Buch, Englisch, 256 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 243 mm x 160 mm, Gewicht: 494 g
Buch, Englisch, 256 Seiten, Print PDF, Format (B × H): 243 mm x 160 mm, Gewicht: 494 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-007655-9
Verlag: Oxford University Press
A clear and concise roadmap for ethical business behavior using commonsense moral principles
Business Ethics for Better Behavior concisely answers the three most pressing ethical questions business professionals face: What makes business practices right or wrong?; Why do normal, decent businesspeople of good will sometimes do the wrong thing?; and How can we use the answer to these questions to get ourselves, our coworkers, our bosses, and our employees to behave better?
Bad behavior in business rarely results from bad will. Most people mean well much of the time. But most of us are vulnerable. We all fall into moral traps, usually without even noticing.
Business Ethics for Better Behavior teaches business professionals, students, and other readers how to become aware of those traps, how to avoid them, and how to dig their way out if they fall in. It integrates the best work in psychology, economics, management theory, and normative philosophy into a simple action plan for ensuring the best ethical performance at all levels of business practice. This is a book anyone in business, from an entry-level employee to CEO, can use.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Chapter One: Why Do Good People Do Bad Things?
- Chapter Two: The Business of Business Is Business: How Businesses Serve Society
- Chapter Three: Why Aren't We All Saints?
- Chapter Four: Addressing Moral Confusion: The Principles Approach
- Chapter Five: Addressing Moral Confusion: The Right and Wrong of Exploitation
- Chapter Six: Addressing Moral Confusion: Ethics Isn't Law
- Chapter Seven: The Effect of Incentives: The Value of Reputation
- Chapter Eight: The Effect of Incentives: Managing for Ethics
- Chapter Nine: The Effect of Incentives: The Problem of Collective Action
- Chapter Ten: The Effect of Incentives: Diffusion of Responsibility
- Chapter Eleven: Psychological Factors: Ethical Fading and Moral Blind Spots
- Chapter Twelve: Psychological Factors: Meaning and Motivation
- Chapter Thirteen: Psychological Factors: Avoid DUMB Values
- Conclusion: How to Run an Unethical Business
- References
- Index




