Integrity in business and management
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Integrity in business and management
(Routledge studies in business ethics, 13)
Routledge, 2018
- : hbk
Available at / 1 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book highlights the interconnectedness of integrity with philosophical history, leadership, managerial decision-making, and organizational effectiveness in a wide variety of contexts (e.g., time theft in organizations and family business). Well-known researchers in business ethics from all around the world reframe the literature on integrity in business and management and develop updated and more comprehensive models of integrity.
Integrity in Business and Management connects integrity to both ancient thought and the modern philosophy of pragmatism, but also explains how contemporary societal trends may shape the way we think about integrity. The final chapter warns against oversocialized conceptualizations of integrity and argues for a clear differentiation between personal integrity and moral integrity.
Aimed at researchers and academics in the fields of business ethics and organizational leadership, Integrity in Business and Management explicates and critiques prior models of managerial integrity in a wide variety of disciplines, covering economics, moral philosophy, business ethics, organizational behavior, sociology, history, and psychology and offers a helpful set of readings in advanced undergraduate and postgraduate courses of business ethics, corporate governance, corporate social responsibility, and leadership to stimulate discussions about personal integrity, moral integrity, and organizational leadership.
Table of Contents
1.The Multiple Facets of Integrity in Business and Management
Manjit Monga and Marc Orlitzky
2. Integrity: A Positive Model that Incorporates the Normative Phenomena of Morality, Ethics, and Legality (Abbreviated Version)
Werner H. Erhard, Michael C. Jensen, and Steve Zaffron
3. Time Theft: An Integrity-based Approach to its Management
Joanna Crossman and Sanjee Perera
4. Financial Motives for Integrity and Ethical Idiosyncratic Credit in Business: A Multilevel Conceptual Model
Carolyn Predmore, Janet Rovenpor, and Frederick Greene
5. The Role of Family Values in the Integrity of Family Business
Claire Seaman and Richard Bent
6. "Doing the Right Thing" in the Banking Sector: Integrity from an Upper Echelons Perspective
Manjit Monga
7. An Integrated Model of Managerial Integrity and Compliance
Duane Windsor
8. Pragmatism and Integrity: A Second Look
David C. Jacobs
9. Virtue Signaling: Oversozialized "Integrity" in a Politically Correct World
Marc Orlitzky
by "Nielsen BookData"