Communication Business International Journal of
... social involvement. Companies no longer only have to heed the concerns of their core stakeholders; they also need to contemplate the many different roles that they perform in society and, consequently, which of these roles they want to give priority when communicating externally. One of the areas wh ...
... social involvement. Companies no longer only have to heed the concerns of their core stakeholders; they also need to contemplate the many different roles that they perform in society and, consequently, which of these roles they want to give priority when communicating externally. One of the areas wh ...
Ethical Leadership for Machiavellians in Business by
... ethical leaders and self-interested unethical leaders is generally accepted in the literature on ethical leadership. Chapter 3 argues that the distinction between authentic transformational leadership and pseudotransformational leadership is too simple to capture the distinction between ethical lead ...
... ethical leaders and self-interested unethical leaders is generally accepted in the literature on ethical leadership. Chapter 3 argues that the distinction between authentic transformational leadership and pseudotransformational leadership is too simple to capture the distinction between ethical lead ...
two-column Word document - Unitarian Universalist Association
... orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is grounded in the understanding that our actions speak louder than our words or beliefs. Faithful living for us includes discerning the course of action that best reflects our beliefs and values and t ...
... orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is grounded in the understanding that our actions speak louder than our words or beliefs. Faithful living for us includes discerning the course of action that best reflects our beliefs and values and t ...
WHAT WE CHOOSE: ETHICS FOR UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS A
... social ethics. No other standard would have any meaning if religion is held to be a necessary good for the well-being of the people. — B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956), Indian jurist, philosopher, writer, orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is ...
... social ethics. No other standard would have any meaning if religion is held to be a necessary good for the well-being of the people. — B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956), Indian jurist, philosopher, writer, orator, and civil rights activist who fought against the Hindu caste system Unitarian Universalism is ...
Utility, ethics and behavior
... behavior. These three formulate a theory for explaining how people react and for determining their degree of satisfaction given one of several possible courses of action. In cardinal utility, Alfred Marshall (1920) indicated that utility has a quantifiable psychic dimension with respect to the degre ...
... behavior. These three formulate a theory for explaining how people react and for determining their degree of satisfaction given one of several possible courses of action. In cardinal utility, Alfred Marshall (1920) indicated that utility has a quantifiable psychic dimension with respect to the degre ...
WHY WOULD CORPORATIONS BEHAVE IN SOCIALLY
... In this paper I seek to answer this question. I do so by drawing on insights from two bodies of literature not generally associated with the academic discussion of corporate social responsibility: the literature on institutional analysis in sociology and the literature on comparative political econo ...
... In this paper I seek to answer this question. I do so by drawing on insights from two bodies of literature not generally associated with the academic discussion of corporate social responsibility: the literature on institutional analysis in sociology and the literature on comparative political econo ...
Virtue Ethics - Which Character Traits are Good?
... Is it helpful to think in terms of virtue/vice? Is character or action more important in I I ...
... Is it helpful to think in terms of virtue/vice? Is character or action more important in I I ...
Strategy and skills for moral decision-making in business
... about the moral legitimacy o f economic systems. The academic discipline o f business management seems to be more focused on the meso-economic issues about the interaction between business and society. Philosophers, according to this typology, tend to engage themselves more with issues on the micro- ...
... about the moral legitimacy o f economic systems. The academic discipline o f business management seems to be more focused on the meso-economic issues about the interaction between business and society. Philosophers, according to this typology, tend to engage themselves more with issues on the micro- ...
2013_10 CREATe Govt Procurement Whitepaper 1 9.24.13
... GDP on procurement (and even more in some developing countries),1 amounting to a global annual tab of roughly $4 trillion.2 Aside from employee salaries and social services, procurement represents the largest share of expenditures across all levels of government.3 The U.S. Government, the world’s si ...
... GDP on procurement (and even more in some developing countries),1 amounting to a global annual tab of roughly $4 trillion.2 Aside from employee salaries and social services, procurement represents the largest share of expenditures across all levels of government.3 The U.S. Government, the world’s si ...
Why Enforcing Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is Morally Questionable Introduction Abstract
... necessary in order to ensure compliance of business organisations to acceptable standards of moral conduct as mandated by a given society. Aristotle notes, and rightly so, that one has to think of oneself as a member of the larger community and endeavour to excel to bring out what is best for himsel ...
... necessary in order to ensure compliance of business organisations to acceptable standards of moral conduct as mandated by a given society. Aristotle notes, and rightly so, that one has to think of oneself as a member of the larger community and endeavour to excel to bring out what is best for himsel ...
Colonialism and Postcolonialism - General Guide To Personal and
... historically mistreated peoples have themselves been harmed by colonial injustice, as a result of a deeply controversial argument that such persons may in fact have gained a net benefit from the treatment of their ancestors (Ferguson 2002). This claim must be assessed carefully. It does not in itsel ...
... historically mistreated peoples have themselves been harmed by colonial injustice, as a result of a deeply controversial argument that such persons may in fact have gained a net benefit from the treatment of their ancestors (Ferguson 2002). This claim must be assessed carefully. It does not in itsel ...
Beyond Evaluation Standards?
... the academic community, the professional evaluators or do they deal with wider questions of general societal justice. In this article it is argued that questions regarding evaluation ethics simultaneously concern wider societal issues, and academic questions whilst also raising important practical i ...
... the academic community, the professional evaluators or do they deal with wider questions of general societal justice. In this article it is argued that questions regarding evaluation ethics simultaneously concern wider societal issues, and academic questions whilst also raising important practical i ...
KAUSALITÄT UND MOTIVATION BEI EDITH STEIN
... need of the wanting. The Husserl’s formula of the categorical imperative reflects it so: “act according to the best knowledge and conscience”. And as both the best knowing and the best conscience are something which is acquired with moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guide ...
... need of the wanting. The Husserl’s formula of the categorical imperative reflects it so: “act according to the best knowledge and conscience”. And as both the best knowing and the best conscience are something which is acquired with moral experience, the unconditioned means here an inalienable guide ...
ETHICAL DECISION MAKING - KRISTIN SMITH
... the study of management, which is embedded with human intentionality and managerial choice (Ghoshal, 2005). Management involves decisions that impact others, and thus it is a moral activity. Ignoring the normative dimension of management by hiding behind the guise of “true scholarly work” is, consc ...
... the study of management, which is embedded with human intentionality and managerial choice (Ghoshal, 2005). Management involves decisions that impact others, and thus it is a moral activity. Ignoring the normative dimension of management by hiding behind the guise of “true scholarly work” is, consc ...
Personal Ethics and Fraudster Motivation: The Missing Link in Fraud
... that 86% of the respondent perceived fraudulent act as a deviant behaviour usually exhibited by people with low personal ethics. The question on the respondents’ perception of fraudster revealed that 76% of the respondents perceived fraudster as an egoistic person who is intelligent and knowledgeabl ...
... that 86% of the respondent perceived fraudulent act as a deviant behaviour usually exhibited by people with low personal ethics. The question on the respondents’ perception of fraudster revealed that 76% of the respondents perceived fraudster as an egoistic person who is intelligent and knowledgeabl ...
Intro to Animal Welfare
... “Subjects of a life” • Rights flow from this inherent value, e.g. the right to have their worth respected • Should not be used for food, clothes, experiments or entertainment ...
... “Subjects of a life” • Rights flow from this inherent value, e.g. the right to have their worth respected • Should not be used for food, clothes, experiments or entertainment ...
On acts, omissions and responsibility
... them. Either way, how releasing a thug equates with switching off a ventilator is beyond imagination. We are told that the thug murders. For the analogy to work, we need to accept that disease is—not figuratively but actually—a murderer. This is hard to believe; and it is harder still to accept that ...
... them. Either way, how releasing a thug equates with switching off a ventilator is beyond imagination. We are told that the thug murders. For the analogy to work, we need to accept that disease is—not figuratively but actually—a murderer. This is hard to believe; and it is harder still to accept that ...
Behavioral Ethics in Organizations: A Review
... are at the conventional level, meaning that their thinking about what is right is largely influenced by significant others as well as rules and laws. Fewer than 20% of American adults reach the principled level, Stages 5 or 6 (Rest et al., 1999), where actions should be more consistent with moral th ...
... are at the conventional level, meaning that their thinking about what is right is largely influenced by significant others as well as rules and laws. Fewer than 20% of American adults reach the principled level, Stages 5 or 6 (Rest et al., 1999), where actions should be more consistent with moral th ...
1.3_Organizational_Objectives_1
... You are an analyst with a private equity firm. For the first time, your firm is thinking of investing in a business with ethical objectives. Watch the video to know the company better. Advise your manager whether to invest in this company. ...
... You are an analyst with a private equity firm. For the first time, your firm is thinking of investing in a business with ethical objectives. Watch the video to know the company better. Advise your manager whether to invest in this company. ...
Rhetoric
... island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender. —Winston Churchill, speech to the House of ...
... island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender. —Winston Churchill, speech to the House of ...
What is Ethical Relativism?
... can be explained objectively by a comprehensive moral theory, which will explain why certain goods may take presence over other goods, when they conflict. Hence, moral conflicts and situational differences do not lead to the conclusion that all norms are subjective and relative. 4. Toleration of Dif ...
... can be explained objectively by a comprehensive moral theory, which will explain why certain goods may take presence over other goods, when they conflict. Hence, moral conflicts and situational differences do not lead to the conclusion that all norms are subjective and relative. 4. Toleration of Dif ...
the influence of a professional organization on physician behavior
... highly unlikely that the U.S. Congress would reach the same position that the AMA's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs did when it concluded that parental involvement should not be mandatory when minors have abortions.23 In some cases, independent government commissions can be used to insulate ...
... highly unlikely that the U.S. Congress would reach the same position that the AMA's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs did when it concluded that parental involvement should not be mandatory when minors have abortions.23 In some cases, independent government commissions can be used to insulate ...
Ethical Relativism 2 Kinds of Relativism: ethical relativism and social
... There are limits to this procedure: there will still be some arbitrariness, because more than one way can be equally good at achieving our goals, or anyway good enough. Morality will have to fulfill its functions under different circumstances (times, places, material resources, technological advance ...
... There are limits to this procedure: there will still be some arbitrariness, because more than one way can be equally good at achieving our goals, or anyway good enough. Morality will have to fulfill its functions under different circumstances (times, places, material resources, technological advance ...
The Possibility of Character Development
... possess global traits does not entail that they do not possess character traits at all or that these traits cannot be strengthened or broadened. As I discussed above, Doris is willing to grant that people can possess local traits, although he concludes that these traits are so narrowly focused that ...
... possess global traits does not entail that they do not possess character traits at all or that these traits cannot be strengthened or broadened. As I discussed above, Doris is willing to grant that people can possess local traits, although he concludes that these traits are so narrowly focused that ...
Euthanasia
... a manner which is in accordance with what a “good model citizen” would do then euthanasia can never be considered as the morally right thing to do. Aristotle also applied this concept to a manner of function. If the function of a pen is to write, then a good pen would be one that writes well. So if ...
... a manner which is in accordance with what a “good model citizen” would do then euthanasia can never be considered as the morally right thing to do. Aristotle also applied this concept to a manner of function. If the function of a pen is to write, then a good pen would be one that writes well. So if ...