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  1. Theorising the Ethical Organization.Jane Collier - 1998 - Business Ethics Quarterly 8 (4):621-654.
    Abstract:The aim of this paper is to create a framework which can serve as a guide to the understanding of organizational ethicality. This is done by linking ethical and organizational theory. Organizational ethicality is about “being” as well as “doing”: relevant ethical theory is therefore both substantive (agent-centred, concerned with the “good”) as well as procedural (act-centred, concerned with the “right” in the sense of the moral or just thing to do). The ethical theories of Alasdair MacIntyre and Jurgen Habermas, (...)
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  • Can Ethics be Taught?: Perspectives, Challenges, and Approaches at Harvard Business School.Thomas R. Piper, Mary C. Gentile & Sharon Daloz Parks - 1993 - Harvard Business School Press.
    When business, government, and other professions fail to meet their responsibilities, it is most often not from an inadequacy of tools, techniques, and theory but from an absence of vision and a failure of leadership that saps all sense of individual or organizational purpose and responsibility. To address this concern, management education must be more than the transfer of skills. It should be a moral endeavor, a passing-on from one generation to the next of a kind of wisdom about responsible (...)
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  • [Book review] defining moments, when managers must choose between right and right. [REVIEW]Joseph Badaracco - 1999 - Business Ethics Quarterly 9 (1):163-167.
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