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  1. Corona and value change. The role of social media and emotional contagion.Steffen Steinert - 2020 - Ethics and Information Technology 23 (S1):59-68.
    People share their emotions on social media and evidence suggests that in times of crisis people are especially motivated to post emotional content. The current Coronavirus pandemic is such a crisis. The online sharing of emotional content during the Coronavirus crisis may contribute to societal value change. Emotion sharing via social media could lead to emotional contagion which in turn could facilitate an emotional climate in a society. In turn, the emotional climate of a society can influence society’s value structure. (...)
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  • The Dark Side of Firms’ Green Technology Innovation on Corporate Social Responsibility: Evidence from China.Xu Chu, Yuntao Bai & Congshan Li - 2024 - Journal of Business Ethics 195 (1):47-66.
    Green technology innovation (GTI) has been increasingly adopted by firms worldwide to promote sustainable development, whereas its potential downsides have been largely overlooked. Drawing on moral licensing theory, we devise a framework to reveal the potential dark side of firms’ GTI on corporate social responsibility (CSR). We argue that with the global eco-awakening, GTI has been an efficient means for firms to meet their stakeholders’ expectations and environmental legitimacy. This may cause a moral licensing effect for senior executives’ ethical strategic (...)
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  • Employee Overtime and Innovation Dilemma.Jingjing Yang & Caifu di FanLi - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-25.
    We examine the influence of human resource (HR) slack, specifically that accrued through employee overtime, on firm innovation in China. Leveraging textual analysis to gauge overtime levels, our findings reveal that although overtime increases innovation output, it does not enhance its quality. These results remain consistent even in firms with research and development personnel slack or those offering higher salaries. Additionally, no significant differences are observed between state-owned and non-state-owned firms in terms of overtime’s impact on innovation. Furthermore, the effect (...)
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  • Normative implications of postgenomic deterministic narratives: the case study of epigenetic harm.Emma Moormann - 2024 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 46 (4):1-26.
    What do we mean when we talk about epigenetic harm? This paper presents a multidimensional view of epigenetic harm. It is a plea to take a step back from discussions of epigenetic responsibility distributions prevalent in ELSA literature on epigenetics. Instead, it urges researchers to take a closer look at the normative role played by the concept of epigenetic harm. It starts out by showing that the ways in which the object of epigenetic responsibility has already been conceptualized are all (...)
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