Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover Page
- Half Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- List of cases and ethical dilemmas
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Why study business ethics?
- What the book is about
- Who the book is for
- What the book will enable readers to do
- The approach to learning
- Background to the book
- Notes
- Part One Business ethics — principles
- 1 Business ethics affect everyone
- Learning outcomes
- Ethical issues arise throughout the business world
- Defining morality and ethics
- Ethics are imbedded in and reflect cultures
- The relationship between law and ethics
- Philosophical theories provide a context
- Business ethics involve choices
- A stakeholder view of business ethics
- Corporate governance and risk management involve ethics
- Why do people behave the way they do?6
- The importance of trust in business
- Cases
- Case 1.1 The employment of children in developing countries
- Case 1.2 Pharmaceutical companies and generic drugs for poor countries
- Case 1.3 The corporate culture at Goldman Sachs
- Case 1.4 Enron
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 2 The evolution of business ethics
- Learning outcomes
- Business has always needed sound ethics
- Business ethics and ancient traders
- Business ethics in the 19th century
- Scandals and collapses in the 20th century
- The 21st century turned the spotlight onto business ethics
- Ethical failures and the response of business
- Cases
- Case 2.1 Fraud at Gray’s Building Society
- Case 2.2 Insider dealing at Drexel Burnham Lambert
- Case 2.3 Ivan Boesky and the case of Guinness
- Case 2.4 Robert Maxwell and his media empire
- Noted
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 3 On corporate social responsibility
- Learning outcomes
- Do companies have social responsibilities?
- Balancing responsibilities between shareholders and stakeholders
- Pros and cons of corporate social responsibility
- The stakeholder perspective
- The ethical perspective
- The societal perspective
- The political perspective
- The enlightened shareholder value (ESV) perspective
- The philanthropic perspective
- Approaches to corporate social responsibility
- The practice of corporate social responsibility
- On sustainable development, the United Nations Global Compact and GRI
- Corporate vision, mission and values
- Cases
- Case 3.1 Mikhail Khodorkovsky and the Yukos case
- Case 3.2 The disaster at BP Deepwater Horizon
- Case 3.3 Royal Bank of Scotland’s IT systems breakdown
- Case 3.4 Tokyo Electric Power and the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 4 Business ethics and corporate governance
- Learning outcomes
- What is corporate governance?
- Board structures
- Board functions
- Corporate vision, mission, values, and strategy formulation
- Policy making
- Executive monitoring and supervision
- Accountability, ensuring compliance and transparency
- The regulation of corporate governance
- Some theoretical insights — agency, stewardship and stakeholder ideas
- Stewardship theory
- Agency theory
- Stakeholder ideas
- The roles of the board chairman and chief executive officer
- The role of the auditors, regulators and company secretary
- Changing expectations in the governance of organizations
- Cases
- ase 4.1 Google harvests private data from Street View scan
- Case 4.2 The Tyco case
- Case 4.3 The case of Lord Black
- Case 4.4 Toyota’s corporate governance failings
- Toyota and its problems
- Appendix To Chapter 4
- Additional information on corporate regulation
- New York Stock Exchange listing rules
- King 1 Report (1994)
- King 2 Report (2002)
- UK Corporate Governance Code (2010)
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 5 Business ethics and enterprise risk
- Learning outcomes
- A new emphasis on corporate risk
- Levels of risk — strategic, managerial and operational
- The concept of ethical risk
- The significance of strategic ethical risk
- Moral hazards in business ethics
- The concept of enterprise risk management
- Managing risk throughout the organization
- Risk recognition
- Risk assessment
- Risk evaluation
- Determining risk strategy and policies
- Risk monitoring and reporting
- Developments in ERM
- The COSO integrated framework for ERM
- The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)9
- The UK Corporate Governance code (2010)
- The International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN)11
- Case
- Case 5.1 The Northern Rock Bank
- Case 5.2 Network Rail
- Case 5.3 The collapse of HBOS bank
- Case 5.4 The collapse of the Andersen partnership
- Notes
- References and further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- Part Two Business ethics — practice
- 6 Creating a sound ethics culture
- Learning outcomes
- Different approaches to ethics management
- The compliance approach to business ethics
- The risk-reduction approach
- The satisfying-stakeholders approach
- Creating a values-orientated culture
- What makes a business decision ethical?
- Who could be affected by this decision?
- Aspects of business ethics can arise when least expected
- What effects might this decision have on others?
- What might others think about the ethics of this decision?
- What makes people act the way they do?
- Age
- Gender
- Education
- Employment experience
- Personal values and integrity
- Context-related factors
- National cultural characteristics
- Corporate cultural characteristics
- Reward systems
- Authority structure and bureaucracy
- Work roles
- Establishing an ethics culture
- Essentials for a successful ethics policy
- The vital importance of business leadership
- Ethics and stakeholder relations
- Antagonistic or collaborative relations with stakeholders
- Ethical codes for different organizations
- Corporate codes of ethics
- Codes of ethics for professional bodies
- Industry-wide codes of ethics
- Codes of ethics for groups
- Drafting an ethics code
- The management of business ethics
- On whistle-blowing and whistle-blowers
- Cases
- Case 6.1 Conflicts of interest at Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs
- Case 6.2 Board failings at Olympus Japan
- Case 6.3 Should Terry be a whistle-blower?
- Case 6.4 US company considers an acquisition in Brazil
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 7 Uniting business ethics, governance and risk
- Learning outcomes
- The 21st century’s emphasis on business ethics, governance and risk
- Uniting business ethics, corporate governance and risk management
- Creating a corporate vision and mission
- Building core corporate values
- Codes of business ethics
- Rolls-Royce Global Code of Business Ethics
- TOTAL South Africa code of ethics
- Wells Fargo code of ethics and business conduct
- Preventing bribery and corruption
- The US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (1977)14
- The OECD Anti-Bribery Convention (1997)
- Hong Kong Prevention of Bribery Ordinance (1997)17
- The UN Convention against Corruption (2004)18
- China’s bribery blacklist (2009)
- UK Bribery Act (2010)19
- Other anti-bribery and corruption initiatives
- Cases
- Case 7.1 Shell Oil, the Nigerian authorities and the Ogoni people
- Case 7.2 Lehman Brothers Inc
- Case 7.3 Questionable behavior at News International
- Case 7.4 Alleged vote-rigging at Pacific Century Cyber Work, Hong Kong
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 8 Business ethics in finance
- Learning outcomes
- What is involved in business finance
- Ethics in financial strategy
- Leverage/gearing strategies
- Anti-predator strategies
- Share price protection strategies
- Tax avoidance strategies
- Ethical relationships with investors in public companies
- Present reality — the separation of ownership from control
- Insider dealing and trading
- Ethical investment and ethical funds
- The UN Principles for Responsible Investment
- Money laundering, combating global crime and terrorism
- Ethical relationships with shareholders in non-listed companies
- Ethical issues in groups of companies
- Ethical issues in government-controlled companies
- Ethics in family firms
- The management of shareholder relations
- Ethical relationships with non-equity sources of finance
- Ethical challenges for independent outside auditors
- Close relationships with clients affecting independence
- Cross-selling consulting services
- The market domination of the ‘big four’
- Auditing failing companies
- Is accountancy a profession or a business?
- Ethical relationships with regulators
- Ethics and credit-rating agencies
- Ethics in financial management
- Ethics in financial operations
- Cases
- Case 8.1 Bankers criticized in Farepak collapse
- Case 8.2 Spoofing at Swift Trade
- Case 8.3 JPMorgan Chase and the Voldemort black hole
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 9 Ethics in business operations
- Learning outcomes
- Ethical issues in procurement
- Suppliers as stakeholders
- Ethical issues with suppliers
- Ethical sourcing, fair trade and sustainable consumption
- Ethical aspects of business operations and information technology
- Ethics in product technology
- Ethics in research and development
- Ethics in manufacturing technology
- Ethics in information technology
- Ethical issues in marketing and market research
- Customers and consumers as stakeholders
- Consumer activism
- From caveat emptor to consumer protection
- Ethical issues in market communications
- Misleading and false descriptions
- Ethical issues in advertising
- Ethical issues in pricing
- Customer boycotts
- Ethical issues in market research
- Individuals‘ right to privacy
- Coping with international sanctions
- Competitors as stakeholders
- Industrial espionage
- Negative advertising
- Anti-competitive behavior
- Ethical challenges of the global market
- On bribery and corruption around the world
- Cases
- Case 9.1 The loss of a Nimrod aircraft-the ethical culture at BAE systems
- Case 9.2 Should Jean-Paul accept his friend’s proposal?
- Case 9.3 HP and the Autonomy acquisition
- Case 9.4 Food safety in Taiwan
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 10 Business ethics and employees
- Learning outcomes
- Employees as stakeholders
- Contract and commitment in the employee relationship
- Risks in the employer-employee relationship
- Employers’ relations with employees
- Employees’ relations with employers
- Employees’ duty to employer — legal and moral
- Senior management and directors’ remuneration
- Employment and human rights
- The right to work
- National cultures and moral values
- Cases
- Case 10.1 Foxconn and Apple13
- Case 10.2 Drug testing of employees
- Case 10.3 Employee rights to privacy
- Case 10.4 Construction company faces competition and corruption
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 11 Business ethics, society and the state
- Learning outcomes
- What we mean by society
- Societal organizations as stakeholders in business
- Co-operative partnerships between companies and societal stakeholders
- Ethical issues in relations between business and society
- Identifying societal stakeholders and their interests
- Societal stakeholders’ tactics — indirect and direct action
- The state as a business stakeholder
- Government representing society’s interests
- Government as regulator of business
- Government as facilitator of business
- Government as player on the business stage
- Ethical issues in government — business relations
- Legitimacy, accountability, and influence
- Lobbying and pressure groups to influence government action
- Business staff advising government on policy or regulation
- Financing political parties and candidates to obtain their support
- Privatization and deregulation
- Globalization and business-government relations
- The power of multinational corporations
- The influence of meta-state organizations
- Cases
- Cases 11.1 When Kraft acquires Cadbury promises melt
- Case 11.2 Waste Management — the crown jewel for Andersen
- Case 11.3 Southern Cross Healthcare Group
- Case 11.4 Chiquita goes bananas
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- 12 The future of business ethics
- The essence of business ethics
- Business ethics provide the bedrock on which sound business practices are built
- Business ethics are concerned with relationships with the stakeholders of a business
- Business ethics apply to every organizational level
- Business ethics lie at the heart of corporate governance
- Business ethics usually call for the balancing of risk
- Every organization develops an ethics culture
- Corporate social responsibility has (CSR) become an essential element of business ethics
- Environmental protection and sustainability have become goals in business ethics
- Globalization is amplifying challenges in business ethics
- Why business ethics have become so important
- The power of business oligarchies
- Frontier issues in business ethics
- Gender diversity
- Excessive executive remuneration
- Aggressive tax avoidance
- The role and responsibilities of auditors8
- Penalties for ethical failure
- Stakeholders’ short-term or long-term interests
- Rethinking the role of business in society
- Limited liability — a privilege not a right
- Some final thoughts
- Personal values in business ethics
- The need for a new paradigm for the corporation
- Cases
- Case 12.1 Aggressive tax avoidance
- Case 12.2 Barclays Bank and the LIBOR rate-rigging scandal
- Case 12.3 GOME retail challenges in China
- Case 12.4 Quotas for women directors
- Notes
- Further reading
- Useful websites
- Projects and exercises
- Self-test questions
- Answers to self-examination questions
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Index
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