The ethics of executive compensation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The ethics of executive compensation
(Leeds School series on business and society)
Blackwell Pub., 2006
Available at 14 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
  Miyagi
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  Fukui
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  Shizuoka
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  Kyoto
  Osaka
  Hyogo
  Nara
  Wakayama
  Tottori
  Shimane
  Okayama
  Hiroshima
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  Tokushima
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  Oita
  Miyazaki
  Kagoshima
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  United Kingdom
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents of Works
- Executive preference for compensation structure and normative myopia : a business and society research project / Diane L. Swanson and Marc Orlitzky
- Does firm performance reduce managerial opportunism? : the impact of performance based compensation and firm performance on illegal accounting restatements / Jegoo Lee ... [et al.]
- A preliminary investigation into the association between Canadian corporate social responsibility and executive compensation / Lois S. Mahoney and Linda Thorne
- How much is too much? : a theoretical analysis of executive compensation from the standpoint of distributive justice / Jared D. Harris
- Justice, incentives, and executive compensation / William H. Shaw
- CEO compensation and virtue ethics / Michael Potts
- Chihuahuas in the gardens of corporate capitalism / Lyla D. Hamilton
- The obligation of corporate boards to set and monitor compensation / Carmen M. Alston
- Executive pay in public academia : a non justice based argument for the reallocation of compensation / James Stacey Taylor
- How to (try to) justify CEO pay / Jeffrey Moriarty
- Executive compensation : just procedures and outcomes / Joseph DesJardins
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The first volume in the Leeds School Series on Business & Society, this collection of lectures demonstrates the valuable results of a timely exchange of ideas regarding the nature of executive compensation.
Includes discussions across academic disciplines, perspectives, and intellectual orientations on the oft-debated topic of executive compensation.
Gathers for the first time a series of lectures delivered at the 2004 Japha Symposium at the University of Colorado.
Provides the reader with insight into the fundamental problems from a social and ethical perspective, and proposes a myriad of possible solutions.
Table of Contents
Contributors. An Introduction (Robert W. Kolb).
Part I: Insights of Empirical Research.
1. Executive Preference for Compensation Structure and Normative Myopia: A Business and Society Research Project. (Diane L. Swanson and Marc Orlitzky).
2. Does Firm Performance Reduce Managerial Opportunism?: The Impact of Performance-based Compensation and Firm Performance on Illegal Accounting Restatements. (Jegoo Lee, Byung-Hee Lee, Sandra Waddock, and Samuel B. Graves).
3. A Preliminary Investigation into the Association between Canadian Corporate Social Responsibility and Executive Compensation. (Lois S. Mahoney ad Linda Thorne).
Part II: Justice-based Analyses of Executive Compensation.
4. How Much is Too Much? A Theoretical Analysis of Executive Compensation from the Standpoint of Distributive Justice. (Jared Harris).
5. Justice, Incentives, and Executive Compensation. (William H. Shaw).
6. CEO Compensation and Virtue Ethics. (Michael Potts).
7. Chihuahuas in the Gardens of Corporate Capitalism. (Lyla D. Hamilton).
Part III: Broadening the Perspective.
8. The Obligation of Corporate Boards to Set and Monitor Compensation. (Carmen M. Alston).
9. Executive Pay in Public Academia: A Non-Justice-Based Argument for the Reallocation of Compensation. (James Stacey Taylor).
10. How to (Try to) Justify CEO Pay. (Jeffrey Moriarty).
11. Executive Compensation: Just Procedures and Outcomes. (Joe DesJardins).
Index.
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