Actors-in-Time: A Proposed Real Time, Decisional Model for Evaluating the Ethical Content of Decisions in the Financial Services Industry
A number of theoretical approaches to ethical decision making in the business context are criticized as being too complex and cumbersome to be useful in day to day decision making. By way of a potential solution, the authors present a universalistic, real-time model for assessing and resolving ethic...
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Published in | Teaching business ethics (Dordrecht) Vol. 6; no. 1; p. 137 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Dordrecht
Springer Nature B.V
01.02.2002
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | A number of theoretical approaches to ethical decision making in the business context are criticized as being too complex and cumbersome to be useful in day to day decision making. By way of a potential solution, the authors present a universalistic, real-time model for assessing and resolving ethical decisions. Utilizing this model requires students and practitioners to evaluate their decisions according to two dimensions. In the first dimension, stakeholders are identified as either ''insiders'' or ''outsiders'' relating to the differential advantages and/or disadvantages a decision has on these two groups. With the second dimension, consequences for the short term and long term for these two stakeholder groups are assessed. The paper concludes with an illustration from real financial services business decisions as viewed through the model. These examples provide readers a sense of the model's potential for consulting and pedagogical purposes. |
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ISSN: | 1382-6891 1573-1944 |