
Ethics and Business
A Global Introduction
Bart Wernaart(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 27. May 2021
Book
Hardback
350 pages
978-1-032-04624-2 (ISBN)
Description
Ethics in business is not a new topic and has been intensely discussed since the emergence of the so-called limited companies. However, privatization, technological and digital innovation, changes in moral perception, economic and financial crises and globalization stir a more recent debate on how companies should behave in our societies.
This book starts from the position that ethics in business should imply an open debate on norms and values, using a sound methodology to get there. Ethics should cross borders: not only the borders of a country, but also the borders of someone's moral imagination. Ethics should not only be about harmony but also about conflict (and how to deal with that). Ethics should be realistic and well substantiated by academic research. Ethics should be used to understand the complexity of the world, and the challenges companies struggle with on various levels.
Therefore, this book is composed of three parts in which ethics is discussed at different levels. In part one we discuss ethics at the level of the individual. In part two we discuss ethics and business. In the third part, ethics is discussed in the context of a globalized world.
In each chapter, we discuss the ethical complications of each topic from various - and preferably opposing - perspectives. Each perspective is methodologically and academically substantiated. Each chapter ends with an extensive literature list in which the original sources are listed for further reading. Furthermore, at the end of each chapter, a summary is written in which the most important definitions and viewpoints are highlighted. The frequent use of colorful and bold examples make this an accessible read for bachelor and master students at business schools and professionals in international business.
This book starts from the position that ethics in business should imply an open debate on norms and values, using a sound methodology to get there. Ethics should cross borders: not only the borders of a country, but also the borders of someone's moral imagination. Ethics should not only be about harmony but also about conflict (and how to deal with that). Ethics should be realistic and well substantiated by academic research. Ethics should be used to understand the complexity of the world, and the challenges companies struggle with on various levels.
Therefore, this book is composed of three parts in which ethics is discussed at different levels. In part one we discuss ethics at the level of the individual. In part two we discuss ethics and business. In the third part, ethics is discussed in the context of a globalized world.
In each chapter, we discuss the ethical complications of each topic from various - and preferably opposing - perspectives. Each perspective is methodologically and academically substantiated. Each chapter ends with an extensive literature list in which the original sources are listed for further reading. Furthermore, at the end of each chapter, a summary is written in which the most important definitions and viewpoints are highlighted. The frequent use of colorful and bold examples make this an accessible read for bachelor and master students at business schools and professionals in international business.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
84 farbige Abbildungen, 45 Farbfotos bzw. farbige Rasterbilder, 39 farbige Zeichnungen, 128 farbige Tabellen
128 Tables, color; 39 Line drawings, color; 45 Halftones, color; 84 Illustrations, color
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 170 mm
Weight
810 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-032-04624-2 (9781032046242)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
05/2021
1st Edition
Wolters-Noordhoff B.V.
€84.47
Shipment within 15-20 days

E-Book
05/2021
1st Edition
Routledge
€68.49
Available for download

E-Book
05/2021
1st Edition
Routledge
€68.49
Available for download
Person
Bart Wernaart is Lecturer in International Business and Management at the Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands.
Content
Introduction
Part 1
Ethics and the individual
1 What is ethics?
1.1 Ethical behaviour?
1.2 Ethics as an academic discipline
1.3 Morality
1.4 The structural analysis
1.5 The structural evaluation
1.6 Ethics and related disciplines
Summary
Literature
2 Responsibility
2.1 The meaning of responsibility
2.2 The ability to take responsibility
2.3 Situational factors that influence responsibility
Summary
Literature
3 Normative ethics
3.1 Directions in normative ethics
3.2 Ethics for people
3.3 Ethics from people
3.4 Directions in ethics applied
Summary
Literature
4 A model for ethical
decision-making
4.1 An ethical dilemma
4.2 Step 1: moral questions
4.3 Step 2: moral stakeholders
4.4 Step 3: alternatives
4.5 Step 4: an informed choice
Summary
Literature
Part 2
Business and ethics
5 A short history of ethics in business
5.1 The industrial revolution
5.2 Current trends in society
5.3 The triple bottom line
Summary
Literature
6 Social values
6.1 The industrial revolution and social values of workers
6.2 Rights of workers in developed countries
6.3 Challenges in developed countries
6.4 Challenges in developing countries
6.5 Corruption
6.6 Social values of consumers
Summary
Literature
7 Ecological values
7.1 The tragedy of the commons
7.2 Towards a circular economy
Summary
Literature
8 Economic values
8.1 Economic values
8.2 Profit
Summary
Literature
9 Accountability
9.1 Transparency and compliance
9.2 The business of business is business
9.3 Voluntary accountability
9.4 Mandatory accountability
9.5 Collective industry self-regulation
Summary
Literature
Part 3
Ethics in a globalized world
10 Cultural diversity
10.1 Culture
10.2 Cultural differences on various levels
10.3 Cultural differences and business
10.4 Cultural differences between countries
Summary
Literature
11 Globalization: does the system work?
11.1 Why globalization is a good thing
11.2 Why globalization is a bad thing
Summary
Literature
Index
About the author
Part 1
Ethics and the individual
1 What is ethics?
1.1 Ethical behaviour?
1.2 Ethics as an academic discipline
1.3 Morality
1.4 The structural analysis
1.5 The structural evaluation
1.6 Ethics and related disciplines
Summary
Literature
2 Responsibility
2.1 The meaning of responsibility
2.2 The ability to take responsibility
2.3 Situational factors that influence responsibility
Summary
Literature
3 Normative ethics
3.1 Directions in normative ethics
3.2 Ethics for people
3.3 Ethics from people
3.4 Directions in ethics applied
Summary
Literature
4 A model for ethical
decision-making
4.1 An ethical dilemma
4.2 Step 1: moral questions
4.3 Step 2: moral stakeholders
4.4 Step 3: alternatives
4.5 Step 4: an informed choice
Summary
Literature
Part 2
Business and ethics
5 A short history of ethics in business
5.1 The industrial revolution
5.2 Current trends in society
5.3 The triple bottom line
Summary
Literature
6 Social values
6.1 The industrial revolution and social values of workers
6.2 Rights of workers in developed countries
6.3 Challenges in developed countries
6.4 Challenges in developing countries
6.5 Corruption
6.6 Social values of consumers
Summary
Literature
7 Ecological values
7.1 The tragedy of the commons
7.2 Towards a circular economy
Summary
Literature
8 Economic values
8.1 Economic values
8.2 Profit
Summary
Literature
9 Accountability
9.1 Transparency and compliance
9.2 The business of business is business
9.3 Voluntary accountability
9.4 Mandatory accountability
9.5 Collective industry self-regulation
Summary
Literature
Part 3
Ethics in a globalized world
10 Cultural diversity
10.1 Culture
10.2 Cultural differences on various levels
10.3 Cultural differences and business
10.4 Cultural differences between countries
Summary
Literature
11 Globalization: does the system work?
11.1 Why globalization is a good thing
11.2 Why globalization is a bad thing
Summary
Literature
Index
About the author