Skip to main content (Press Enter).
Sign in
Skip auxiliary navigation (Press Enter).
Contact Us
Code of Conduct
aom.org
Join the Division
Skip main navigation (Press Enter).
Toggle navigation
Home
About us
Domain Constitution and Policy
Division Officers
Five-Year Review
Meeting Minutes
Community
Newsletters
Impact & Outreach
Impact/Outreach Committee
Research
Research Committee
SIM Research Activities
SIM-Related Journals
Curriculum Development
Curriculum Development Committee
Class Activities to Use
SIM Textbooks and Syllabi
Internet Sources
Other Teaching-Related Resources
Global Scholars
Global Scholar Committee
Member Activities
Membership Committee
Groups and Organizations
Webinar Recordings and Slides
Responding to Peer Reviews
Reviewing for SIM
Reviewing Best Practices (Jan. 2025)
Reviewing Best Practices (Jan. 2024 #1)
Reviewing Best Practices (Jan. 2024 #2)
SIM Awards
Events
AOM Events
National Calendar
Our Events
File Library
Library Documents
Standalone Library
Discussion: View Thread
Expand all
|
Collapse all
Save the date: Rob Hughes (Rutgers) at Fordham EIB Seminar - December 6 (5 pm EST)
1.
Save the date: Rob Hughes (Rutgers) at Fordham EIB Seminar - December 6 (5 pm EST)
Like
Miguel Alzola
Posted 11-07-2024 09:28
Options Dropdown
Dear colleagues,
Our last Fordham Ethics in Business Seminar of 2024 will be on Friday, December 6.
Robert Hughes (Rutgers) will present his paper on Heath's MFA titled "Is Competition Inherently Sleazy?"
Join us in person if you are around (Lincoln Center Campus, Room 324, 140 W 62nd St) or virtually. Please kindly
RSVP
here.
Full information, including an abstract, is below.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Miguel
FORDHAM ETHICS IN BUSINESS SEMINAR SERIES
Robert Hughes (Rutgers University)
"Is Competition Inherently Sleazy?"
Friday, December 6, 2024, 5:00-6:30 p.m. EST
Room 324, 140 W 62nd St., Lincoln Center Campus
Zoom is available for virtual attendees
Please kindly
RSVP
here
Abstract:
Joseph Heath presents his market failures approach to business ethics as a happy medium between cynicism and the idealism of traditional moral theories such as Kantian ethics, which Heath believes to be incompatible with important forms of competition. The market failures approach defends some real ethical limits in business, beyond following the law, but it condones certain deviations from the norms of everyday morality in the interest of economic efficiency. On this view, a certain level of sleaziness in business is permissible and inevitable, even if it is regrettable. I argue that Kantian ethics provides a better account of the ethics of competition than the market failures approach does. Kantian ethics is in fact compatible with competition, both on the market and in the workplace. On some key issues, notably including the issue of truthfulness and disclosure, Kantian ethics permits competitive strategies that the market failures approach forbids. Moreover, when Kantian ethics deems the reasoning behind a competitive strategy morally acceptable, it endorses the strategy without any ethical reservations. There is no reason to regard justified business practices as regrettable or sleazy.
Bio:
Robert Hughes is an associate professor of professional practice at Rutgers Business School--Newark and New Brunswick. His research in moral, legal, and political philosophy addresses ethical issues that arise in business, such as the ethics of lawbreaking, competitive pressures to do wrong, and the possibility of consensual yet wrongful exploitation.
______________________________
Miguel Alzola Ph. D.
Associate Professor of Ethics
Fordham University
×
New Best Answer
This thread already has a best answer. Would you like to mark this message as the new best answer?
Copyright Academy of Management. All rights reserved.
Powered by Higher Logic