Chapter 5 - Managing Ethics and Social Responsibility
ethics comittee
group of executives appointed to oversee company ethics
justice approach
holds that moral decision must be based on standards of equity, fairness, and impartiality
utilitarian approach
holds that the moral behavior produces the greatest good for the greatest number
stakeholder
any group/person within/outside the organization that has some type of investment/interest in the organization's performance and is affected by organization's action.
ethical dilemma
arises in a situation concerning right or wrong when values are in conflict
moral-rights approach
asserts that human beings have fundamental rights and liberties that cannot be taken away by an individual's decision
chief executive officer (aka chief ethics and compliance officer)
company executive who overses all aspects of ethics and legal compliance, including establishing and broadly communicating standards, ethics training, dealing with exceptions or problems, and advisng senior managers in the ethical and compliance aspects of decisions.
individualism approach
contends that acts are moral when they promote the individual's best term interests
practical approach
debates about what is good, right, or just the bases decisions on prevailing standards of the profession and the larger society, taking the interests of all stakeholders into account.
legal responsility
deems what society sees as important with respect to corporate behavior
principle-based statements
designed to affect corporate culture; they define fundamental values and contain general language about company responsibilities, quality of products, and treatment of employees.
amount of explicit control (from left to right from high to low)
domain of codified law (legal standard), domain of ethics (social standard), domain of
code of ethics
formal statement of a company's values concerning ethics and social issues; it communicates to employees what the company stands for
economic responsibility
-first criterion of social responsibility -role to produce goods and maximize profit
triple bottom line
-measuring an organization's social performance, its environmental performance, and its financial performance. -aka Three Ps: People, Planet, and Profit.
criteria of corporate social performance (from top to bottom)
1. discretionary responsibility (organizational virtuousness): contribute to community and be good corporate citizen 2. ethical responsibility: do what's right 3. legal responsibility: obey the law 4. economic responsibility: make money!
the four types of ethical manager behavior
1. display honesty and integrity 2. show kindness, compassion, and concern for needs and feelings for others 3. is fair in decision and distribution of rewards 4. communicates and enforces ethical standards through behavior
Three types of justice approach
1. distributive justice - requires that different treatment of people not be based on arbitrary characteristics 2. procedural justice - requires that rules be administered fairly 3. compensatory justice - argues that the individual should be compensated for the cost of injuries by the partly responsible.
The components of ethical organization
1. ethical leadership 2. code of ethics 3. ethics committee 4. chief ethics officer 5. ethics hotline 6. ethics training 7. support for whistle-blower
corporate credos
general statements of principle
stages of moral development
1. pre-conventional level: individuals are concerned with external rewards and punishments and obey authority to avoid detrimental personal consequences. 2. conventional level: people learn to conform to the expectations of good behavior as defined by colleagues, family, friends, and society. 3. post-conventional/principled level: individuals are guided by an internal set of values based on universal principles of justice and will even disobey rules/laws that violate these principles.
frameworks for ethical decision making
1. utilitarian approach 2. individualism approach 3. moral-rights approach 4. justice approach 5. practical approach
profit-maximizing view
goal should be to make the most amount of money while still playing by the rules
sustainability
weaving environmental and social concerns into all their decisions, had a significantly higher sales growth, return on assets, profits, and cash flow from operations in at least some areas of the business.
corporate social responsibility
management's obligation to make choices and take actions that will contribute to the welfare and interests of society, not just the organization.
ethical leadership
managers are honest and trustworthy, and fair in their dealings with employees/customers, and behave ethical in both professional and personal lives.
policy based statements
outline procedures to be used in specific ethical situations.
ethics hotline
report questionable behavior and can seek guidance form here
stakeholder mapping
systematic way to identify the expectations, needs, importance, and relative power of various stakeholders.
ethics
the code of moral principles and values that governs the behaviors of a person or group with respect to what is right or wrong (personal standard)