Tigers
Lions
Bears
Snakes
Oh My
100

A management-initiated boundary of conduct (beliefs, values, voluntary policies, and voluntary contractual obligations)

What is voluntary boundary?

100

Crimes perpetrated every year by nonviolent business criminals

What is white-collar crime? 

100

A highly appropriate and common practice that helps ensure compliance with legal requirements, industry self-regulation, and societal expectations

What is core practice?

100

Fair treatment and due reward in accordance with ethical or legal standards, including the disposition to deal with perceived injustices of others

What is justice? 

100

An externally imposed boundary of conduct (laws, rules, regulations, and other requirements)

What is mandated boundary? 

 For example, antitrust and consumer protection laws create boundaries of propriety that must be respected by companies. Failure to do so results in civil and criminal penalties.

200

Refers to moral philosophies that focus on the rights of individuals and the intentions associated with a particular behavior rather than its consequences

What is deontology? 

200

 set of values, beliefs, goals, norms, and ways of solving problems that members (employees) of an organization share.

What is corporate culture? 

200

Hold that actions are the proper basis to judge morality or ethicalness

What are act deontologists? 

200

To individuals’ perceptions of social pressure and the harm they believe their decisions will have on others

What is moral intensity? 

200

The assumption that one person’s opinion is as good as another’s

What is normative relativism? 

300

_______________ approaches describe how organizational decision makers should approach an ethical issue.

What is normative? 

300

_________ principle states that each person has basic rights that are compatible to the basic liberties of others

What is equity principle? 

300

is the act of illegally taking information from a corporation through computer hacking, theft, intimidation, sorting through trash, and impersonation of organizational members.

What is corporate espionage? 

300

_____________ principle states that economic and social equalities or inequalities should be arranged to provide the most benefit to the least-advantaged members of society

What is difference principle? 

300

Seeks the greatest good for the greatest number of people

What is utilitarianism? 

400

The view that an external world exists independent of our perceptions

What is realism? 

400

“Act as if the maxim of thy action were to become by thy will a universal law of nature.” Simply put, if you feel comfortable allowing everyone in the world to see you commit an act and if your rationale for acting in a particular manner is suitable to become a universal principle guiding behavior, then committing that act is ethical.

What is categorical imperative? 

400

Argues that ethical behavior involves not only adhering to conventional moral standards but also considering what a mature person with a “good” moral character would deem appropriate in a given situation

What is virtue ethics? 

400

Refers to moral philosophies in which an act is considered morally right or acceptable if it produces some desired result, such as pleasure, knowledge, career growth, the realization of self-interest, utility, wealth, or even fame

What is teleology? 

400


The idea that pleasure is the ultimate good, or the best moral end involves the greatest balance of pleasure over pain

What is hedonism? 

500

Conformity to general moral principles based on logic determines ethicalness

What are rule deontologists? 

500

This (then) new law seeks to improve financial regulation, increase oversight of the industry, and prevent the types of risk-taking, deceptive practices, and lack of oversight that led to the 2008–2009 financial crisis. The act contains 16 provisions that include increasing the accountability and transparency of financial institutions, creating a bureau to educate consumers in financial literacy and protect them from deceptive financial practices, implementing additional incentives for whistle-blowers, increasing oversight of the financial industry, and regulating the use of complex derivatives.

What is the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act?


500

Teleological philosophies that assess the moral worth of a behavior by looking at its consequences

What is consequentialism?  

500

Reject the ideas that (1) ends can be separated from the means that produce them and (2) ends, purposes, or outcomes are intrinsically good in and of themselves

What is instrumentalists? 

500

In 2002, largely in response to widespread corporate accounting scandals, Congress passed the _______________________ to establish a system of federal oversight of corporate accounting practices. In addition to making fraudulent financial reporting a criminal offense and strengthening penalties for corporate fraud, the law requires corporations to establish codes of ethics for financial reporting and develop greater transparency in financial reporting to their investors and other stakeholders.

What is the Sarbanes–Oxley Act

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