CH 5 Slides
CH 5 Slides
CH 5 Slides
Chapter 5
Socially-Conscious
Management
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Learning Objectives
5.1 Discuss what it means to be socially responsible and
what factors influence that decision.
5.2 Explain green management and how organizations can
go green.
5.3 Discuss the factors that lead to ethical and unethical
behavior.
Develop your skill at creating trust in work groups.
5.4 Describe management’s role in encouraging ethical
behavior.
Know how to make good decisions about ethical
dilemmas.
5.5 Discuss current social responsibility and ethics issues.
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From Obligations to Responsiveness to
Responsibility
• Social obligation: when a firm engages in social
actions because of its obligation to meet certain
economic and legal responsibilities
• Classical view: the view that management’s only
social responsibility is to maximize profits
Exhibit 5-2 uses the terms shades of green to describe the different environmental
approaches that organizations may take.
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Evaluating Green Management Actions
• Company-issued reports on environmental
performance
• ISO 9000 (quality management) and ISO 14000
(environmental management) standards
• Global 100 list of the most sustainable
corporations in the world
Exhibit 5-3 shows factors that determine ethical and unethical behavior.
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Stage of Moral Development
• Preconventional level
• Conventional level
• Principled level
Exhibit 5-4 shows the three levels and six stages of moral development.
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Individual Characteristics
• Values
• Ego strength
• Locus of control
As Exhibit 6-5 shows, six characteristics determine issue intensity or how important an
ethical issue is to an individual: greatness of harm, consensus of wrong, probability of
harm, immediacy of consequences, proximity to victim(s), and concentration of effect.
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Issue Intensity
• The six factors suggest that:
– the larger the number of people harmed
– the more agreement that the action is wrong
– the greater the likelihood that the action will cause
harm
– the more immediately the consequences of the action
will be felt
– the closer the person feels to the victim
– The more concentrated the effect of the action on the
victim(s)…
• The greater the issue intensity or importance
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Ethics in an International Context
• Ethical standards are not universal
• Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
• United Nations Global Contract
Exhibit 5-6 shows the UN Global Compact, which asks companies to embrace, support,
and enact, within their sphere of infuence, a set of core values in the areas of human rights,
labor standards, the environment, and anti-corruption.
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Exhibit 5-6
The Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact (2 of 2)
Principle Number Principle Text
Environment blank
Anti-Corruption blank
Principle 10 Business should work against corruption in all its forms, including
extortion and bribery.
Exhibit 5-6 shows the UN Global Compact, which asks companies to embrace, support,
and enact, within their sphere of infuence, a set of core values in the areas of human rights,
labor standards, the environment, and anti-corruption.
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Employee Selection
• Values-based management: the organization’s
values guide employees in the way they do their
jobs
Exhibit 5-7 shows the three categories into which the content of codes of ethics falls.
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Exhibit 5-7
Codes of Ethics (2 of 3)
Cluster 2. Do Not Do Anything Unlawful or Improper That Will Harm the
Organization
1. Conduct business in compliance with all laws.
2. Payments for unlawful purposes are prohibited.
3. Bribes are prohibited.
4. Avoid outside activities that impair duties.
5. Maintain confidentiality of records.
6. Comply with all antitrust and trade regulations.
7. Comply with all accounting rules and controls.
8. Do not use company property for personal benefit.
9. Employees are personally accountable for company funds.
10. Do not propagate false or misleading information.
11. Make decisions without regard for personal gain.
Exhibit 5-7 shows the three categories into which the content of codes of ethics falls.
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Exhibit 5-7
Codes of Ethics (3 of 3)
Exhibit 5-7 shows the three categories into which the content of codes of ethics falls.
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Developing Codes of Ethics
• Organizational leaders should model appropriate behavior
and reward those who act ethically.
• Managers should reaffirm the importance of the ethics
code and discipline those who break it
• Stakeholders should be considered as an ethics code is
developed or improved
• Managers should communicate and reinforce the ethics
code regularly
• Managers should use the five-step process to guide
employees when faced with ethical dilemmas
Exhibit 5-8 shows the five-step process to guide employees when faced with ethical
dilemmas.
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Leadership at the Top
• Doing business ethically requires a commitment
from managers at all levels, but especially the top
level because:
– they uphold the shared values and set the
cultural tone
– they’re role models in both words and actions
Exhibit 5-9 gives some suggestions on how managers can provide ethical leadership.
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Protection of Employees Who Raise Ethical
Issues
• Whistle-blower: individual who raises ethical
concerns or issues to others