
Brings enthusiasm to every interaction.
Inspires confidence and independent thinking.
Makes learning interactive and fun.
Encourages students to think independently.
Always patient, kind, and understanding.
Dr. Mansoor Khan serves as a Lecturer in Accounting within the School of Accounting and Finance, College of Business and Law at Adelaide University. He holds a PhD from Swinburne University, a Master of Commerce from the University of Melbourne, and a Master of Business Administration from the University of Peshawar, Pakistan. With over twenty years of teaching, research, and consulting experience, Khan teaches Management Accounting and Financial Accounting courses at both postgraduate and undergraduate levels. He coordinates ACCT 1009 Accounting Principles for Business Decisions and delivers courses such as ACCT 2006 Management Accounting, ACCT 5016 Management Accounting M, ACCT 5023 Financial Accounting, and ACCT 1008 Accounting for Business. Prior to joining UniSA Business, he served as sessional staff at various universities in Melbourne from 2002 to 2006. Earlier in his career, he was a Research and Planning Officer for the Government of Pakistan from 1995 to 1997, where he developed and monitored projects in education, health, forestry, water conservation, and the environment. From 1992 to 1995, he worked as a lecturer at the University of Peshawar and as a trainer in the banking sector in Pakistan.
Khan's research focuses on Islamic accounting and finance, including the social and ethical responsibilities of Islamic banks, corporate and Shariah governance at Islamic banks, Islamic accounting and reporting standards, takaful and sukuk, corporate governance in Islamic banking and finance institutions, accounting theory and practice in Islamic banking and finance, reporting and disclosures at Islamic business and financial institutions, Islamic banking theory and practice, and legal and Shariah issues related to Islamic banking worldwide. His key publications include the co-authored book Developments in Islamic Banking: The Case of Pakistan (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008) with M. I. Bhatti; journal articles such as "Corporate social responsibility (CSR) standards and reporting: conventional (Australian) banks versus Islamic banks" (Accountancy Business and the Public Interest, 2019), "CRS standards and reporting at Islamic practice in Pakistan: a case study of Meezan Bank Limited Pakistan" (Journal of Developing Areas, 2016), "Developing a conceptual framework to appraise the corporate social responsibility performance of Islamic banking and finance institutions" (Accounting and the Public Interest, 2013), "Main features of interest-free banking movement in Pakistan (1980-2006)" (Managerial Finance, 2008), "Development in Islamic banking: a financial risk-allocation approach" (Journal of Risk Finance, 2008), "Islamic banking and finance: on its way to globalization" (Managerial Finance, 2008), and "Why interest-free banking and finance movement failed in Pakistan" (Humanomics, 2006); as well as a book chapter "Islamic banking and finance: on its way to globalization" (Routledge, 2010).
