9 resultados para Ethical Dilemmas
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Adjustment to emerging economies is benefited if Western expatriates recognise they are experiencing a liminal situation, which can lead to the instrumental utilisation of coping strategies as equivalent to rites of passage between distinct ethical frameworks. Given the characteristics ascribed to rites, the ethical dilemma resulting from the simultaneous demand to abide by local rules and to respect Western ethical principles is more easily solved. Consequently, effective and sustainable adjustment is favoured. Implications for organisations and individuals are discussed.
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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This paper provides an ongoing analysis to one of the biggest ethical and financial scandals in Portugal – Banco Espírito Santo (BES). BES was considered one of the three best banks but it went bankrupted and its employees were transferred to a new entity – Novo Banco. This study was conducted in order to provide an understanding of the employees’ side, which has been forgotten so far. An ethical scandal (sensebreaking) creates ambiguity and uncertainty which triggers new sensemaking processes in order to understand and derive meaning from the new reality. The methodology followed was semi-structured interviews to employees both from the branches and the central services. We found evidence that in organizations with strong identification, unethical behavior has a significant impact on followers’ – the new process of sensemaking is particularly important in this situation because employees suffer more from the disruption of their reality.
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Recently, unethical conduct in the workplace has been a focus of literature and media. Unethical pro-organizational behavior (UPB) refers to unethical conduct that employees engage in to benefit the organization. Given the complexity of UPB, there is an increasing need to understand how and under what conditions this attitude originates within organizations. Based on a sample of 167 employees and seven organizations, results support the moderated mediation model. An ethical leader increases employees’ organizational affective commitment which increases the likelihood to engage in UPB. However, the indirect relationship diminishes when employees feel authentic at work.
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Consumers’ indecisions about the ethical value of their choices are amongst the highest concerns regarding ethical products’ purchasing. This is especially true for Fair Trade certified products where the ethical attribute information provided by the packaging is often unacknowledged by consumers. While well-informed consumers are likely to generate positive consumer reactions to ethical products and increase its ethical consumption, less knowledgeable buyers show different purchasing patterns. In such circumstances, decisions are often driven by socio-cultural beliefs about the low functional performance of ethical or sustainable attributes. For instance, products more congruent with sustainability (e.g., produce) are considered to be simpler but less tasty than less sustainable products. Less sustainable products instead, are considered to be more sophisticated and to provide consumers with more hedonic pleasures (e.g., chocolate mousse). The extent that ethicality is linked with experiences that provide consumers with more pain than pleasure is also manifested in pro-social social behaviors. More specifically through conspicuous self-sacrificial consumption experiences like running for charity in marathons with wide public exposure. The willingness of consumers to engage in such costly initiatives is moderated by gender differences and further, mediated by the chronic productivity orientation of some individuals to use time in a productive manner. Using experimental design studies, I show that consumers (1) use a set of affective and cognitive associations with on-package elements to interpret ethical attributes, (2) implicitly associate ethicality with simplicity, and that (3) men versus women show different preferences in their forms of contribution to pro-social causes.
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This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Journal of Business Ethics following peer review. The version of record Neves, P., & Story, J. (2015). Ethical Leadership and Reputation: Combined Indirect Effects on Organizational Deviance. Journal of Business Ethics, 127(1), 165–176. “The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10551-013-1997-3”.
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Dissertação apresentada na Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa para a obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia do Ambiente, perfil Gestão de Sistemas Ambientais
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EUROPEAN MASTER’S DEGREE IN HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEMOCRATISATION Academic Year 2007/2008
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RESUMO - Este trabalho de projecto visa responder à questão de saber como gerir uma unidade de ética num serviço público central de saúde pública, “de forma racional e informada”, definindo os seus objectivos estratégicos (Baranger, citando Drucker, 1990) utilizando como caso de estudo o Gabinete de Assuntos Jurídicos, Ética e Responsabilidade, adiante designado por Gabinete, da Direcção‐Geral da Saúde. Para o efeito, fez‐se, em primeiro lugar, uma abordagem teórica descritiva das bases filosóficas da ética realçando a sua aplicação prática na determinação das características dos sistemas de saúde. Em seguida, analisa‐se a utilização do conceito de ética no âmbito da Saúde Pública, no contexto da bioética, verificando‐se elementos distintivos que parecem justificar a autonomização do conceito de ‘Ética em Saúde Pública’. Para tal, foram consultadas as principais fontes de princípios éticos em saúde, tais como a Declaração Universal dos Direitos do Homem, a Declaração de Helsínquia, bem como a Constituição da República Portuguesa e os Códigos Deontológicos das profissões de saúde. Nesta fase do trabalho é pesquisada, nas perspectivas nacional e internacional, a existência de unidades de ética, congéneres ou de âmbito similar, bem como respectivas áreas e níveis de intervenção, tendo‐se nesse sentido auscultado as entidades idóneas dos Estados‐Membros da União Europeia. Na segunda parte do trabalho de projecto, desenvolveu‐se o planeamento estratégico através da aplicação da metodologia balanced scorecard, apresentando‐se uma proposta de objectivos estratégicos e iniciativas a serem desenvolvidas pelo gabinete de ética sub judice, para um horizonte temporal fixado em três anos. Da utilização desta metodologia resultaram doze objectivos estratégicos, dos quais se destacam: ‘fomentar a discussão ética’; ‘promover a igualdade dos utentes do SNS’; e ‘identificar prioridades de actuação’. Entre as iniciativas a desenvolver salienta‐se o desenho de um questionário, a aplicar às comissões de ética do sistema de saúde com o objectivo de identificar prioridades de actuação do Gabinete. O trabalho finaliza‐se com as conclusões, recomendações e linhas de investigação que se considera deverem ser desenvolvidas, num futuro próximo, para o aprofundamento da matéria alvo deste estudo. ------------------ABSTRACT - This research‐project aims to answer the question of how to manage a unit of ethics within the directorate‐general of public health in a "rational and informed” way, defining their strategic goals (Baranger, quoting Drucker, 1990) using as case study the Office of Legal Affairs, Ethics and Responsibility, hereinafter referred as the Office, of the Directorate‐General of Health. For this purpose, the first part of the study, includes a framework description of the main philosophical basis of ethics, emphasizing that its practical application determines the characteristics of health systems; the use of the concept of ethics of Public Health in the context of bioethics was analyzed, and distinctive elements were found that seem to justify the autonomy of the concept of 'Ethics of Public Health'. The main sources of this part were the fundamental ethical principles in health, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Helsinki Declaration, and also the Constitution of the Portuguese Republic and the Codes of Ethics of the health professions. At this stage of the study a description is also made, at both a national and international perspective, on the existence of similar units of ethics or with similar scope, and their areas and levels of intervention. For the international dimension the appropriate bodies of the Member States the European Union were consulted. In the second part of the research‐project, a strategic planning for the Office was designed, using the balanced scorecard methodology, and a proposal of the strategic objectives and initiatives to be developed within a time schedule of three years are presented. The use of this method resulted in twelve strategic objectives, among which we note the following: 'to promote the ethical discussion'; 'to promote equality of users of the NHS'; and ‘to identify priorities for action’. The design of a questionnaire to be answered by the ethics committees for health of the Portuguese health system, in order to identify priorities for the Office’s activities is also presented in the study. The work ends with the conclusions and recommendations, as well as a suggestion of lines for future research to further investigate the subject of this study.