How Multitasking Affects Ethics
(View Complete Item Description)Clifford Nass discusses the long-term effects of multitasking and social networking on attention spans.
Material Type: Reading
Clifford Nass discusses the long-term effects of multitasking and social networking on attention spans.
Material Type: Reading
A free-market approach to establishing reliability.
Material Type: Reading
The role of rushing in ethical lapses.
Material Type: Reading
An examination of growing income inequalities between rich and poor in the United States.
Material Type: Reading
Robert Finocchio, former CEO of Informix, offers prescriptions for making ethics part of strategy.
Material Type: Reading
A definition of insider trading and tips on preventing the problem.
Material Type: Reading
A definition of and scenarios about insider training, plus suggestions about what businesses can do to discourage it.
Material Type: Reading
Practical suggestions for corporate board members on the ethical aspects of insolvency and bankruptcy.
Material Type: Reading
Is it wrong for an Internet company to share users' information with third-parties and advertisers?
Material Type: Case Study
Chief legal officer of Millennium Management discusses making internal audit an integral part of an organization's ethical culture.
Material Type: Reading
Vice Chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery John W. Noble explores how laws, regulations, and ethical principles work together in corporate governance.
Material Type: Reading
An outline of the key themes of the papal ecyclical on economic issues.
Material Type: Reading
Best practices for companies investigating corruption and other violations.
Material Type: Reading
Wal-Mart is frequently the target of criticism for its employment practices and its effect on the larger economy and community. How should consumers evaluate these issues?
Material Type: Reading
The complexity of modern business requires a climate where virtue flourishes as opposed to venality, careerism and greed. Through theological and religious studies and opportunities for spiritual development, Jesuit business education helps its graduates (regardless of their religious or non-religious tradition) develop an ethical and spiritual inner compass. It directs them toward cooperation with all persons of good will committed to (trans)forming business in a manner consistent with human purpose and dignity. At the same time, the Jesuit trained leader is forewarned of the reality of human imperfections and social distortions evident in business history. The Jesuit perspective shares with the student a commitment to progress in hope. It rejects any utopian model of human or institutional perfection through an understanding that business institutions and economies are created by human beings and must be changed by human beings. As part of their understanding of calling graduates are prepared for self-sacrifice in order to help secure justice for all in every sphere that business touches.
Material Type: Reading
Video of a conversation with Hank Shea, former federal prosecutor and professor of law at St. Thomas University.
Material Type: Lecture
An interview with Center Executive Director Kirk O. Hanson.
Material Type: Reading
Five takeaways from a meeting on Business Ethics in China.
Material Type: Reading
New technologies allow employers to check whether employees are wasting time at recreational Web sites or sending unprofessional e-mails. But when do an employer's legitimate business interests become an unacceptable invasion of worker privacy?
Material Type: Reading
Dirksen Professor of Business Ethics Manuel Velasquez asks the question, Is a company responsible for the uses to which customers put its products?
Material Type: Reading