Teaching Business Ethics: Theory and Practice |
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Authors: | Fort Timothy L. Zollers Frances E. |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Business Administration, University of Michigan, 701 Tapan St, 3203B, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1234, USA;(2) School of Management, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA |
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Abstract: | Business ethics teaching can be improved when ethicists integrate the ethical theories they apply to business with the organizational design of the course. By utilizing three techniques – implementing a Total Quality Management-style survey and review, nominating and electing class virtues, and telling personal stories of moral action – classes can be organized to operate by the social contract, rights, stakeholder, and virtue theories that dominate business ethics literature. Classes then become laboratories for the practical articulation and application of the theories as well as providing real examples of the theories in action. This methodology produces benefits for the particular class and for the development and refinement of the theories themselves.This paper describes each of the three pedagogical techniques; and then explicitly relates them to these leading business ethics theories to demonstrate how the integration can lead to a community seeking and discovering moral truth in the classroom. |
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