Description
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- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- About the Editors
- Preface
- Introduction to this Volume on Business Ethics
- References
- Acknowledgments
- PART 1 FOUNDATIONS
- Chapter 1 Behavioral Business Ethics: The Journey from Foundations to Future
- Abstract
- Defining Behavioral Business Ethics
- Setting the Stage – Pre-1980s Work in Business Ethics
- Pre-1960s
- The 1960s
- The 1970s
- The Birth of Behavioral Business Ethics/The Beginning of a “Fad” – 1980s
- Contributions by Marketing Scholars
- Contributions from Moral Psychology
- Contributions by Management Scholars
- The “Fad” Takes Off – 1990s to Early 2000s
- A Rise in Business Ethics Research – The 1990s
- Beyond Rationalist Models – The 2000s
- Where Do We Go from Here? Future Directions and Research Opportunities
- Engaging with Cross-cultural Differences and Similarities
- Engaging with Qualitative Methods and Looking across Levels
- Engaging with the Past
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 2 Ethical Implications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution for Business and Society
- Abstract
- The Gig Economy
- Technological Unemployment
- Inequality
- Market-based Redistribution
- Universal Basic Income
- Meaning of Life
- Duty to Hire?
- Third-way Solutions
- Three Issues in AI Ethics
- Machine Ethics
- Explainable AI and a Right to Explanation
- AI as Scapegoat and the Principle of Fair Reciprocity
- The Scapegoat Argument
- Automation vs Augmentation
- Toward the Accountability of Augmentation
- Conclusion: Reinventing Business
- Notes
- References
- PART 2 INFLUENCES ON INDIVIDUAL DECISION-MAKING
- Chapter 3 Virtue Ethics in Business: Scale and Scope
- Abstract
- What Is Virtue Ethics?
- Main Sources of Virtue Ethics in Business
- Alasdair MacIntyre in VE in Business
- Thomistic VE in Business and Its Encyclical Developments
- Positive Organizational Scholarship
- Main Themes in Virtue Ethics in Business
- Theory of Work
- Theory of the Firm
- Further Research Opportunities
- References
- Chapter 4 Trickle-down Effects of Unethical Leadership: The Role of Meaning-making
- Abstract
- Introduction and Purpose
- Theoretical Background
- Definitions: Unethical Leadership, Trickle-down Effects, and Meaning-making
- Trickle-down Phenomenon
- Sense-making vs Meaning-making
- Meaning-making
- Survival, Group Membership, and Strain
- Social Information Processing and Attribution Theories
- Social Information Processing Theory
- Attribution Theory
- Methodology
- Positivist Rendering of Meaning-making
- Participants
- Interview Protocol
- Data Validation and Triangulation
- Methodological Rigor
- Analysis
- Coding Methods
- Social Information Processing
- Attribution Theory
- Survival, Group Membership, and Strain
- Discussion
- Strengths and Limitations
- Conclusion
- References
- Appendix:
- Chapter 5 Expressive Business Ethics
- Abstract
- Introduction
- The Background of Expressive Ethics
- Does Expressive Business Ethics Make Sense?
- Can (Non-)Expressions Be Wrong?
- The Nature of an Expressive Wrong
- Firing
- Immoral Investing
- Compensation
- The Future of Expressive Critiques: Metaethics Wanted
- Acknowledgment
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 6 Cognitive Moral Development in Ethical Decision-making
- Abstract
- Introduction
- The Evolution of Moral Development
- Social Intuitionist Moral Reasoning
- Neuroscientific Dual-process Moral Judgment
- Behavioral Ethics
- New Directions in Moral Judgment
- The Art of Ethical Decision-making
- Knowledge
- Being Present in the Moment
- Emotion
- Practice
- Notes
- References
- PART 3 ORGANIZATIONAL LEVEL ETHICS
- Chapter 7 Morality in Groups
- Abstract
- Introduction
- A Review of Research on Morality in Groups
- Moral Reasoning
- Moral Foundations Theory
- Moral Emotions
- Social Identity
- Social Norms
- Where Do We Go from Here?
- Morality at the Mesolevel
- Moral Emotions in the Social Environment
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 8 How Can Observers Effectively and Safely Engage with Unethical Organizational Behaviors?
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Obstacles to Observer Engagement with Unethical Organizational Behavior
- Micro-level Individual Obstacles
- Meso-level Organizational Obstacles to Engagement
- Organizational Culture
- Performance Evaluation and Compensation Systems
- Communication Systems
- Macro-level Environmental Obstacles
- Clientelist, Crony Capitalism
- Competitive Pressures
- Observer Engagement Methods
- Evocation and Framing of Dialogic Engagement as Consistent with the Vision and Values of the Organization
- Win–win Incentive and Ethics Networking Methods
- Internal and External Whistle-blowing Methods
- If the Observer Is in a Position of Organizational Power, Top-down Forcing Methods
- Linking of Observer Engagement with Countervailing External Social Movements
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 9 The Dark Side: Giving Context and Meaning to a Growing Genre of Ethics-related Research
- Abstract
- Why Does Dark Side Research Exist?
- Why Do Ethics Concepts Have Dark Sides?
- Why Do Scholars Pursue Dark Side Research?
- Different Avenues to the Dark Side
- TMGT
- Unintended Consequences
- Moderators
- Ramifications
- Moving Forward
- Conclusion
- References
- PART 4 NEW FRONTIERS
- Chapter 10 Neuroscience Research and Ethical Leadership: Insights from a Neurological Micro-foundation
- Abstract
- Leadership Ethics and Responsibility
- Social Cognitive Neuroscience and Ethical Leadership
- Understanding Oneself: Self-reflection and Self-regulation
- Understanding Others: Theory of Mind and Empathy
- Leading Others: Trust, Fairness, and Cooperation
- The Contribution of Social Cognitive Neuroscience to Ethical Leadership: Toward an Agenda for Future Research
- Neuroscience Research and Leadership
- Limitations of the Dialogue between Neuroscience and Leadership
- Future Research Agenda
- Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 11 A Humanistic Ontology for Responsible Management
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Managerial Responsibility and the Limits of Prior Responses
- Corporate Governance as Structural Response
- CSR as Strategic Response
- Limitations of the Economistic Ontological Blueprint
- A Humanistic Ontology For Managerial Responsibility
- Sociality
- Emotionality
- Morality
- Balance
- Toward a Consilience of Knowledge Challenging Economism
- A Humanistic Model For Responsible Management
- Baseline Model
- The Drive to Acquire (dA)
- The Drive to Defend (dD)
- A Humanistic Extension
- The Drive to Bond (dB)
- The Drive to Comprehend (dC)
- Dignity as a Universal Threshold
- Well-being as the Ultimate Objective
- Responsible Management and the Humanistic Paradigm
- Future Streams of Research
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 12 Scalpels Not Machetes: A Call for the Use of Precision Tools in Ethics Research
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Theoretical Rationale
- Theoretical Overview and Hypotheses
- Organizational Support
- General versus Specific Types of Organizational Support
- Perceived Organizational Support for Ethics (POS-E)
- Methods
- Sample and Procedures
- Measures: Outcome Variables
- Pressure to Violate Organizational Ethical Standards
- Pressure to Violate Personal Ethical Standards
- Ethically Risky Work Setting
- Preparedness to Handle Ethical Violations
- Job Satisfaction
- Measures: Predictor Variables
- Perceived Organizational Support (POS)
- Perceived Organizational Support for Ethics (POS-E)
- Control Variables
- Results
- Preliminary Analyses
- Structural Analyses: Hypothesis Testing
- Discussion
- Practical Implications
- Future Research
- Limitations
- Conclusion
- Note
- References
- About the Authors
- Index
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