Schermerhorn Mgmt9 Ch02
Schermerhorn Mgmt9 Ch02
Schermerhorn Mgmt9 Ch02
Management, 9/e
John R. Schermerhorn, Jr. Chapter 2: Management Ethics and Social Responsibility
Prepared by: Jim LoPresti University of Colorado, Boulder Published by: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
the workplace? How can high ethical standards be maintained? What is social responsibility and governance?
Ethics
Code of moral principles. Set standards of good or bad or right or wrong in ones conduct. What is accepted as good and right in the context of the governing moral code.
Ethical behavior
behavior.
Personal values help determine
the greatest number of people. Individualism view of ethics primary commitment is to ones long-term selfinterests. Moral-rights view of ethics respects and protects the fundamental rights of all people. Justice view of ethics fair and impartial treatment of people according to legal rules and standards.
Procedural justice Distributive justice Interactional justice
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Ethical behavior is always determined by cultural context. Behavior unacceptable in ones home environment should not be acceptable anywhere else. Considered by some to be ethical imperialism
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Cultural universalism
Figure 2.2 The extremes of cultural relativism and ethical imperialism in international business ethics.
Source: Developed from Thomas Donaldson, Values in Tension: Ethics Away from Home, Harvard Business Review, vol. 74 (September-October 1996), pp. 48-62.
although having potential for personal and/or organizational benefit, may be considered unethical. Ethical dilemmas include:
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Behavior is not really illegal. Behavior is really in everyones best interests. Nobody will ever find out. The organization will protect you.
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Figure 2.3 Factors influencing ethical managerial behaviorthe person, organization, and environment.
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Ethics training: Structured programs that help participants to understand ethical aspects of decision making. Helps people incorporate high ethical standards into daily life. Helps people deal with ethical issues under pressure.
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Whistleblowers
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Barriers to whistleblowing include: Strict chain of command Strong work group identities Ambiguous priorities Organizational methods for
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behavior.
Managers should be realistic in setting
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Codes of ethics:
Formal statement of an organizations values and ethical principles regarding how to behave in situations susceptible to the creation of ethical dilemmas.
Bribes and kickbacks Political contributions Honesty of books or records Customer/supplier relationships Confidentiality of corporate information
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Recognize the ethical dilemma Get the facts Identify your options Test each option: Is it legal? Is it right? Is it beneficial? Decide which option to follow Double-check decision by asking spotlight questions: How would I feel if my family found out about my decision? How would I feel about this if my decision were in the local news? Take action
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Ethics mindfulness
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governance:
Looks at ethical issues on the
organization level.
Obligates organizations to act in ways
that serve both its own interests and the interests of society at large.
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Organizational stakeholders
Those persons, groups, and other organizations directly
affected by the behavior of the organization and holding a stake in its performance. Employees Customers Suppliers Owners Competitors Regulators Interest groups
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Perspectives on social
responsibility:
Classical view
Socioeconomic view
Management must be concerned for the broader social welfare, not just profits.
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Reduced business profits Higher business costs Dilution of business purpose Too much social power for business Lack of public accountability
Adds long-run profits Improved public image Avoids more government regulation Businesses have resources and ethical obligation
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social performance:
Is the organizations
Economic responsibility met? Legal responsibility met? Ethical responsibility met? Discretionary responsibility met?
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responsibility:
Obstructionist meets economic
responsibilities. Defensive meets economic and legal responsibilities. Accommodative meets economic, legal, and ethical responsibilities. Proactive meets economic, legal, ethical, and discretionary responsibilities.
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Figure 2.7 Four strategies of corporate social responsibilityfrom obstructionist to proactive behavior.
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organizations:
Common areas of government
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governments:
Personal contacts and networks Public relations campaigns Lobbying Political action committees Sometimes by illegal acts, such as bribery or illegal financial contributions to political campaigns
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Figure 2.8 Centrality of ethics and social responsibility in leadership and the managerial role.
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Corporate governance:
The oversight of the top management of an
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