Managing Ethical Risks and Crises: Beyond Legal Compliance
Diane Huberman Arnold, Keith Arnold, Vanessa J. Arnold
.
DOI: 10.4236/blr.2010.11001   PDF    HTML     8,385 Downloads   17,446 Views   Citations

Abstract

Recent interest in culture stems from its power to explain corporate and organizational failures. Such failures are both internal and external: accounting fraud, management misconduct, harassment and bullying in the workplace, racism, sexism, environmental issues, and health and safety concerns. Current theory holds that these failures are to be explained partly by the particular, poor organizational culture and unhealthy climate, poor leadership, and by the misdeeds of a few bad apples. When economic conditions are negative, organizations look to legislation, regulations, and codes, to reform their culture, and manage the risks of organizational failure. Both the compliance strategy, demanding obedience to laws, regulations and codes, and the integrity or values strategy, focusing on ethics training, education, tone at the top, and the hiring of employees with integrity and values, are the mainstay of recent legislation and regulations in North America and the European Union. We criticize the reliance on legislation, regulations and codes, the focus of a compliance solution which we find inadequate, ineffective, and unenforceable. We suggest reliance on a front-end, proactive and preventive program of best, precautionary practices, will better meet the challenge, in prosperity or poverty, of setting corporate culture on the right track.

Share and Cite:

D. Arnold, K. Arnold and V. Arnold, "Managing Ethical Risks and Crises: Beyond Legal Compliance," Beijing Law Review, Vol. 1 No. 1, 2010, pp. 1-6. doi: 10.4236/blr.2010.11001.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Associated Press editorial (2004a). American Express Faces Disciplinary Action.
[2] Associated Press editorial (2004b). Report: Vioxx linked to thousands of deaths.
[3] Berman, Dennis, ed. 2000. Small virtues: entrepreneurs are more ethical. Business Week’s Frontier.
[4] Brugmann, Jeb and C.K. Prahalad. (2007). Co-creating business’s new social compact, Harvard Business Review. Card, Claudia. (2005). The atrocity paradigm: A theory of evil. New York: Oxford.
[5] Corporate Narc. (2010). Merck Accounting Scandal, accessed.
[6] Crane, Andrew & Dirk Matten. (2010). Business ethics: managing citizenship and sustainability in the age of globalization. Oxford: Oxford.
[7] Efstathious Jr., Jim. (2010). Drilling regulators banned by U.S. from dealing with friends, relatives. Bloomberg News.
[8] Ferrell, O.C., John Fraedrich & Linda Ferrell. (2008). Business Ethics: Ethical Decision Making and Cases. 6th ed., Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
[9] Ho, Vanessa. (2005). Cautious Optimism Greets Nortel’s Appointment of Ethics Chief. ITWorldCanada.com, Jan. 16.
[10] Huberman Arnold, Diane & Keith Arnold. (2010)Broken Organizations.
[11] Karakowsky, Len, Archie B., Carroll & Ann K. (2005). Buchholtz, Business and Society: Ethics and Stakeholder Management. Toronto: Nelson-Thomson.
[12] Levitt, Steven D. & Stephen J. (2005). Dubner. Freakonomics. New York: Harper Collins.
[13] London Times. (2010). Editorial. Private Life. Public Good.
[14] Marcinow, Diane M. (1996). The paradox of ethical resistance: why do individuals frequently encounter retaliation for ‘doing the right thing’? Proceedings of the Fifth Conflict Resolution Symposium. Ottawa: Carleton University. 64-81.
[15] Markkula. (2010). Center For Applied Ethics, Managing Risk Ethically podcast.
[16] McKay, Ruth & Diane Huberman Arnold. (2010). Sustainable Enterprise: Crisis Management and Culture Transformation.
[17] McShane, Steven L. (2001). Canadian Organizational Behaviour, 4th ed. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson.
[18] Paine, Lynn S. (1994). Managing for organizational integrity. Harvard Business Review. 17-106.
[19] Paine, Lynn S., Rohit Deshpande, Joshua D. Margolis & Kim Eric Bettcher. (2005). Up to code: Does your company’s conduct meet world-Class standards? Harvard Business Review. pp. 122-135.
[20] Putnam, Robert D. & Lewis M. Feldstein. (2003). Better Together: Restoring the American Community. New York: Simon and Schuster.
[21] Quinn, John. J. (1997). Personal ethics and business ethics: The ethical attitudes of owner/managers of small business. Journal of Business Ethics. 16(2). 119-127.
[22] Rocco, Fiammetta. (1992). American express: Vendetta against banking rival. The Economist.
[23] Sen, Amartya. (2007). Markets and the role of ethics in capitalism. Moral Issues in Business, 10th edition. William H. Shaw and Vincent Barry, eds. Belmont, CA: Thomson Wadsworth.
[24] Shaw, William H. & Vincent Barry. (2007). Moral Issues in Business, 10th ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson Wadsworth.
[25] Soifer, Eldon. (1997). Ethical Issues: Perspectives for Canada, 2nd ed., Peterborough, Ontario: Broadview.
[26] Trevino, L. K. & Katherine A. Nelson. (2007) Managing Business Ethics, 4th ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
[27] Vyakarnam, S., Bailey, A., Myers, A. & D. Burnett. (1997). Towards an understanding of ethical behavior in small firms. Journal Of Business Ethics. 16(15), 1625-36.
[28] Walker, David. (2007). Counter-Terrorism Strategy. London: Charity Commission.
[29] Weaver, Gary R., Linda Klebe Trevino & Philip L. Cochran. (1999). Corporate ethics programs as control systems: Influences of executive commitment and environmental factors. Academy of Management Journal, 42(1). 41-57.
[30] Woods, Richard & Richard Goss. (2009). The bullying of common sense. Sunday Times.
[31] Zola, émile. La Curée. (1874) Paris: Gallimard Folio Classique, ed. Henri Mitterand, 1999.
[32] Zola, émile. L’Assommoir. (1877) translated by Robert Lethbridge and Margaret Mauldon. New York: Oxford World’s Classics, 2009.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.