College of
Business
Administration
The Legal and Ethical Environment of Business
1) In The Pyramid of Corporate Social Responsibility, Archie Carroll seems to suggest that there are hierarchical interests with which corporations are involved. These interests range from economic to legal, social and ethical [see also Treveno/Nelson pp. 28-30]
*Is Archie correct in his evaluation?2) What is the "link between the firm's ethical responsibilities or perspectives and its major stakeholder groups"?
*What is implied by the metaphor of hierarchy?
*How might this model be applied in the context of the organization with which you are currently employed?3) What (if any) is a corporation's social responsibility? What arguments can you rally to the defense of your position on this question?
4) Rachels outlines social contract theory as the view that "morality consists in the set of rules, governing how people are to treat one another, that rational people will agree to accept, for their mutual benefit, on the condition that others follow those rules as well."
*What are the rules that you would agree to under such conditions?The following questions relate to Bellah et al.'s The Good Society (no, this [thankfully] is not an assigned text...)
*How might acceptance of the premises underlying social contract theory have impacted the playing of the 'Commons Game'?5) It is claimed:
The corporation is a central institution in American life about which we will have much to say in this book...As an institution it is a particular historical pattern of rights and duties, of powers and responsibilities, that make it a major force in our lives...Individual corporations are organizations that operate within the legal and other patterns that define what a corporation is.Do institutions represent 'objective' realities, or are they rather 'socially constructed'? What does this imply about their role in bringing about the 'good society'? About our ability to reshape them?6) It is further argued that "what we have often forgotten is that though economic markets operate in some ways through an autonomous logic of their own, they can exist only because of certain institutional arrangements..."
What are these 'institutional arrangements that brought corporations into being'--and which continue to support their existence? Can you conceive of corporations without supporting institutions? How autonomous is the free market?
7) Furthermore, (and related to Article 2)...
"We often hear that only technical reason can really be taught, and our educational commitments from primary school to university seem to embody that belief...But technical reason alone, as we have seen, is insufficient to manage our social difficulties or make sense of our lives...Even when we see that the solution must have something to do with institutions, we once again look for a technical solution in some kind of "management science" rather than trying to understand the inherently moral nature of institutions...How does your EMBA educational experience 'square' with the preceeding claim? What education and/or experience have you had with the 'moral' side of corporations? Do you factor such considerations in to your business decision-making?
8) In 'The Good Society' Selznick is quoted as calling corporations "private government."
Are corporations private governments? What are the similarities and differences between corporations and governments? Which institution is more powerful in the world we know?
9) Jeffrey Lustig argues..."What is necessary is not an impossible attempt to separate the corporation from its social integument...but to acknowledge their mutual dependence and to ensure that the corporations become socially accountable." What critics are arguing for is...to bring the corporation into full democratic accounting with respect to its own claim to be a "citizen."
How might social contract theory 'square' with this view? What are the specific corporate governance implications of viewing the corporation as a citizen? What would the purpose of the corporate enterprise be under such a model?
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