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From cartoons to boardrooms comes the statement, "It's not
personal. It's just business."
Just a Job? Communication, Ethics, and Professional Life offers a
provocative perspective on ethics at work. The book questions the
notions that doing ethics at work has to be work, and that work is
somehow a sphere where a different set of rules applies. This
problematic line between work and life runs through the ways we
commonly talk about ethics, from our personal relationships to the
domains of work, including the organization, the profession, and
the market. Talk about ethics is far more than "just talk," and
this book shows how and why it matters.
Drawing from the fields of communication and rhetoric, the authors
show how the very framing of ethics--even before we approach
specific decisions--limits the potential roles of ethics in our
work lives and the pursuit of happiness, and treats it as something
that is meaningful only at special moments such as when faced with
dilemmas, or as the last chapter in a business book. Separating
ethics from life, we put it beyond our daily reach.
The authors argue against ethical myopia limited to spectacular
scandals or comprehensive professional codes. Instead, they propose
a master reframe of ethics based on a new take on virtue ethics,
including Aristotle's practical ideal of eudaimonia or flourishing,
which tells new stories about the ordinary as well as extraordinary
aspects of professional integrity and success. By reframing ethics
as not special, they elevate it to its rightful position in work
and personal life.
Generously illustrated with examples and ideas from scholarly as
well as popular sources, this book asks us to reconsider the
meaning of and path toward the "good life."
From cartoons to boardrooms comes the statement, "It's not
personal. It's just business."
Just a Job? Communication, Ethics, and Professional Life offers a
provocative perspective on ethics at work. The book questions the
notions that doing ethics at work has to be work, and that work is
somehow a sphere where a different set of rules applies. This
problematic line between work and life runs through the ways we
commonly talk about ethics, from our personal relationships to the
domains of work, including the organization, the profession, and
the market. Talk about ethics is far more than "just talk," and
this book shows how and why it matters.
Drawing from the fields of communication and rhetoric, the authors
show how the very framing of ethics--even before we approach
specific decisions--limits the potential roles of ethics in our
work lives and the pursuit of happiness, and treats it as something
that is meaningful only at special moments such as when faced with
dilemmas, or as the last chapter in a business book. Separating
ethics from life, we put it beyond our daily reach.
The authors argue against ethical myopia limited to spectacular
scandals or comprehensive professional codes. Instead, they propose
a master reframe of ethics based on a new take on virtue ethics,
including Aristotle's practical ideal of eudaimonia or flourishing,
which tells new stories about the ordinary as well as extraordinary
aspects of professional integrity and success. By reframing ethics
as not special, they elevate it to its rightful position in work
and personal life.
Generously illustrated with examples and ideas from scholarly as
well as popular sources, this book asks us to reconsider the
meaning of and path toward the "good life."
In these 70 essays, speeches, sermons and screeds, POCLADers probe:
corporations as "legal persons"; corporate social responsibility as
a ploy; strategies for amending state corporation codes and
challenging judge-made laws; and much, much more. This collection,
which Howard Zinn calls "powerfully persuasive," chronicles
POCLAD's evolution - among the twelve POCLADers and with thousands
of activists. Here are hidden histories, crisp analyses and
thoughtful responses to corporate apologists - all in one
provocative book.
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