
Financial Ethics
Andrew McCosh(Author)
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Published on 31. August 1999
Book
Hardback
X, 164 pages
978-0-7923-8556-1 (ISBN)
Description
Financial Ethics
presents an exploration of this relatively new subject. The book will follow two different trails, which eventually are brought together. The first trail is an exploration in Chapters One and Two of the general nature of the finance industry, of the institutions which make it up, of the people in it and the pressures they are under. The first trail also examines the nature of the reward system in the finance industry.
The second trail is an examination of the guidance people can obtain from four of the world's great religions on exactly how people ought to behave when engaged in the financial industry.
The second part of the book is contained in Chapters Three to Nine. If people propose to advise the financiers to be ethical, it is important to know what is meant by this, and to call upon reliable sources and why they are using the four particular religious sources chosen. The next four chapters extract business and financial commands and one or two important interpretive writings from Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism.
Part Three of the book (Chapters Ten to Thirteen) is a distillation of the concepts from the religions, an application of the concepts to the modern financial world, and a discussion of the various organizational tools which might be used to put them into operation.
The second trail is an examination of the guidance people can obtain from four of the world's great religions on exactly how people ought to behave when engaged in the financial industry.
The second part of the book is contained in Chapters Three to Nine. If people propose to advise the financiers to be ethical, it is important to know what is meant by this, and to call upon reliable sources and why they are using the four particular religious sources chosen. The next four chapters extract business and financial commands and one or two important interpretive writings from Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism.
Part Three of the book (Chapters Ten to Thirteen) is a distillation of the concepts from the religions, an application of the concepts to the modern financial world, and a discussion of the various organizational tools which might be used to put them into operation.
More details
Edition
1999 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
X, 164 p.
Dimensions
Height: 241 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
442 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7923-8556-1 (9780792385561)
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4615-5039-6
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions


Content
I -The Problem Domain.- 1 The Jobs of the Capital Markets, and the People Who Do Them.- 2 A Focus on the Problem we are Addressing.- Two - Guidance From The Religions.- 3 Plan and Introduction to the Religious Guidance Chapters.- 4 The Jewish Tradition.- 5 The Christian Tradition.- 6 The Islamic Tradtion.- 7 The Buddhist Tradition.- 8 An Aggregation of the Commands of the Religions.- 9 The Remaining Task:The Commands We Have Yet to Fulfill.- III - Testing, And Then Marketing, The Second Ethical Command.- 10 Some Financial Transactions for Testing.- 11 Political and Organisational Tools for Gaining Acceptance of an Ethical Command.- 12 Consequences and Conclusions.- 13 Epilogue: A Personal Action Plan.