Introduction II. Ethical Dilemmas A. The Layoff III. Prescriptive Approaches to Ethical Decision Making in Business A. Focus on Consequences (Consequentialist Theories) B. Focus on Duties, Obligations, and Principles (Deontological Theories) C. Focus on Integrity (Virtue Ethics) IV. Eight Steps to Sound Ethical Decision Making in Business A. Step One: Gather the Facts B. Step Two: Define the Ethical Issues C. Step Three: Identify the Affected
Words: 4227 - Pages: 17
B. Create a business contingency plan (BCP) that the company would follow if faced with a major business disruption (e.g., hurricane, tornado, terrorist attack, loss of a data center, the sudden loss of a call center in a foreign country, the collapse of a financial market or other catastrophic event) in which you include the following: Business Contingency Plan (BCP) Definition: “Business continuity planning (BCP) ‘identifies an organization's exposure to internal and external threats and synthesizes
Words: 9611 - Pages: 39
The Legal Environment of Business Research Paper February 9, 2011 The legality of employers monitoring the actions of employees outside the workplace and reprimanding or firing individuals based on any findings. Introduction What an employee does outside of the workplace and working hours should not put him at risk for termination, right? Not necessarily. Today, employees are meeting up in bars to have bash sessions about their terrible boss or awful working conditions, they are updating
Words: 3351 - Pages: 14
M1 Legal requirements | Briefly explain the legal requirements that an event organiser has to take into account. Include at least one Act of Parliament for each section and show how the Act affects event planning. | Explain why it is so important to get these aspects of the event right and the consequences of getting it wrong. | Outline a specific example of one aspect of this requirement that might be important when running an event | Health & Safety | The health and safety is a legal requirement
Words: 3072 - Pages: 13
SUBJECT BUSINESS ETHICS PROFESSOR CYRUS GONDA TOPIC UNETHICAL PRACTISE IN FOLLOWING SECTORS: HOSPITAL GROSSERY HOTEL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY JOURNALISM GYMNASIUM INTERIOR INSURANCE UNETHICAL PRACTISE IN DIFFERENT SECTORS Hospital No profession is more fundamentally rooted in an ethic than medicine. In the 21st century, almost every young American physician graduates from medical school by reciting some version of an oath of ethical behavior first sworn to by doctors in the fifth
Words: 4237 - Pages: 17
Reflective Observation In our survey for the ethics and moral values subject, we are trying to find out how ethical behaviors or values have change from their prior generations to current generations. Anna interviewed two people in her company, “Enbridge Pipeline Inc”, she chose an employee that has been there for 50 years (Employee A) and another employee that has been in the workforce for less than 5 years (Employee B). When we interview both employees regarding question #7 (refer to Appendix
Words: 1562 - Pages: 7
Ethics in business research Chapter outline Introduction Ethical principles Harm to participants Lack of informed consent Invasion of privacy Deception 122 128 128 132 136 136 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 145 Other ethical and legal considerations Data management Copyright Reciprocity and trust Affiliation and conflicts of interest The difficulties of ethical decision-making Checklist Key points Questions for review © Oxford University Press 2011. Alan Bryman and Emma Bell. Business Research
Words: 16772 - Pages: 68
ethical and are members of management morally responsible for the preventable Pinto fire deaths? In the following paper, several sources will be used to enlighten the reader as to the controversy surrounding the Ford Pinto, facts and myths, and how Ford chose to market the Pinto in light of the knowledge they held regarding the flawed engineering makeup of the automobile. LITERATURE REVIEW Ford
Words: 1922 - Pages: 8
Introduction Business ethics are not as complicated or abstract as one might think. A simple way to evaluate whether or not a practice is ethical is to determine the ultimate effect of that practice. For example, if the manager of a store paid his cleaning employee less than the going rate to clean his store, knowing exactly what the going rate is, several things could happen to damage the business. The employee could suffer serious financial implications or the employee could leave and find another
Words: 10765 - Pages: 44
right thing -- but "the right thing" is not nearly as straightforward as conveyed in a great deal of business ethics literature. Most ethical dilemmas in the workplace are not simply a matter of "Should Bob steal from Jack?" or "Should Jack lie to his boss?" (Many ethicists assert there's always a right thing to do based on moral principle, and others believe the right thing to do depends on the situation -- ultimately it's up to the individual.) Many philosophers consider ethics to be the "science of
Words: 7577 - Pages: 31