Home

rerevisjoner

Rerevisjoner are follow-up audits conducted after an initial audit to reassess areas previously examined. The term is used in Norwegian and related Nordic contexts and translates roughly to “revisions” or “re-audits.” The main purpose is to verify that management has implemented recommended corrective actions and to re-evaluate risks, controls, and performance outcomes.

Rerevisjoner are typically initiated by audit committees, regulators, or senior management, sometimes as mandated by policy

Process: the scope and objectives are defined in relation to prior findings; auditors collect and re-test relevant

Outcomes are typically categorized as fully implemented, partially implemented, or not implemented, with management responses and

See also: revision, internal audit, external audit, follow-up audit, compliance review.

or
law.
They
are
common
in
the
public
sector
to
monitor
implementation
of
audit
recommendations
within
a
specified
timeframe,
and
in
corporate
governance
to
ensure
accountability
and
continuous
improvement
of
internal
controls.
evidence,
interviews
are
conducted,
and
controls
are
re-evaluated.
The
goal
is
to
determine
the
extent
of
implementation,
residual
risks,
and
whether
new
issues
have
emerged
since
the
previous
revision.
A
report
is
issued
summarizing
findings,
the
status
of
recommendations,
any
new
risks,
and
suggested
corrective
actions
with
deadlines.
follow-up
timelines.
Rerevisions
may
inform
risk
management,
compliance,
and
budgeting,
and
can
lead
to
further
revisions
if
needed.