Contact and submissions

For any questions about the conference and to submit papers please email afconference@le.ac.uk

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