|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
Since its inception thirty years ago, business ethics has benefited
from the interdisciplinary contributions by management, political
theory, sociology, and, of course, philosophy. This volume provides
an updated examination of the role that moral and political
philosophy can play in addressing problems in business ethics. The
essays contained within its pages represent the work of new
scholars and address a wide array of foundational issues such as
distributive justice within firms, human rights, ethical challenges
of international business, the role of virtue in business
management, entrepreneurship and the relationship of markets and
market actors with democratic institutions. In an important sense,
this collection traces where philosophy has been and where it is
headed within business ethics. Each of the contributions represent
new work that, at once, strengthens the theoretical foundations of
normative business ethics and provides practical insight for
non-philosophers working in the field.
Since its inception thirty years ago, business ethics has benefited
from the interdisciplinary contributions by management, political
theory, sociology, and, of course, philosophy. This volume provides
an updated examination of the role that moral and political
philosophy can play in addressing problems in business ethics. The
essays contained within its pages represent the work of new
scholars and address a wide array of foundational issues such as
distributive justice within firms, human rights, ethical challenges
of international business, the role of virtue in business
management, entrepreneurship and the relationship of markets and
market actors with democratic institutions. In an important sense,
this collection traces where philosophy has been and where it is
headed within business ethics. Each of the contributions represent
new work that, at once, strengthens the theoretical foundations of
normative business ethics and provides practical insight for
non-philosophers working in the field.
This book arises out of papers delivered at the World Congress
of the International Society of Business, Economics and Ethics
(ISBEE) held in Cape Town in 2008. There are two sections. First, a
number of key papers provide an insight into global business,
wealth creation and welfare issues with particular reference to the
African continent - appropriate for a Congress that was based in
South Africa and drew wide participation from African scholars.
Second, it provides the output from a global research project on
"Fairness in International Trade" which ran over the two years
prior to the Congress. This project drew together the work of
scholars in five regions across the globe and is the first time
that such a global perspective has been attempted.
This book is aimed at academics working in the area of
international trade or development economics particularly those who
have an interest in the ethical dimensions of trade. It will also
be of interest to students of development economics and business
ethics particularly at Masters and Doctoral level.
This book arises out of papers delivered at the World Congress of
the International Society of Business, Economics and Ethics (ISBEE)
held in Cape Town in 2008. There are two sections. First, a number
of key papers provide an insight into global business, wealth
creation and welfare issues with particular reference to the
African continent - appropriate for a Congress that was based in
South Africa and drew wide participation from African scholars.
Second, it provides the output from a global research project on
"Fairness in International Trade" which ran over the two years
prior to the Congress. This project drew together the work of
scholars in five regions across the globe and is the first time
that such a global perspective has been attempted. This book is
aimed at academics working in the area of international trade or
development economics particularly those who have an interest in
the ethical dimensions of trade. It will also be of interest to
students of development economics and business ethics particularly
at Masters and Doctoral level.
Virtue at Work is about good organizations, good managers, and good
people, and how these can contribute to good communities. It
provides an integrated and philosophically-grounded framework that
enables a coherent approach to organizations and organizational
ethics from the perspective of practitioners in the workplace,
managers in organizations, as well as from the perspective of
organizations themselves. The philosophical grounding comes from
the work of the moral philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre. In line with
MacIntyre's own commitments, this book makes philosophy
down-to-earth and practical. It provides a new way of understanding
ethics and organizations that is both realistic and attractive, but
also challenging. And it also provides tough but realistic
suggestions in order to put this approach into practice. Virtue at
Work not only applies theory in a readable and compelling manner,
but also shows how this has been applied to a wide variety of
organizations and occupations. Examples are drawn from
Architecture, Accounting, Human Resource Management, Banking,
Investment Advising, Open Source Software, Pharmaceuticals, Fair
Trade, the UK's National Health Service, Churches, and Journalism,
among many others.
Virtue at Work is about good organizations, good managers, and good
people, and how these can contribute to good communities. It
provides an integrated and philosophically-grounded framework that
enables a coherent approach to organizations and organizational
ethics from the perspective of practitioners in the workplace, from
the perspective of managers in organizations, as well as from the
perspective of organizations themselves. The philosophical
grounding comes from the work of the moral philosopher Alasdair
MacIntyre. In line with MacIntyre's own commitments, Virtue at Work
makes philosophy down-to-earth and practical. It provides a new way
of understanding ethics and organizations that is both realistic
and attractive, but also challenging. And it also provides tough
but realistic suggestions in order to put this approach into
practice. Virtue at Work not only applies theory in a readable and
compelling manner, but also shows how this has been applied to a
wide variety of organizations and occupations. Examples are drawn
from Architecture, Accounting, Human Resource Management, Banking,
Investment Advising, Open Source Software, Pharmaceuticals, Fair
Trade, the UK's National Health Service, Churches, and Journalism,
among many others.
|
|