Abstract:
This paper investigates how forensic accounting-particularly judicial and fiscal expertise-has evolved conceptually and collaboratively over the last quarter-century. A customised search of the Web of Science Core Collection retrieved 1 255 records (articles, book chapters and early-access papers, 2009-2025) filtered to the Business, Economics, Management and Finance categories. After preprocessing, the database was analysed with SciMAT to map thematic structure and longitudinal shifts. The science-mapping workflow (standardisation, theme detection, longitudinal overlay and network analysis) revealed two distinct developmental phases. Between 2009-2016 the agenda pivoted toward behavioural determinants of fraud and Digital Forensics, signalling the first response to data-intensive crime. In the most recent window (2017-2025) the high-centrality/high-density Forensics hub absorbs emerging clusters such as Earnings Management, Cybersecurity, Blockchain and stakeholder Perceptions, evidencing a turn towards technology-enabled detection and ethical transparency. Overall, the results demonstrate a maturing, multidisciplinary domain in which digital tools, regulatory harmonisation and ethical accountability are co-evolving drivers. These insights offer scholars a clarified thematic roadmap and provide regulators and practitioners with evidence on where scientific effort-and gaps-are concentrated. UDC: 657.632:001.891(478); JEL: M41, M42
Description:
DASCALU, Iulian; Veronica GROSU and Svetlana MIHAILA. Assessing Conceptual Dynamics and Collaborative Networks in Forensic Accounting through a Bibliometric Approach. Online. In: Development Through Research and Innovation IDSC-2025: International Scientific Conference: The 6th Edition, May 16th, 2025: Collection of scientific articles. Chişinău: SEP ASEM, 2025, pp. 435-444. ISBN 978-9975-168-26-7 (PDF). Disponibil: https://doi.org/10.53486/dri2025.53