Ethics in Modern Management

Ethics in Modern Management

by Gerald J. Williams
ISBN-10:
0899307078
ISBN-13:
9780899307077
Pub. Date:
05/30/1992
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-10:
0899307078
ISBN-13:
9780899307077
Pub. Date:
05/30/1992
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Academic
Ethics in Modern Management

Ethics in Modern Management

by Gerald J. Williams

Hardcover

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Overview

This book confronts business managers with media accounts of alleged ethical misconduct by business people and the low opinion the public has of the honesty of business people in general. Gerald J. Williams agrees that greed and self-interest are surely at work here, but he points out that these vices can be found in just about every area of human endeavor. He asks whether business people might think there is some special characteristic of the business enterprise that sometimes justifies acting in ways that would be considered immoral if they were done in nonbusiness situations. Does the impact, for instance, that a business may have on the economic welfare of its shareholders, employees, and the social and political communities in which it operates sometimes require its managers to follow a double ethic, one that applies to their business lives but not to their private lives? Not so, according to the author, who argues that there is no such thing as business ethics; there are only ethical principles applicable to all circumstances and conditions of human life.

It is Williams' belief that only business people can restore their tarnished reputation by acting ethically, but that they have to first know something about moral theory and understand how different theoretical approaches to morality may yield different moral principles. Business people need to reflect on the set of moral principles they hold, conscientiously satisfy themselves that they are comfortable with those principles, and, if not, modify them and apply them consistently in both business and nonbusiness situations. This book is designed to help managers with the process of education and moral reflection by describing three approaches to morality: cultural moral relativism, utilitarianism, and Thomistic natural law. The book then goes on to show how each approach can address and attempt to solve concrete, real-life ethical conflicts in the business world. In short, the book offers a somewhat unique hands-on technique for teaching business ethics. It should interest business managers at all levles as well as teachers and students of business ethics.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780899307077
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/30/1992
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile: 1490L (what's this?)

About the Author

GERALD J. WILLIAMS is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Seton Hall University, the College of New Rochelle, and Keene College of New Jersey. For nearly 33 years he managed various operations, staff, and training functions for the C&P Telephone Company of West Virginia, AT&T, and Bell Communications Research, Inc., from which he retired in 1989. He has published articles on business ethics in The Jourbanal of the Eastern Academy of Management, The Training and Development Jourbanal, and in Philosophers at Work, an introductory textbook in philosophy.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Moral Theories
Human Dignity and Justice
Moral Responsibility
Moral Aspects of Economic Systems
Employment and Wages
Employee Privacy
Performance Appraisals
Firing Employees
Loyalty to a Company
Employee and Public Safety
Truth in the Free-Market Economic System
Advertising
Closing Down an Operation
Protecting the Environment
Summing Up
Appendix: Utilitarianism, Natural Law, and Cultural Moral Relativism—An Expanded Version
References
Index

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