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Business Ethics: Course introduc1on • Johanna Romare • Email: [email protected] • h:p://www.liu.se/ikk/cte/kurser/business-‐ethics/ 1.538292/schedule-‐business-‐ethics-‐ spring-‐2014.pdf Branches of business ethics Finance ethics Employment ethics /Employee rights Management ethics Accoun1ng ethics Corporate responsibility Interna1onal business ethics (ethics for mul1na1onals) • Ethics of adver1sing • Etc. • • • • • • What is business ethics? ”…the study of prac1ces and policies in business, to determine which are ethically defensible and which are not.“ Jennifer Jackson, An introduc+on to business ethics What is business ethics? ”The bransch of ethics that analyses problems and dilemmas created by business prac1ces: for example the social responsibility of the firm, the proper limits of acceptable compe11on, the weighing of conflic1ng obliga1ons to stockholders and clients, and the extent and limits of company loyalty.” Oxford Dic+onary of Philosophy What is business ethics? ”Business ethics is the study of what cons1tutes right and wrong, or good and bad, human conduct in a business context." "Think more deeply about the nature and purpose of business in our society and about the ethical choices individuals must inevitably make in their business and professional lives.” William H. Shaw, Business Ethics, p. xi, 8. What does business ethics do? • Comprises principles and standards that guide behavior in business • Deals with acceptable or unacceptable behavior within or outside the business organisa1on. • The discipline of applying ethical principles to deal with complex moral problems. What is business ethics? • The discipline of applying ethical principles to deal with complex moral problems within business/business organisa1ons. Ethical principle = ”a general moral statement that sets forth condi1ons under which an ac1on is right or wrong or something is good or bad” (Mark Timmons, Moral Theory) Different ways of rela1ng to business ethics 1. Academic discipline 2. Movements in business 3. Ethical analysis of business The history of business ethics as an academic discipline Recent history – 1957 Business ethics textbook by Herbert Johnston 1957-‐1963 • 1957 Price fixing conspiracy among members of the electrical industry in USA. • An1trust viola1ons • Empirical study by Raymond C. Baumhart showed that most businesses had unethical prac11oners. The history of business ethics as an academic discipline Vietnam war Civil rights movement/1964 Civil Rights Act US -‐ domina1ng economic force Mul1na1onal corpora1ons • • • • • Social responsibility programs and ethical codes Business ethics as an academic discipline in Europe 1980’s (Henk van Luijk, See A Companion to Business Ethics) -‐ Rights and du1es of shareholders and stakeholders -‐ Environmental consequences of business -‐ Marke1ng and adver1sing prac1ces -‐ The role of the state -‐ Interna1onal business ethics (mul1na1onals) -‐ Social responsibility -‐ Codes of conduct Method? Philosophical study? Social science? Economics? Business ethics CSR A history of the ethical analysis of business Aristotle (348-‐322 b.c) ”Trade for profit is unnatural and therefore unethical”. Marx (1818-‐1883) ”The rela1onship between capitalists and workers is exploita1ve and therefore unethical”. A history of the ethical analysis of business John Locke (1632-‐1704): The importance of natural rights (property rights) Adam Smith (1732-‐1790): Laissez-‐faire economics”. The invisible hand. Moral sen1ments. What is ethics? Moral philosophy [ethics] is the a:empt to achieve a systema1c understanding of the nature of morality and what it requires of us -‐ in Socrates words, of ”how we ought to live”, and why. James Rachels, (2007), The elements of moral philosophy, p. 1. Doing ethics • • • • Descrip1ve ethics Norma1ve ethics Meta ethics Applied ethics Descrip1ve ethics (is) Descrip1ve ethics is he study of peoples’ beliefs about morality; about people’s values as well as their statements about moral issues. Descrip1ve study! Norma1ve ethics (ought) The study of ethics with regard to what is right and wrong, how we ought to act and why. Norma1ve ethics What is right/good? Normative ethics Teleological ethics Deontological ethics Virtue ethics Consequenses of action The qualities of action The virtues of agents Applied ethics Prac1cal ethical problems related to areas of the human life: • • • • • • • Business ethics Bioethics Animal ethics Professional ethics Medical ethics Social ethics Etc. Applied ethics What should I do? What ought I to do? E.g. ”Should I give money to charity?”; ”Am I morally obliged to save a drowning child?; Do mul1na1onal pharmaceu1cals have a responsibility to provide vaccines and medicines at an affordable price in LDCs? Prac1cal ques1on à Answer: Ac1on Applied ethics (1) Moral principle (2) Account of the relevant facts __________________________ (3) Prac1cal conclusion (ac1on) Applied ethics The role of ethical theory: Provides explana1ons / reasons of why I ought to do X. The reason should be applicable in all similar cases Levels of analysis: Micro – ethical norms and principles applies to the individual. Meso – ethical norms and principles applies to the organiza1on, its structure and culture Macro – ethcial norms and principles applies to insi1tu1ons, the market, government, cultural tradi1ons, etc.