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Personal and Organizational Ethics Search the Web Nortel has posted its ethics policies on the Internet. To read it, navigate your web browser to: http://www.nortelnetworks.com © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 1 Chapter Seven Objectives • To understand the different levels at which business ethics may be addressed • To appreciate principles of personal ethical decision-making • To identify factors affecting the business moral climate • To understand the strategies to improve the ethical climate © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 2 Chapter Seven Outline • Levels at which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed • Personal and Managerial Ethics • Managing Organizational Ethics • From Moral Decisions to Moral Organizations • Summary © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 3 Introduction to Chapter Seven • This chapter focuses on the day-today ethical issues that managers face © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 4 Levels at Which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed • Personal level—situations faced in personal life (income tax and speeding). • Organizational level—workplace situations faced as managers and employees (illegal dumping and creative accounting). © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 5 Levels at Which Ethical Issues May Be Addressed • Industrial level—ethical situations confronted as professionals • Societal and international levels— local-to-global situations confronted indirectly or directly by management © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 6 Personal and Managerial Ethics Resolving Ethical Conflicts Three Approaches • Conventional (covered in Chapter 6) • Principles • Ethical tests © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 7 Personal and Managerial Ethics Principles Approach The anchors decision making • Utilitarianism • Rights • Justice • • • • © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Caring Virtue Servant Leadership Golden Rule 8 Personal and Managerial Ethics Principle of Utilitarianism focuses on producing the greatest ratio of good to evil for everyone – Consequentialist theory © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 9 Personal and Managerial Ethics Principle of Rights focuses on examining, and possibly protecting, individual moral or legal rights © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 10 Personal and Managerial Ethics • A principle of justice that involves considering what alternatives promote fair treatment of people • Types of justice – Distributive – Compensatory – Procedural © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 11 Personal and Managerial Ethics Rawls’ Justice • Each person has an equal right to basic liberties as compared to others • Social and economic inequalities are arranged so that they are: reasonably expected to be to everyone’s advantage and attached to positions and offices open to all people © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 12 Personal and Managerial Ethics • Principle of caring focuses on a person as a relational (cooperative) and not as an individual – Feminist theory • Virtue ethics focuses on individuals becoming imbued with virtues – Aristotle and Plato © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 13 Personal and Managerial Ethics Servant leadership focuses on serving others first such as employees, customers, community, and so on © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 14 Personal and Managerial Ethics Characteristics of Servant Leaders • • • • • Listening Empathy Healing Persuasion Awareness • Foresight • Conceptualization • Commitment to the growth of people • Stewardship • Building a community © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 15 Personal and Managerial Ethics Golden rule focuses –do unto others as you would have them do unto you © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 16 Personal and Managerial Ethics Concerns to be Addressed in Ethical Conflicts • Obligations • Ideals • Effects © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 17 Personal and Managerial Ethics When Obligations Ideals and Effects Conflict • When two or more moral obligations conflict, use the stronger one • When two or more ideals conflict, or conflict with obligations, honour the more important one • When effects are mixed, choose the action that produces the greatest good and the least harm © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 18 Personal and Managerial Ethics Ethics Test Approach • • • • • Test of common sense Test of one’s self Test of making something public Test of ventilation Gag test © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 19 Managing Organizational Ethics Factors Affecting the Morality of Managers Society’s Moral Climate Business’s Moral Climate Industry’s Moral Climate Superiors Policies Individual (One’s personal situation) © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Peers 20 Managing Organizational Ethics Factors Influencing Unethical Behaviour • Behaviour of superiors • Ethical practices of one’s industry or profession • Behaviour of one’s peers in the organization • Formal organizational policy (or lack of one) • Personal financial need © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 21 Managing Organizational Ethics Questionable Behaviour of Superiors or Peers • Amoral decision making • Unethical acts, behaviours or practices • Acceptance or legality as the standard behaviour • Absence of ethical leadership © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 22 Managing Organizational Ethics Questionable Behaviour of Superiors or Peers • Use of a system that over estimates profits • Insensitivity towards how subordinates perceive pressure to meet goals • Inadequate formal ethical policies © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 23 Improving Ethical Climate Ethics Programs & Officers Realistic Objectives Effective Communication Top Management Leadership Ethics Audit Ethics Training Ethical Decisionmaking Processes Codes of Conduct Discipline of Violators © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Whistle-blowing Mechanisms (“Hotlines”) 24 Ethical Decision-Making Identify decision you are about to make Articulate all dimensions of proposed decision Conventional Approach Standards/Norms -Personal -Organizational -Societal -International Principles Approach Ethical Principles -Justice -Rights -Utilitarianism -Golden Rule Course of action passes ethics screen Engage in course of action Ethical Tests Approach Ethical Tests -Common sense -One’s best self -Public disclosure -Gag test . . . Course of action fails ethics screen Do not engage in course of action Identify new course of action © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 25 From Moral Decisions to Moral Organizations Moral Decisions Moral Managers Moral Organizations © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. 26 Selected Key Terms • • • • • • • • • Codes of conduct Codes of ethics Compensatory justice Distributive justice Ethical tests Ethical audits Golden rule Legal rights Moral rights • • • • • • • • • © 2005 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Principle of caring Principle of justice Principle of rights Principle of utilitarianism Procedural justice Rights Servant leadership Utilitarianism Virtue ethics 27