University of New Orleans University of Alabama University of Southern Mississippi Augusta University
Michael Timothy Dugan (born 1957) is an accounting academic, currently serving as Professor of Accounting at Augusta University. He is noted for research contributions in the area of predictive ability and market-based archival research.[1] Peers external to his home institution have recognized Dugan for teaching excellence.[2]
Dugan became a tenure-trackassistant professor at the University of New Orleans in 1982 following completion of his doctorate. There he began his research on the development of models to predict corporate bankruptcy. He remained on the faculty there through 1984. He then pursued a one-semester visiting professorship at Clarkson University immediately prior to moving to the University of Alabama. Dugan served at the University of Alabama from 1985 until 2010, with a two semester leave of absence at Auburn University from Fall 1991 through Spring 1992, where he held a named visiting professorship. During his tenure at the University of Alabama, Dugan achieved full professorship in 1995.
In 2010, Dugan became Horne Professor of Accountancy at the University of Southern Mississippi.[1] There Dugan continued to pursue his research in the development of bankruptcy prediction models and win teaching and research awards.[4] In 2014, Dugan relocated to Augusta University (then Georgia Regents University) to become Peter S. Knox Distinguished Chair of Accounting, where he remains as of the Spring semester 2017.
Dugan has developed bankruptcy prediction model limitations[5][6] and accounting-based estimation techniques for corporate risk[7][8][1] His assessments reveal limitations in the accuracy of some widely accepted bankruptcy prediction models. The estimation techniques provide measures of degrees of risk inherent in corporate stock.
Major publications
Dugan has 71 publications in the scholarly literature as of December 2019 with approximately 1100 citations according to Google Scholar. Selected additional major publications include:
M. Dugan, D. Minyard, and K. Shriver, “A Re-examination of the Operating Leverage – Financial Leverage Tradeoff Hypothesis,” Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance (Fall 1994), pp. 327–334.
M. Dugan and K. Shriver, “An Empirical Comparison of Alternative Methods for the Estimation of the Degree of Operating Leverage,” The Financial Review (May 1992), pp. 309–321.
C. Zavgren, M. Dugan, and J. Reeve, “The Association Between Probabilities of Bankruptcy and Market Responses – A Test of Market Anticipation,” Journal of Business Finance and Accounting (Spring 1988), pp. 27–45.
M. Dugan and T. Forsyth, “The Relationship Between Bankruptcy Model Predictions and Stock Market Perceptions of Bankruptcy,” The Financial Review (August 1995), pp. 507–527.
Awards and recognition
Dugan received 10 teaching awards at the departmental, business school, university, and accounting professional levels, which includes his receipt of the Alabama State Society of CPAs 2009 Outstanding educator award.[2] His 2010 publication entitled "The Impact of Academic Accounting Research on Professional Practice: An Analysis by the AAA Research Impact Task Force" received the Accounting Horizons Best Paper Award in 2010.[9] In 2017, Augusta University awarded Dugan with their graduate school's outstanding research award for the recognition that his research brought to the university.[10] Dugan received the 2020 Accounting Department Outstanding Alumnus Award from the University of New Orleans.[11]
Personal life
Dugan is a divorced father of two children and resides in Evans, Georgia.
^"Annual Report - FY13/FY14". Southern Miss College of Business Annual Report 2013-4. 2014.
^Grice, S.; Dugan, M. (September 2001). "The Limitations of Bankruptcy Prediction Models: Some Cautions for the Researcher". Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting. 17 (2): 151. doi:10.1023/A:1017973604789. S2CID152519561.
^Tennyson, M.; Ingram, R.; Dugan, M. (Summer 1990). "Assessing the Information Content of Narrative Disclosures in Explaining Bankruptcy". Journal of Business Finance and Accounting: 391.
^Dugan, M.; Shriver, K. (February 1989). "The Effects of Estimation Period, Industry, and Proxy on the Calculation of the Degree of Operating Leverage". The Financial Review. 24: 109–122. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6288.1989.tb00333.x.
^Stelk, S.; Park, S.; Dugan, M. (May 2015). "Additional Analysis of Estimation Techniques for Operating leverage". Journal of Financial Economic Policy: 180–188. doi:10.1108/JFEP-10-2014-0056.