Delphine Samuels
Associate Professor of Accounting and James S. Kemper Faculty Scholar
Associate Professor of Accounting and James S. Kemper Faculty Scholar
Delphine Samuels’ research focuses on financial reporting transparency, with an emphasis on governmental entities. Her recent work examines the incentives for financial disclosure at the state and local municipality levels, and the effects of transparency in governments’ procurement processes. Her work on the private sector examines the economics of corporate misreporting, and how corporations substitute between different types of financial disclosures. Her research appears in the Journal of Accounting and Economics, Journal of Accounting Research, The Accounting Review, Management Science and various business media articles.
Prior to joining Booth, Samuels spent three years as an Assistant Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Born in Switzerland, she holds a BS in management from the University of Lausanne. She came to the US to earn her MAcc from USC, and gained experience as a senior auditor for Ernst & Young in Los Angeles. She received her PhD in accounting from The Wharton School.