共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
This research project seeks to discover whether certain characteristics of a moral issue facilitate individuals’ abilities
to detect violators of a conditional rule. In business, conditional rules are often framed in terms of a social contract between
employer and employee. Of significant concern to business ethicists is the fact that these social contracts are frequently
breached. Some researchers in the field of evolutionary psychology argue that there is a biological basis to social contract
formation and dissolution in business. However, although it is inescapable that biological forces shaped a fixed neural structure
that guides and limits humans’ abilities, we argue that characteristics of the situation in which the person finds himself
or herself moderate the activation of these neural circuits in ordinary business social contract situations. Specifically,
the moral intensity associated with the social contract conditional rule is likely to influence peoples’ abilities to detect
violators of the rule. This study utilizes adapted versions of the Wason selection task and manipulates the issue-contingent
moral intensity characteristics of magnitude of consequences, proximity, and social consensus to assess if moral intensity
facilitates detection of rule violators. Results from this empirical study indicate no relationship between moral intensity
characteristics and issue recognition but do provide insights into the evolutionary psychology approach.
David M. Wasieleski is an Assistant Professor in the Leadership and Change Management Division of the A.J. Palumbo School
of Business Administration and the John F. Donahue Graduate School of Business at Duquesne University. He received his Ph.D.
from the University of Pittsburgh. David’s recent research focuses on individuals’ biological propensity for ethical behavior
and its effect on workplace relationships. His other research interests include moral intensity, cognitive moral development,
stakeholder agenda-building, and policy learning.
Sefa Hayibor is an Assistant Professor of Management in the Sobey School of Business at Saint Mary’s University (Canada).
He received his Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh. His research interests include business ethics and ethical decision-making,
stakeholder motivation and management, charismatic leadership, and cognitive heuristics and biases. 相似文献
2.
The study extends and tests the issue contingent four-component model of ethical decision-making to include moral obligation.
A web-based questionnaire was used to gauge the influence of perceived importance of an ethical issue on moral judgment and
moral intent. Perceived importance of an ethical issue was found to be a predictor of moral judgment but not of moral intent
as predicted. Moral obligation is suggested to be a process that occurs after a moral judgment is made and explained a significant
portion of the variance in moral intent.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi: ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Russell
Haines is an Assistant Professor of Information Technology at Old Dominion University. He received his B.S. and Master of
Accountancy from Brigham Young University and his Ph.D. from The University of Houston. His research interests are in laboratory
experiments, ethical decision- making, supply chain decision-making, and computer- mediated communication.
Marc D. Street is an Assistant Professor of Management at Salisbury University in Salisbury, Maryland. He received his B.A.
from the University of Maryland, College Park (1983); his MBA from the University of Baltimore (1993); and his Ph.D. from
the Florida State University (1998). His primary research interests are in the areas of decision-making and business ethics.
Dr. Street’s research has been published in journals such as Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Journal
of Business Ethics, and the Journal of World Business, among others.
Douglas Haines is Associate Professor of Marketing and Department Chair of the Department of Business in the College of Business
and Economics at the University of Idaho. Before acquiring his Ph.D. at the University of Oregon, he worked for 15 years in
various positions at the H.J. Heinz company including
Vice President of the Weight Watchers Foods Division of Heinz USA. His research interests include decision making, particularly
in the marketing channel context, inter firm relationships, and the development of the market for biodiesel and other alternative
energy sources. 相似文献
3.
Manjit Monga 《Journal of Business Ethics》2007,71(2):179-194
Increased globalisation has also seen increased scrutiny of corporate behaviour by the communities. Clearly managers are under
increased pressure from stakeholders not only to outperform their competitors, but also are expected to do so in an ethical
manner. In order to act ethically an individual is expected to have a well-developed moral imagination and moral reasoning.
Literature on ethical reasoning research indicates a positive relationship between higher levels of moral reasoning and ethical
behaviour. This paper presents the findings of a study of the moral reasoning/moral development of managers working in large
manufacturing enterprises situated in the state of Punjab in India. Kohlberg’s theory of Cognitive Moral Development forms
the basis of the study. Moral Judgement Interview (MIG) developed by Weber, on the basis of Kohlberg’s theory was used for
the study. Moral Reasoning Scores were calculated using Abbreviated Scoring Guide. More than half of the managers scored at
post-conventional level of reasoning while assessing the moral dilemmas. The reasoning scores varied for the three dilemmas.
Manjit Monga is a lecturer in the School of Management, at the Division of Business, University of South Australia. Her research
interests are in the area of management and workplace ethics, organisational culture, research ethics and resource management.
The aythor is a lecturer in the School of Mangement, at the Division of Business,University of South Australia. Her research
interests are in the area of mangement and workplace ethics,organisational culture,research ethics and human resource mangement. 相似文献
4.
Vidya N. Awasthi 《Journal of Business Ethics》2008,78(1-2):207-223
This study uses judgment and decision-making (JDM) perspective with the help of framing and schema literature from cognitive psychology to evaluate how managers behave when problems with unethical overtones are presented to them in a managerial frame rather than an ethical frame. In the proposed managerial model, moral judgment of the situation is one of the inputs to managerial judgment, among several other inputs regarding costs and benefits of various alternatives. Managerial judgment results in managerial intent leading to managerial action. The model and the effects of taking an ethics course on ethical and managerial judgment and managerial intent were then indirectly tested in this study, wherein subjects judged the ethical wrongness, managerial badness, and the managerial intent regarding decisions made in a case. Forty-nine MBA students analyzed a case involving budget-based bonuses and production, in which the ethical issue evolved over three stages. It appears from the Path-analysis results that managerial judgment mediated between moral judgment and the judgment of managerial intent as suggested by the proposed model, and that taking an ethics course directly affected managerial judgment but did not affect the moral judgment. Additionally, in the first stage of decision-making (early stage of a developing “ethical slippery slope”), moral judgment did not significantly influence managerial judgment. However, students with ethics course still were more inclined to judge the decision as managerially bad as compared to others, indicating that they were more aware or sensitive to the moral issues involved. 相似文献
5.
Using survey methodology we examined the relationships between commitment to moral self-improvement (CMSI), religiosity, ethical problem recognition, and behavioral intentions in a sample of 242 business students. Results of the study suggest that CMSI predicts ethical problem recognition and behavioral intentions. Our findings also suggest that CMSI is positively related to religiosity. The study provides some evidence of CMSI being a mediator in the influence of religiosity on ethical problem recognition and behavioral intentions. Compared to religiosity, CMSI turned out to be a better predictor of perceived importance of ethics, ethical problem recognition, and ethical behavioral intentions. The results of the study have implications for increasing understanding of ethical decision-making, future studies of business ethics, and business ethics education. 相似文献
6.
伦理问题、道德强度与供应商伦理管理 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
供应商的伦理问题涉及人权、环境、多样化、慈善与安全等方面,不同伦理问题的道德强度不同,企业决策者对供应商不同伦理问题的重视程度也不同。运用层次分析法,给出道德强度的结果严重度、社会共识、结果发生可能性、时间急迫性、接近性、结果集中度等六个维度的相对权重,根据道德强度各维度的相对重要性,对供应商不同的伦理权重进行排序。 相似文献
7.
This article presents findings from aqualitative study among Norwegian businessstudents carried out in 1997. In this study thestudents were asked to write 1/3 to 3/4 page essaysabout six moral dilemma scenarios inbusiness-life and in private-life contexts.After a summary of main results the responsesto two scenarios are examined more thoroughly,for identification of consequence vs. ruleorientation, personal vs. impersonal andnormative vs. non-normative orientation. In anext step, such response tendencies arecompared by gender and age (using comparableessays of managers as a point of reference).The conclusions focus on the potential use ofthe study for business ethics teaching. 相似文献
8.
Examining the Construct of Organizational Justice: A Meta-Analytic Evaluation of Relations with Work Attitudes and Behaviors 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
The nomological net for the construct of organizational justice was investigated. The estimated true score correlation between procedural and distributive justice (N = 4,696, K = 16) was 0.66. The patterns of correlations of both procedural and distributive justice with job satisfaction, OCB, commitment, and productivity were also meta-analytically estimated. Procedural justice was associated to a greater extent than distributive justice with organizational commitment, organizational citizenship behaviors and productivity. Distributive and procedural justice correlated similarly with job satisfaction. Partial correlations and variance reduction ratios suggested that relationships between distributive justice and work attitudes and behaviors were mostly mediated by procedural justice perceptions. Implications for theory and practice are discussed. 相似文献
9.
This article concerns itself with the relationship between implicit moral cognitions and decisions in the realm of business ethics. Traditionally, business ethics research emphasized the effects of overt or␣explicit attitudes on ethical decision-making and neglected intuitive or implicit attitudes. Therefore, based on an implicit social cognition approach it is important to␣know whether implicit moral attitudes may have a substantial impact on managerial ethical decision-making processes. To test this thesis, a study with 50 participants was conducted. In this study the participants were asked to work on a deliberative managerial ethical decision-making task, in which they had to decide on one of two options. Implicit moral attitudes towards the two options were measured using the implicit association test (IAT). A semantic differential scale was used to diagnose explicit moral attitudes towards the two options. Each step taken within the deliberative decision-making process, as well the decision itself, was assessed using a scoring model-based decision analysis and a decision-making questionnaire. The results of this study show that implicit moral attitude has a great influence on the deliberative ethical decision-making process. The derived conclusion is that complex and deliberative decision-making processes in the context of business ethics can be affected by implicit social cognitions such as implicit moral attitudes. 相似文献
10.
Thomas R. Shaw 《Journal of Business Ethics》2003,46(4):301-318
Webmasters are a key moral agent in the issue of privacy. This study attempts to understand the factors underlying their attitudes about privacy based on the theory of moral intensity. Webmasters of high-traffic sites were invited via email to participate in a web-based survey. The results support the application of moral intensity to the domain of privacy and the population of webmasters – both outcomes and social norms have statistically significant main effects on attitudes. The results also suggest a reconfiguration of the dimensions of moral intensity. This is based on the observation that proximity to the organization has a negative main effect on attitudes, and it moderates the relationship between social norms and attitudes. The original theory of moral intensity did not acknowledge the possibility of this moderating role for proximity. These observations have important implications for future research and practice in the areas of privacy, moral intensity, and ethical decision making. 相似文献
11.
Recent work in the fields of ethics and entrepreneurship has raised the possibility that entrepreneurs may differ from other individuals in the moral issues they face, in their moral judgements and behaviors concerning those issues, and even in their level of cognitive moral development. While this work has been exploratory and its conclusions tentative, the findings raise two interesting questions: do entrepreneurs actually differ from non-entrepreneurs in their ethical orientations and, if so, why? We propose a model of ethical decision making for small business entrepreneurs. We suggest some ways in which the ethical framework of entrepreneurs may differ systematically from that of other business people and propose some areas for future research. 相似文献
12.
The present study takes Confucian entrepreneurs as an entry point to portray the dynamics and problems involved in the process of putting moral precepts into practice, a central issue in business ethics. Confucian entrepreneurs are defined as the owners of manufacturing or business firms who harbor the moral values of Confucianism. Other than a brief account of their historical background, 41 subjects from various parts of Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur were selected for in-depth interviews. By studying the moral choices they made in the market, it was discovered that, contrary to the prevalent mode of inquiry in economics either to reduce all social phenomena to rational calculations or to consider moral actions in terms of utilitarian values, their economic action cannot be accounted for by the postulate of utility maximization, and that the efforts to do business according to their moral principles can be very costly. The study also attempts to document how these Confucian entrepreneurs reconciled the conflict between the moral values they cherished and the instrumental goals they pursued, and will seek to uncover how they responded when faced with this dilemma. 相似文献
13.
The purpose of this article is to develop the multidimensional ethics scale and moral scenarios that allow or even support diversity in managers’ reactions when measuring their moral decision-making. This means that we expand the multidimensional ethics scale with a female ethics dimension and take a critical look at the previously used scenarios in the light of diversity. Furthermore, we develop two new scenarios in order to better attain diversity in managers’ moral decision-making. Diversity is primarily looked at from a gender perspective, meaning that we pay attention to the femininities and masculinities of the scale items and scenarios. In addition, we use the concept of social desirability to assess diversity as we presume that social desirability works against diversity. Our article builds on previous research using the multidimensional ethics scale. First, we present a summary of the theoretical dimensions of the original multidimensional ethics scale and extend the scale with female ethics principles to foster diversity. Second, we analyse and assess previously used moral scenarios in order to see how they permit the expression of diversity. Third, we develop two new scenarios based on the interviews conducted with female managers. 相似文献
14.
The Effects of Proximity and Empathy on Ethical Decision-Making: An Exploratory Investigation 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The goals of this research were to (1) explore the direct effects of and interactions between magnitude of consequences and various types of proximity – social, psychological, and physical – on the ethical decision-making process and (2) investigate the influence of empathy on the ethical decision-making process. A carpal tunnel syndrome vignette and questionnaire were administered to a sample of human resource management professionals to test the hypothesized relationships. Significant relationships were found for the main effects between magnitude of consequences and principle-based evaluation, cognitive empathy and principle-based evaluation, and empathy and moral intention. Physical proximity moderated the relationships between magnitude of consequences and utilitarian evaluation as well as magnitude of consequences and moral intention. Cognitive empathy moderated the relationships between magnitude of consequences and principle-based evaluation and physical proximity and utilitarian evaluation. Affective empathy marginally moderated the relationship between physical proximity and principle-based evaluation. Future research directions, management implications, and strengths and weaknesses of the research are discussed. 相似文献
15.
Elsa González 《Journal of Business Ethics》2002,39(1-2):101-108
The stakeholder approach offers the opportunity to consider corporate responsibility in a wider sense than that afforded by the stockholder or shareholder approaches. Having said that, this article aims to show that this theory does not offer a normative corporate responsibility concept that can be our response to two basic questions. On the one hand, for what is the company morally responsible and, on the other hand, why is the corporation morally responsible in terms of conventional and post-conventional perspectives? The reason why the stakeholder approach does not offer such a definition, as we shall see, is because the normative stakeholder approaches tend to confuse the social validity with the moral validity or legitimacy. It leads us to a conventional definition of corporate moral responsibility (CMR) that is not relevant to the pluralistic and global framework of our societies and economies. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate this intuition. 相似文献
16.
Following an extensive review of the moral intensity literature, this article reports the findings of two studies (one between-subjects,
the other within-subject) that examined the effect of manipulated and perceived moral intensity on ethical judgment. In the
between-subjects study participants judged actions taken in manipulated high moral intensity scenarios to be more unethical
than the same actions taken in manipulated low moral intensity scenarios. Findings were mixed for the effect of perceived
moral intensity. Both probable magnitude of consequences (a factor consisting of magnitude of consequences, probability of
effect, and temporal immediacy) and social consensus had a significant effect; proximity did not. In the within-subject study
manipulated moral intensity had a significant effect on ethical judgment, but perceived moral intensity did not. Regression
of ethical judgment on age, gender, major, and the three perceived moral intensity factors was significant between-subjects,
but not within-subject. Ethical judgment was found to be a more robust predictor of intention than perceived moral intensity
using a within-subject design.
Joan M. McMahon is an Assistant Professor of Management in the Luter School of Business at Christopher Newport University,
teaching courses in Organizational Behavior, Leadership, and Human Resources. She has a B.A. in Speech from the State University
of New York, College at Oneonta; an M. Ed. in Early Childhood Education from James Madison University; and an M.S. and Ph.D.
in Industrial/Organizational Psychology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.
Robert J. Harvey is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He has a
B.A. in Psychology and an M.A. in Experimental Psychology from the University of Missouri at Kansas City, and a Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational
Psychology from Ohio State University. Dr. Harvey has authored a number of articles in the Journal of Applied Psychology, the Journal of Personality Assessment, Personnel Psychology, and others. He is the author of the chapter on job analysis in the Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. 相似文献
17.
Christopher Michaelson 《Journal of Business Ethics》2008,83(4):773-787
Moral luck – which seems to appear when circumstances beyond a person’s control influence our moral attributions of praise and blame – is troubling in that modern moral theory has supposed morality to be immune to luck. In business, moral luck commonly influences our moral judgments, many of which have economic consequences that cannot be reversed. The possibility that the chance intervention of luck could influence the way in which we assign moral accountability in business ethics is unsettling. This paper argues that if we cannot explain moral luck away, we should give consideration to moral risk in our moral judgments and the associated assignment of economic rewards regarding episodes in which moral luck plays a role. 相似文献
18.
At the heart of entrepreneurship are imagination, creativity, novelty, and sensitivity. It takes these qualities to develop a new product or service and bring it to market, to envision the possible impacts a new product may make and come up with novel and creative solutions to problems that may arise. These qualities go to make up what could be called the spirit of entrepreneurship, a spirit that involves the ability to handle the experimental nature of entrepreunerial activity. These same qualities are crucial for moral decision making, and an ethical approach which emphasizes imagination, creativity, and has an experimental thrust is much better adapted to the entrepreneurial activity and much more relevant to the unique situations that entrepreneurs face. In this sense, the process approach to ethics developed in this article is a unifying framework that brings together the activity of entrepreneurship and moral decision making. 相似文献
19.
This paper examines the advent of the Web as a critical media tool in the promotion and sale of goods to consumers and the ethical questions it raises that are issues of public policy. We examine four traditional ethical rationales that guide organizational decision-making – utilitarianism, distributive justice, moral rights of man and relativism, further characterized as "ends-based", "equity-based", "rules-based" and "comparison-based" rationales – and we apply them to four moral dilemmas attributed to the proliferation of dot.com companies as they relate to consumer welfare. We find that ethical rationale in the New Media is largely non-existent, and where it exists, it is primarily reactive and driven by utilitarian or relativistic reasoning. We attribute this condition to the newness of the industry and to its economic context, representing, as it does, many characteristics embodied in the concept of the "perfect market." We offer some remedies to improve ethical conduct by e-business. 相似文献
20.
David E. Desplaces David E. Melchar Laura L. Beauvais Susan M. Bosco 《Journal of Business Ethics》2007,74(1):73-87
Recent highly publicized ethical breaches including those at Enron and WorldCom have focused attention on ethical behavior
within the accounting profession. At the heart of the debate is whether ethical attitudes of accountants are to blame. Using
a nationally representative sample of accounting practitioners and a multidisciplinary student sample at two Southern United
States universities, we compare sample responses to 25 ethically charged vignettes to test whether they differ. Overall, we
find no significant difference – even for a specific “accounting tricks” vignette, which resembles the Enron and WorldCom
situations. We do find, however, that the practitioners were more accepting of vignettes that involved physical harm (PH)
to individuals and those that were legal (but ethically questionable). We postulate that accounting practitioners may apply
a legalistic framework to their assessment of the acceptability of each vignette. Focusing on an “accounting tricks” vignette,
we also find no significant difference between auditors and institutional practitioners compared to all other types of accountants
in the sample. We conclude that ethical attitudes of accounting practitioners do not differ significantly by specialty area.
Tisha L. N. Emerson is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Baylor University in Texas. In addition to business ethics,
Professor Emerson has published articles in the areas of environmental economics and economic education. She teaches courses
in environmental economics, international trade, intermediate microeconomics and microeconomic principles.
Stephen J. Conroy is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of San Diego in California. In addition to business
ethics, Professor Conroy has published articles in the areas of economic development and demography, economics of education
and economics of aging. He teaches courses in managerial economics at both the graduate and undergraduate level, as well as
undergraduate courses in urban and regional economic development, intermediate microeconomics and principles of micro- and
macroeconomics.
Charles W. Stanley is an Associate Professor of Accounting at Baylor University in Texas. In addition to business ethics,
Dr. Stanley has published articles in the areas of financial accounting, managerial accounting, auditing, accounting systems,
tax, and professional ethics for accountants. He has also authored several on-line continuing education courses for CPAs including
one that meets the Texas State Board of Accountancy requirements for continuing education by Texas CPAs. He teaches courses
in auditing, ethics, financial accounting and managerial accounting in the MBA program at Baylor. 相似文献