Contextualizing Business Ethics: Anomie and Social Life |
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Authors: | Phil Johnson Ken Smith |
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Affiliation: | (1) Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, UK;(2) Sheffield Business School, Shaffield Hallam University, Totley Hall Lane, S17 4AB, Sheffield, UK |
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Abstract: | The objective of this paper is to explore howthe current interest in Business Ethics can be locatedwithin an analysis of contemporary society which takesinto account the prevalence of moral uncertainty along with the concomitant desire to(re)establish some form of normative order. As such,Business Ethics may be seen as a socially constructedfield of study which reflects broaderchanges and controversies within society. Yet as a body of knowledge,Business Ethics articulates epistemological doubts. Twodistinctive themes in Business Ethics discourse areconsidered — the modernist/rationalist and thepostmodernist/relativist. It is argued that in different ways, each canbe seen as both an expression of, and a reaction to, theincreasing incidence of anomie in society. Theimplications for organizational practices are thenconsidered through the example of Corporate Codes ofEthics and the problem of establishing consensus wherethe grounds for any claim to moral authority areproblematic. |
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Keywords: | BUSINESS ETHICS MODERNISM POSTMODERNISM ANOMIE |
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