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Honest Work A Business Ethics Reader

Why We Work The Meaning of Work. ?From Curse to Calling: A Short History of the Meaning of Work" Joanne B. CiullaThe AncientsEarly ChristiansMedieval Occupational EthicsThe Renaissance: Work as CreativityThe Reformation: Work as a Moral QualityWork as Identity. Why We Work The Meaning of Work.

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Honest Work A Business Ethics Reader

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    1. Honest Work A Business Ethics Reader Joanne B. Ciulla Clancy Martin Robert C. Solomon

    2. Why We Work The Meaning of Work From Curse to Calling: A Short History of the Meaning of Work Joanne B. Ciulla The Ancients Early Christians Medieval Occupational Ethics The Renaissance: Work as Creativity The Reformation: Work as a Moral Quality Work as Identity

    3. Why We Work The Meaning of Work Hopping On and Off Career Track Michelle Quinn Sequencing Taking Time Off to Raise Children Returning to Work

    4. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace Respecting the Humanity in a Person Norman E. Bowie Application of Kants Respect for Persons Principle to Business Kants Justification of the Respect for Persons Principle What Does Kant Mean by this Principle?

    5. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace Exploring the Managed Heart Arlie Hochshild Producing Service: The Emotional Style of Offering the Service Is Part of the Service Itself Emotional Labor

    6. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace The Employer-Employee Relationship and the Right to Know Anita M. Superson Employee Awareness of Dangers in Workplace Employee Right to Know Not Accorded Full Protection by Law Nature of Employer-Employee Relationship Principle of Autonomy: Establishing the Right Implications of the Employee Right to Know

    7. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace The Ethics of Corporate Downsizing John Orlando The Moral Equality of Workers and Shareholders Property Rights Fiduciary Duties Risk Contracts The Utilitarian Argument

    8. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace The Ethics of Corporate Downsizing John Orlando Arguments Against Downsizing Harming Some to Benefit Others Legitimate Expectations Fairness Applying the Results

    9. Promises and Betrayals on the Job Ethics in the Workplace Antigay Jokes Annette Friskopp and Sharon Silverstein Strategies for Opposing Antigay Jokes Enlisting Management Support Fighting Humor with Humor The Ouch Technique I Dont Get It Coming Out

    10. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Is Business Bluffing Ethical? Albert Z. Carr Pressure to Deceive The Poker Analogy We Dont Make the Laws Cast Illusions Aside

    11. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Replies to Carr Timothy B. Blodgett No Medals for Honesty A Matter of Mutual Trust Playing Games?

    12. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Does It Pay to Bluff in Business? Norman E. Bowie Carrs Poker Analogy and Labor Relations Undermining Trust Undermining the Spirit of Cooperation

    13. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Is It Ever Right to Lie? Robert C. Solomon Distinguishing Kinds of Lying Telling Less Than the Whole Truth Telling a Biased Truth Idealizing Ones Products or Services Giving Intentionally Misleading Statements Stating Obvious Falsehoods Stating Vicious Falsehoods Comments on Carrs Poker Analogy

    14. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Defining Secrecy Some Crucial Distinctions Sissela Bok Differences Between Lying and Secrecy Depth of Secrecy (Sacredness, Intimacy, Privacy, etc.) Distinction Between Secrecy and Privacy Where Secrecy and Privacy Overlap Conflicts over Secrecy Two Presumptions Equality Partial Individual Control

    15. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Secrecy and Disclosure Richard T. De George Banks Obligation to Maintain Confidentiality Ethically Dubious Uses of Secret Accounts Banks Obligation to Disclose Certain Information

    16. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Giving Feedback: The Consultants Craft Sue De Wine Feedback Information on a Persons Behavior Information on What Impact That Behavior Can Have on Others Types of Feedback Evaluative Interpretive Descriptive

    17. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Giving Feedback: The Consultants Craft Sue De Wine Effective Feedback Useful Content Timeliness Clarity and Accuracy Tips on Providing Feedback

    18. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Do Management Gurus Lie? Evan M. Dudick Consulting Firms and Management Strategic Management Consulting Who Watches the Watch-Dogs?

    19. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Self-Deception The Economist How Did Enron Depend upon Deceit? Why Lies Require More Lies

    20. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Lies That Fail Paul Ekman and Mark G. Frank Lies Betrayed by Thinking Clues Lying About Feelings Feelings About Lying Fear of Being Caught Deception Guilt

    21. The Check Is in the Mail Honesty and Trust in Business Building Trust Robert C. Solomon and Fernando Flores The Misunderstanding of Trust Trust as an Emotional Skill Simple Trust Blind Trust Authentic Trust

    22. The Good Life Strategic Planning For the Good Life Robert C. Solomon Planning a Life Luck or Fate? Value Questions Question Yourself

    23. The Good Life On The Good Life Aristotle What Is the Highest of All Goods Achievable by Action? Life of Pleasure or Wealth Political Life Contemplative Life The Function of Man

    24. The Good Life On Pleasure Epicurus Pleasure vs. Pain Pleasure Is Freedom from Pain in the Body and from Trouble in the Mind We Act to Avoid Pain and Fear Pain Is the Absence of Pleasure

    25. The Good Life Wealth Andrew Carnegie Proper Administration of Wealth The Use of Great Fortunes The Problem of the Rich and the Poor

    26. The Good Life Greed Solomon Schimmel The Paradox of Greed Greed as a Source of Unhappiness

    27. The Good Life Leisure and Consumption Joanne B. Ciulla Work and Amusements Trading Leisure for Consumption

    28. The Good Life Integrity Lynne McFall Coherence Integrity and Importance Integrity, Friendship, and the Olaf Principle

    29. The Good Life Standing for Something Cheshire Calhoun Personal and Social Virtues Standing For Standing for Something Integrity as the Master Virtue

    30. The Good Life Your Money or Your Life Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin Having Enough The Pleasures of Frugality Frugality and Self-Respect

    31. The Good Life Impersonal Interests Bertrand Russell The Uses of Impersonal Interests Relaxation Sense of Proportion Happiness and Greatness of Soul

    32. The Good Life Why Ethics? Robert C. Solomon Ethical Errors End Careers More Quickly and Definitively Than Any Other Mistake in Judgment or Accounting Ethics Provides the Broader Framework Within Which Business Life Must Be Understood Nothing Is More Dangerous to a Business or to Business in General Than a Tarnished Public Image

    33. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics Ethical Issues for Accountants Richard T. De George Ethical Issues The Accounting Rules Regulation and Efficiency

    34. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics Lies, Damned Lies, and Managed Earnings Carol J. Loomis Expectations as the Fundamental Reason for Managing Earnings The Fundamental Problem with Earnings-Management Obstacles in Pursuing Corporate Criminals

    35. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics Arthur Andersen Refugees Reflect on What Went Wrong Ed Cohen Unfairly Scapegoated? Difficult Accounting Due to Complex Business Structure

    36. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics The Individual Investor in Securities Markets: An Ethical Analysis Robert E. Frederick and W. Michael Hoffman Exactly What Kind of Investor Are We Talking About? What Sort of Justification Might Be Offered for Restricting the Investments of At-Risk Investors? If Some Investors Are Restricted, How Should It Be Done?

    37. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics Finance Ethics John R. Boatright Financial Markets Unfair Trading Practices Fair Conditions Financial Contracting Financial Services Fiduciaries and Agents Sales Practices Financial Services Firms Financial Management Balancing Competing Interests The Level of Risk Hostile Takeovers

    38. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics What Is Really Unethical About Insider Trading? Jennifer Moore Ethical Arguments Against Insider Trading Fairness Property Rights in Information Harm Is There Anything Wrong with Insider Trading? Information is Positive Profit by Creating Inside Information Free Riders Deflect Employee Attention to Major Changes Within Company

    39. Money, How We Get It, and Where It Goes Accounting, Finance, and Investment Ethics F.I.A.S.C.O. Frank Partnoy Derivatives Asian Fallout

    40. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Ring of Gyges Plato Constraints on Justice

    41. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice On Human Exchange and Human Differences Adam Smith Self-Love Differences in Talents The Effects of the Differences in Genius and Talent

    42. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice A Latin Viewpoint Latin Trade Wal-Mart in Latin America Economic Justice or Low Prices?

    43. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Exploitation of Need Joanne B. Ciulla Self-Enslavement Monkey Labor Wages for Time and Freedom

    44. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Justice as Fairness John Rawls The Initial Situation The Two Principles of Justice Guaranteeing Justice The General Conception of Justice

    45. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Rich and Poor Peter Singer Some Facts About Poverty Absolute Poverty Relative Poverty The Obligation to Assist

    46. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice A Capitalist Conception of Justice Irving Kristol Social Justice vs. Unqualified Justice Smiths Concepts of Justice and Sympathy A Realistic Conception of Justice

    47. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Justice Ruins the Market Friedrich von Hayek The Immoral Consequences of Morally Inspired Efforts In the Great Society Social Justice Becomes a Disruptive Force

    48. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice The Winner-Take-All-Game Eduard Garcia The Winner-Take-All Game Hollywood-Style Economics

    49. Who Gets What and Why? Fairness and Justice Comparable Worth: A Matter of Simple Justice Gerald W. McEntee Comparable Worth Pro and Con Arguments: Womens More Recent Entry into Workforce, etc. Upset Free Market and Require New Laws Dissimilar Jobs Costs Too Much

    50. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits Milton Friedman Business Social Responsibilities Corporate Executive Has a Social Responsibility in Capacity as a Businessman Shareholders Stakes Market Mechanism and Unanimity Political Mechanism and Conformity

    51. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory Why Shouldnt Corporations Be Socially Responsible? Christopher D. Stone The Promissory Argument The Agency Argument The Role Argument The Polestar Argument

    52. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory Corporate Moral Agency Peter A. French Accepting Corporations as Members of Moral Community Ordinary Responsibility and Ascription The Subjects Intentions with Ascription Corporate Intentions are Reducible to Human Intentions Corporate Internal Decision Structure

    53. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory A Stakeholder Theory of the Modern Corporation R. Edward Freeman The Attack on Managerial Capitalism The Legal Argument The Economic Argument A Stakeholder Theory of the Firm The Stakeholder Concept Stakeholders in the Modern Corporation The Role of Management

    54. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory Social Responsibility and Economic Efficiency Kenneth J. Arrow Improving the Efficiency of Business The Used-Car Argument

    55. Is the Social Responsibility of Businessto Increase Its Profits? Social Responsibility and Stakeholder Theory The Changing Basis of Economic Responsibility J. Maurice Clark Forecast of the Argument The Swing of the Pendulum Responsibility and the Liberal Economics

    56. When Innovation Bytes Back Ethics and Technology Intellectual Property Rights and Computer Software Deborah C. Johnson The Philosophical Basis of Property Natural Rights Argument Critique of Moral Rights In Software Against Ownership Consequentialist Arguments Conclusions from the Philosophical Analysis of Property Is it Wrong to Copy Proprietary Software?

    57. When Innovation Bytes Back Ethics and Technology Information Ethics in a Worldwide Context Elizabeth A. Buchanan Information Inequity Qualitatively-Grounded Inequities Information Commoditization The Internet: Perpetuating Inequity World Wide

    58. When Innovation Bytes Back Ethics and Technology Hacker Ethics Deborah C. Johnson Why Hack? Four Hacker Arguments Information Should Be Free Illustrating Security Problems No Harm Done Keeping Big Brother at Bay

    59. When Innovation Bytes Back Ethics and Technology Why the Future Doesnt Need Us Bill Joy Dystopias Technological Innovations Regulation and Creativity

    60. When Innovation Bytes Back Ethics and Technology In Defense of the Naked Mind Theodore Roszak The Computer and General Ludd Meanwhile, Back at the Carnival The End of the War Machine? The Advent of the Money Machine Edutainment The Ideal of the Online Commonwealth A Few More Words

    61. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales The Dependence Effect John Kenneth Galbraith The Theory of Consumer Demand Consumer Demand and Marketing and Salesmanship The Output of Society

    62. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales The Non Sequitur of the Dependence Effect Friedrich von Hayek Cultural Needs The Non Sequitur of the Dependence Effect

    63. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales Advertising and Behavior Control Robert L. Arrington Manipulation of Human Autonomy or Cost-Effective Information? Autonomous Desire Rational Desire and Choice Free Choice

    64. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales The Justification of Advertising in a Market Economy Alan Goldman Maximum Efficiency Maximization of Individual Freedoms Consumer Relevant Knowledge Moral Demands Regulations Social Effect of Advertising Rational Choices?

    65. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales The Bribed Soul Leslie Savan The Sponsored Life When Watching, Watch Out Big Lie, Little Lie Read the Box Assume No Relationships We Dont Buy Products Promotional Is Political Shepherding Herds of Individuals Follow the Flattery We Participate in Our Own Seduction

    66. The Art of Seduction The Ethics of Advertising, Marketing, and Sales The Ethics of Sales Thomas L. Carson Preliminaries: A Conceptual Roadmap The Common Law Principle of Caveat Emptor Holleys Theory Criticisms of Holley Toward a More Plausible Theory About the Ethics of Sales The Golden Rule

    67. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Liability Peter Huber Tort Liability From Consent to Coercion Strict Liability

    68. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Calculating Risks: Its Easier Said Than Done John Nesmith Universal Perception Factors Control vs. No Control Immediate vs. Chronic Natural vs. Manmade Risk vs. Benefit Imposed vs. Voluntary

    69. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers How We Got into This Mess Stanley J. Modic Product Liability Who Pays? Its Not Working Why Its Happening Impetus from Detroit Two Crises Cultivating the Market A Gloomy Prospect Solutions Coming Tort-Law Change

    70. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Strict Products Liability and Compensatory Justice George G. Brenkert Strict Product Liability Absolute Liability Assumptions of the Free Enterprise System

    71. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Fear of Living Henry Fairlie The Fear of Living The Groups Who Encourage the Fear

    72. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Too Many Lawyers, Too Many Suits Warren E. Burger Too Many Lawyers The Litigation Explosion Walter K. Olson Commercial Litigation Overworked System Necessary Evil? Contingency Fees Monopoly of the Field

    73. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers Pinto Madness Mark Dowie Fords Moral Mistake Cost-Benefit Analysis

    74. Things Fall Apart Product Liability and Consumers The Pinto Case and the Rashamon Effect Patricia Werhane The Rashamon Effect The Development of the Pinto

    75. You Know How to Whistle, Dont You? Whistleblowing, Company Loyalty, and Employee Responsibility Whistleblowing and Professional Responsibility Sissela Bok Nature of Whistleblowing Individual Moral Choice

    76. You Know How to Whistle, Dont You? Whistleblowing, Company Loyalty, and Employee Responsibility Some Paradoxes of Whistleblowing Michael Davis The Standard Theory Three Paradoxes A Complicity Theory Testing the Theory

    77. You Know How to Whistle, Dont You? Whistleblowing, Company Loyalty, and Employee Responsibility Whistleblowing and Employee Loyalty Ronald Duska Whistleblowing Moral Constraints for Whistleblowers The Team Model

    78. You Know How to Whistle, Dont You? Whistleblowing, Company Loyalty, and Employee Responsibility Four Concepts of Loyalty David E. Soles The Idealist Account The Common Sense Conception Loyalties as Norms The Minimalist Account

    79. You Know How to Whistle, Dont You? Whistleblowing, Company Loyalty, and Employee Responsibility Loyalty, Corporations and Community George D. Randels Loyalty, Duty, and Virtue What Is Loyalty? Loyalty and the Standard Account of Business Corporate Loyalty in the Postmodern Business World

    80. Think Local, Act Global International Business Jihad vs. McWorld Benjamin Barber The Clash of the Two Worlds The Dynamics of their Linkage Both Make War on the Sovereign Nation-State Indifference to Civil Liberty Virtues of Democracy are Lost

    81. Think Local, Act Global International Business The Lexus and the Olive Tree Thomas L. Friedman Globalization Lexus Factory vs. Olive Tree

    82. Think Local, Act Global International Business Trying Out Ones New Sword Mary Midgley Moral Isolationism Do Barriers Work Both Ways? Do Barriers Block Praise and Blame? What Is Involved in Judging?

    83. Think Local, Act Global International Business The Ethic of Compassion Dalai Lama Nying Je Chenmo Compassion In Our Daily Lives

    84. Think Local, Act Global International Business Values in Tension: Ethics Away from Home Thomas Donaldson Competing Answers Balancing the Extremes: Three Guiding Principles Defining the Ethical Threshold: Core Values Creating an Ethical Corporate Culture Conflicts of Development and Conflicts of Tradition

    85. Think Local, Act Global International Business Values in Tension: Ethics Away from Home Thomas Donaldson Guidelines for Ethical Leadership Treat Corporate Values and Formal Standards of Conduct as Absolutes Design and Implement Conditions of Engagement for Suppliers and Customers Allow Foreign Business Units to Help Formulate Ethical Standards and Interpret Ethical Issues In Host Countries, Support Efforts to Decrease Institutional Corruption Exercise Moral Imagination

    86. Think Local, Act Global International Business Doing Business in Dangerous Places The Economist Todays Risks How to Be Safer Simmering

    87. Think Local, Act Global International Business United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights The Common Standard for All Peoples and All Nations All Humans Are Born Free No Discrimination Life, Liberty, and Security of Person No One Shall Be Held in Slavery or Servitude No One Shall Be Subjected to Cruel, Inhumane Punishment Everyone Is a Person Before the Law All Are Equal Before the Law and Entitled Without Discrimination to Equal Protection of the Law Right to Effective Remedy by the Competent National Tribunal for Acts Violating the Fundamental Rights Granted by Law No One Shall Be Subjected to Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile Entitlement to a Fair and Public Hearing

    88. Think Local, Act Global International Business United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights Innocent Until Proven Guilty No One Shall Be Subjected to Arbitrary Interference of Privacy Freedom of Movement Within Borders of State; Everyone Has Right to Leave and Return to Own Country The Right to Seek Asylum in Other Countries; May Not Be Invoked for Non-political Crimes Right to Nationality; Right to Change Nationality Right to Marry and Found a Family; Free and Full Consent; Family is the Natural and Fundamental Group Unit of Society Right to Own Property Freedom of Thought, Conscience, and Religion Freedom of Opinion and Expression Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association Right to Take Part in Own Government

    89. Think Local, Act Global International Business United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights Right to Social Security Right to Work; Equal Pay; Just and Favorable Remuneration; Right to Form Unions Right to Rest and Leisure Right to Standard of Living Adequate for the Health and Well-Being of Self and Family; Motherhood and Childhood Right to Special Care Right to Education; Promoting Understanding; Parents Choice Right to Freely Participate in Community Right to the Social and International Order to Participate in These Rights Duties to the Community; Limitations Only in Respect for the Rights of Others No Destruction of Any Rights

    90. Working with Mother Nature Environmental Ethics and Business Ecology At the Shrine of Our Lady Fatima or Why Political Questions Are Not All Economic Mark Sagoff Political and Economic Decisionmaking Substituting Efficiency for Safety Liberty: Ancient and Modern Values Are Not Subjective Preference or Principle? The Citizen as Joseph K.

    91. Working with Mother Nature Environmental Ethics and Business Ecology People or Penguins William F. Baxter Spheres of Freedom Criterion Waste is a Bad Thing Every Human Regarded as an End Rather Than a Mean The Incentive and Opportunity to Improve His Share of Satisfactions Should Be Preserved to Every Individual Optimal State of Pollution Difference Between Dollars and Resources

    92. Working with Mother Nature Environmental Ethics and Business Ecology Morality, Money, and Motor Cars Norman Bowie Business Has No Obligation to Protect the Environment Business Has the Obligation to Avoid Intervening in the Political Arena in Order to Weaken or Defeat Environmental Legislation Business Has Obligation to Obey the Law The Noninterventionist Policy

    93. Working with Mother Nature Environmental Ethics and Business Ecology The Place of Nonhumans in Environmental Issues Peter Singer Humans and Nonhumans Speciesism Nonhumans Have Interests Equal Consideration of Interests Examples The Meat Industry

    94. Working with Mother Nature Environmental Ethics and Business Ecology Rain-forest Chic Jon Entine Environmental Popularity Self-Interest vs. Ethical Concerns

    95. The Gift that Keeps on Asking Reciprocity and Conflicts of Interest Nepotism in American Business Adam Bellow Nepotism Old and New Good and Bad

    96. The Gift that Keeps on Asking Reciprocity and Conflicts of Interest A Quick Look at the History of Bribes John T. Noonan, Jr. Bribes History of Bribes Universality of Bribes Concept Counter to Normal Expectations Religious Origins Religious Ambivalence The Double Message Bribe/Gift Distinction Open Bribes Bribes in Business Ideologically Neutral Enforcement of Law Against Bribes Sanctions Against Bribes Attention to Contemporary Corruption Material Injury

    97. The Gift that Keeps on Asking Reciprocity and Conflicts of Interest Ethics and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Mark Pastin and Michael Hooker History of the FCPA Ethical Analysis of the FCPA

    98. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership What Is Good Leadership? Joanne B. Ciulla Our Fascination with Pizzazz Its Great to Be King! The Challenge of Consistency Machiavellianism and Robinhoodism The Intersection of Ethics and Effectiveness Unethical or Stupid? Blinding Morality

    99. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership Is It Better to Be Loved than Feared? Niccolo Machiavelli Moral Qualities in a Leader

    100. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership The Bathsheba Syndrome: The Ethical Failure of Successful Leaders Dean C. Ludwig and Clinton O. Longnecker The Story of David and Bathsheba Success as an Antecedent to Ethical Failure The Dark Side of Success Advice to Successful Leaders

    101. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership A Kantian Theory of Leadership Norman E. Bowie Kantian Leadership and the Development of Autonomy Kingdom of Ends Formulation of the Categorical Imperative Subjection to Moral Law Leader as a Decision-Proposer The Norms for Decisions Guiding Principles for Leaders

    102. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership What Is Transforming Leadership? James MacGregor Burns FDR and the Pursuit of Change Transactional Leadership Transforming Leadership Empowerment Emotions in Leader-Follower Relationships Charisma

    103. When the Buck Stops Here Leadership Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness Robert Greenleaf Who Is the Servant-Leader? Everything Begins with the Initiative of an Individual What Are You Trying to Do?

    104. Whos Minding the Store? The Ethics of Corporate Governance Who Rules the Corporation? Ralph Nader, Mark Green, and Joel Seligman Revamping the Board Election of the Board A New Role for Shareholders

    105. Whos Minding the Store? The Ethics of Corporate Governance Power and Accountability: The Changing Role of the Corporate Board of Directors Irving S. Shapiro Boards Changing for the Better Five Basic Jobs Boards Need Windows

    106. Whos Minding the Store? The Ethics of Corporate Governance Who Should Control The Corporation? Henry Mintzberg Nationalize It Democratize It Regulate It Pressure It Trust It Ignore It Induce It If the Shoe Fits

    107. Whos Minding the Store? The Ethics of Corporate Governance Employee Voice in Corporate Governance: A Defense of Strong Participation Rights John J. McCall Defenses Dignity, Fairness, Self-Respect, Health, Democracy Property Rights Objections Adjucating the Rights Conflict Autonomy, Fairness, Utility, Democracy Conclusion: The Employee Tight to Co-determine Corporate Policy Has Presumptive Force

    108. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Two Kinds of Commerce Aristotle The Art of Wealth Getting Retail Trade The Business of the Statesman

    109. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market The Benefits of Capitalism Adam Smith The Improvements in Machinery The Woolen Coat The Complexity and Organization of Fabor

    110. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Adam Smiths Relevance to Contemporary Economic Theory Patricia Werhane Adam Smith: Hardly a Utopian Five Conditions to a Just Operation of Unregulated Economy Perfect Liberty, Internal Self-Restraint, Coordination, Laws of Justice, and Perfect Competition

    111. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Commodity Fetishism Karl Marx Commodity, Use Value, and Exchange Value The Mystical, Mysterious Commodity Fetishism of Commodities

    112. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Reflections on the Triumph of Capitalism Robert Heilbroner Socialism vs. Capitalism Normative Claims Descriptive Stance

    113. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Laissez-faire and Education John Stuart Mill Authoritative Interference Legitimate Interference

    114. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Buddhist Economics E. F. Schumacher Right Livelihood The Function of Work Liberation from the Attachment of Wealth Character in Economics

    115. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market The Economics of Poverty Amartya Sen Reasons for Poverty Defeating Poverty The ethics of Famine

    116. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Pecuniary Emulation and Conspicuous Consumption Thorstein Veblen Pecuniary Emulation Property is the Nature of Trophy, the Accepted Badge of Efficiency

    117. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism Daniel Bell Culture as the Most Dynamic Component of Civilization Legitimation of Cultural Impulse The Glorification of Plenty The Liberal Answer to Social Problems Two Crises

    118. Is Everything for Sale? The Future of the Free Market Everything For Sale Robert Kuttner The Mixed Economy Capitalism as Laissez-Faire Balance of Market, State, and Civil Society

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