Business Ethics and Corporate Responsibility Towards its Partners

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniela-Tatiana Corodeanu Agheorghiesei
2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 695-701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia H. Werhane

ABSTRACT:The first issue of Business Ethics Quarterly was launched in 1991. At that time there were few general principles that could serve as guidelines for global business. However, since 1991 a plethora of such principles have been developed to serve as guidelines and evaluative mechanisms for global corporate responsibilities. But operationalizing these principles in practice has been a challenge for most transnational corporations and even for smaller, more local enterprises. This is because, in some cases, the principles ask too much of companies. In other cases, the principles are ambiguous. And in still other cases, the principles, written by and large from a Western, rights-based perspective, cannot be operationalized in some cultural or religious settings. In this paper I will outline a series of dilemmas multinational enterprises face in the global market place, even when they sincerely sign on to one or another set of principles. These problems are not insurmountable, but in the imperfect world of commerce, require that our expectations of corporate responsibilities be satisficing rather than absolutist.


2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (04) ◽  
pp. v-xv ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis G. Arnold ◽  
Kenneth E. Goodpaster ◽  
Gary R. Weaver

2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffery Smith

ABSTRACT:In this address I argue that different perspectives on the normative foundations of corporate responsibility reflect underlying disagreements about the ideal arrangement of tasks between market and state. I initially recommend that scholars look back to the “division of moral labor” inspired by John Rawls’ seminal work on distributive justice in order to rethink why, and to what extent, corporations take on responsibilities normally within the purview of government. I then examine how this notion is related to recent theoretical work in the field of business ethics. I thereafter turn to provide a brief outline of an alternative view that sees corporations as having responsibilities in so far as markets are sites of delegated oversight over the production of social goods that might otherwise be administered by the state.


Food Ethics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Monique Janssens

AbstractThe aim of this paper is to take normative aspects of animal welfare in corporate practice from a blind spot into the spotlight, and thus connect the fields of business ethics and animal ethics. Using insights from business ethics and animal ethics, it argues that companies have a strong responsibility towards animals. Its rationale is that animals have a moral status, that moral actors have the moral obligation to take the interests of animals into account and thus, that as moral actors, companies should take the interests of animals into account, more specifically their current and future welfare. Based on this corporate responsibility, categories of corporate impact on animals in terms of welfare and longevity are offered, including normative implications for each of them. The article concludes with managerial implications for several business sectors, including the most animal-consuming and animal-welfare-threatening industry: the food sector. Welfare issues are discussed, including the issue of killing for food production.


Author(s):  
Jonathan Herring

This chapter examines the issue of business ethics. It first explains why business ethics matter. It then considers the notion of notion of corporate responsibility, and sets out policies and practices to ensure that businesses have an ethical dimension to their decision-making. The chapter explores the role of businesses in promoting worldwide social goods. It also considers the role of the lawyer in helping businesses to behave in an ethical way.


2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Donaldson

What a difference a decade makes. Ten years ago the term “stakeholder” was slang for any neglected group affected by a corporation. To be sure, the word had been molded with precision by a thin, important line of management theorists. And to be sure also the word was sometimes used by managers who wanted to justify their personal commitments to groups other than stockholders, such as employees and customers. But like slang, “stakeholder” seemed perfectly plastic and therefore conceptually flawed. It meant one thing to one person, something else to another.Today the term has arrived. Management journals and consultants flaunt it, and articles devoted to one or another interpretation of stakeholder theory are commonplace. Both the Encyclopedia of Management (Freeman 1998) and the Blackwell Encyclopedic Dictionary of Business Ethics (Freeman 1997) identify stakeholder theory as one of a tiny handful of recognized models for interpreting corporate responsibility. As the term rose to prominence, it acquired more solidity, and while varying interpretations of it can be found, a core of meaning pervades current stakeholder literature.The success of the stakeholder terminology and of its accompanying theory has not been accidental. One of the influential forces galvanizing attention was the six-year effort on the definition of the corporation, sponsored by the Sloan Foundation, that situated the stakeholder concept at the center of its project. Through this project, books, conferences, meetings with stakeholder groups, and finally the “Principles of Stakeholder Management,” commonly referred to as the “Clarkson Principles,” brought energy and interest to stakeholder research.


Author(s):  
Montserrat Díaz Méndez ◽  
Pablo Gutiérrez Rodríguez ◽  
José Luis Vázquez Burguete

La desconfianza generalizada hacia los dirigentes empresariales refuerza la importancia de la ética en la empresa, tanto en el ámbito meramente teórico-académico cuanto en la aplicación práctica de determinados principios morales a las actividades mercantiles. La responsabilidad social corporativa o empresarial es una concreción de la ética consistente en la asunción voluntaria por parte de las empresas de determinados comportamientos que implican una serie de obligaciones en su ámbito interno y externo. Se discute la necesidad o no de establecer por ley el contenido de la responsabilidad social corporativa y, por tanto, exigir su cumplimiento.Mantener su carácter voluntario no significa que el Estado no pueda establecer unas directrices claras sobre la dimensión social de las empresas, así como su implicación en la sociedad en la que viven y las ventajas para aquellas empresas que lo respeten. Los códigos éticos son un intento normativizador de la ética, que suponen un beneficio para el estado, ya que no se ve obligado a tener que producir normas de derecho positivo y crear sus correspondientes mecanismos de control de conflictos. Por su importancia económica, una especial atención ha merecido la regulación ética de las sociedades cotizadas. En cualquier caso, hay que concienciar de la necesidad de un comportamiento ético basado en la bondad y la justicia, partiendo de que quien actúa éticamente lo hace por convencimiento.<br /><br />The general distrust towards top management decisions has reinforced/ stressed the importance of business ethics. Social Corporate Responsibility (SCR) is an specific aspect of ethics. It implies the voluntary assumption of certain behaviours and values which may involve several obligations for the company that will affect it as a whole. Nowadays, there exists a discussion about the need of whether establishing or not a law on the content of fulfillment. In this sense, it is important to consider that keeping its voluntary character does not mean that government cannot establish some directives on social commitment.Ethical codes are an attempt to rule business ethics and imply a direct benefit for government since it avoids the obligation of producing laws and developing control mechanisms. Also, due to the economic importance of stock-listed companies, this paper pays an special attention to their ethical behaviour. As a general conclusion, we remark the idea of concerning society about the need of an ethical business behaviour based on goodness and justice values.


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