ETHICAL DECISION MAKING BY INDIVIDUALS IN ORGANIZATIONS: AN ISSUE-CONTINGENT MODEL THOMAS M. JONES University of Washington The Academy of Management Review‚ Vol. 16‚ No. 2. (Apr.‚ 1991)‚ pp. 366-395. Abstract Existing theoretical models of individual ethical decision making in organizations place little or no emphasis on characteristics of the ethical issue itself. This article (a) proposes an issue-contingent model containing a new set of variables called moral intensity: (b) using
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Ethical Standards and Decision Making Introduction There are ten different standards in the code of ethics. All of these standards are important in their own way. However‚ Competence in psychology is possibly more important. Competence is important because the knowledge available in the psychology field is forever changing. There is always something new to learn and to stay up to date on all information in psychology can be very overwhelming. With these ten standards being known‚ the next thing
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Ethics is the principles one uses to make an outright decision. It also refers to the standards of how humans react in different conditions in which they find themselves as many things such as parents‚ professionals‚ friends and so on. After reading the two articles ¨Thinking Ethically¨ which reviews theoretical approaches to ethical decision making‚ ¨A Framework for Ethical Decision Making¨ which describes a model of ethical decision making and ¨The Case of the Sole Remaining Supplier¨ which talk
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BUS 204-OL Reflection on personal approach to ethical decision making in the workplace June 1‚ 2010 My personal approach to ethical decision making in the workplace has been fairly easy thus far. Being a stay at home mom for much of my early days and working for the same organization the last fifteen years has not provided a multitude of different environments in which I can compare one to the other. I can say through the years‚ however‚ I have seen the sensitivity increased around the subject
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Trevino & Nelson Ethical Decision Making (Privacy Pressures TEAM 2) Instruction: Details: 1. Gather the Facts. • 2. Define the Ethical Issues (I) in moral terms (e.g.‚ Is X action morally right‚ given Y?). 3. Identify the affected Parties. Utilitarian View Virtue Ethics 4. Identify the Consequences. State: (a) the consequentialist principle (CP) used to assess the actions of the decision maker (e.g.‚ egoism‚ utilitarianism); (b) the standard implicit in this principle (e.g.‚ action
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Ethical Decision Making in the Workplace Sara had to make a harsh but responsible decision in this episode to terminate shift supervisor Ronnie’s employment. I don’t feel that this was a decision that Sara wanted to make but it was the right decision for the future success of the business. Sara’s decision was primarily based on Ronnie’s terrible attitude towards the customer’s but he also didn’t have the best work ethic or customer service skills. Ronnie displayed many negative traits for someone
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and never get them to believe something that doesn’t exist. Carol Gilligan maintains that the morality of males is different from that of females. Males view rules and principles as necessary to proceed in a practice (a game‚ an art‚ a science‚ the making and sustaining of a community). Females‚ on the other hand‚ give fundamental importance to the consistency of relationships with other people. Gilligan describes male morality as a morality of principles
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Merck and Vioxx: An Examination of an Ethical Decision-Making Model Erin Cavusgil ABSTRACT. Marketing researchers have proposed various conceptual models of ethical decision-making to better clarify the steps in the decision-making process. However‚ lacking in the literature is comprehensive empirical validation of these models. This manuscript examines the ethical decision-making model proposed by Ferrell et al. [1989‚ Journal of Macromarketing 56(Fall)‚ 55–64] in the context of a real-world
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(1) Decision-making strategies (2) (a) Decision-making (b) Heuristics‚ Cognitive Processes (3) American Psychologist Association (4) Nonrational Processes in Ethical Decision Making. Volume 66 no. 7 (5) Mark D. Rogerson‚ Michael C. Gottlieb‚ Mitchell M. Handelsman‚ Samuel Knapp‚ Jeffrey Younggren. (2011). American Psychological Association. Nonrational Processes in Ethical Decision Making‚ 66(7)‚ 614 – 623. (6) The purpose of this study is to find a way for ethical decision
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Ethical Decision-Making Model Paper Athena Falconer COM/450 Ethics and Communication January 19‚ 2014 University of Phoenix Courtney Shobert BAAG1FHV59 Ethical Decision-Making Model Paper Ethics are not gained in one day. Ethics are built over time from experiences. From childhood to adulthood these learned behaviors add to traits that help shape an individual; they complete who one is and what one believes. Ethics guides individual’s understandings of the concepts of right and wrong. In everything
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