•  156
    Snow Brand Milk Products (A)
    with Jenny Mead, Regina Wentzel Wolfe, and Akira Saito
    Journal of Business Ethics Education 7 103-116. 2010.
    This three-case series examines the dilemma that faced the Japanese company Snow Brand Milk Products (SBM) as it confronted the task of rebuilding and revitalization after a series of scandals, many self-induced, had threatened the company’s future. The A case begins in spring 2002 when leading consumer activist Nobuko Hiwasa was invited to join Snow Brand’s board of directors. The CEO wanted her to assist in SBM’s revitalization efforts, which were beingimplemented in the wake of two recent sca…Read more
  •  57
    Do Investors See Value in Ethically Sound CEO Apologies? Investigating Stock Market Reaction to CEO Apologies
    with Maria Goranova
    Journal of Business Ethics 152 (2): 311-322. 2018.
    Since the late 1990s, the number of apologies being offered by CEOs of large companies has exploded. Communication and management scholars have analyzed whether and why some of these apologies are more effective or more ethical than others. Most of these analyses, however, have remained at the anecdotal level. Moreover, the practical, economic consequences of apologies have not been examined. Almost no rigorous or systematic empirical work exists that examines whether stakeholders reward firms w…Read more
  •  29
  • Ethical issues in human resources
    In Norman E. Bowie (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Business Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 6--225. 2002.
  •  168
    Why Saying "I'm Sorry" Isn't Good Enough
    Business Ethics Quarterly 23 (2): 239-268. 2013.
    The number of corporate apologies has increased dramatically during the past decade. This article delves into the ethics of apologies offered by chief executive officers (CEOs). It examines ways in which public apologies on the part of a representative (CEO) of a corporate body (the firm) differ from both private, interpersonal apologies, on the one hand, and nation-state/collective apologies, on the other. The article then seeks to ground ethically desirable elements of a corporate apology in t…Read more
  •  87
    Creative Financial Methods in Giving Back
    with Michael Pirron
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 35 (2-3): 179-197. 2016.
    Michael Pirron is CEO of Impact Makers, an IT consulting firm based in Virginia. Impact Makers decided to reincorporate as a Benefit Corporation when Virginia passed the legislation. In this interview with Professor Daryl Koehn from DePaul University, Pirron discusses why he chose to reincorporate and their organization’s decision to give all their profits to charity. To do this, Impact Makers set up a new financial innovation to protect the social purpose of the organization. They gave all thei…Read more
  •  136
    Transforming Our Students
    Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (1): 137-151. 2005.
    Teachers and managers strive to be determining causes, leading those whom we instruct or supervise to act in some ways rather than others. If we are seeking to be causes, then we ought to admit our mission and monitor how well we are doing. Yet, instead of owning up to our failures, we hide behind claims such as “some students are unteachable because their habits are bad,” or “we have little time to affect our students who are being indoctrinated by other business school professors to believe th…Read more
  •  67
    Rethinking the Responsibility of International Corporations
    Business Ethics Quarterly 3 (2): 177-183. 1993.
  •  110
    The recent financial meltdown in the US mortgage markets and the ongoing budgetary crises in Europe suggest that we are at an economic and ethical crossroads. What has caused the problems? Do we need to rethink in some fundamental way our ethical notions and some of our practices? These questions clearly are not separable, for, as I shall argue, some of our ideas about corporate responsibilities, technological innovations, and nation states’ ability to regulate corporations have been a cause of …Read more
  •  103
    Figures of Evil in the Business World
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 22 (3): 3-21. 2003.
  • Does not mean that he must be ruthless, cruel
    Ethics in the Workplace: Selected Readings in Business Ethics. forthcoming.
  •  177
    What can eastern philosophy teach us about business ethics?
    Journal of Business Ethics 19 (1). 1999.
    This paper examines what, if anything, "Eastern philosophy" can teach us about business ethics. The whole idea of "Eastern ethics" or so-called "Asian values" is suspect on a number of scores. The paper argues that It is better to refer to specific ideas of particular thinkers influential within one country or tradition. The paper concentrates on the philosophy of two such thinkers – Watsuji Tetsuro of Japan and Confucius. When this more "micro" approach is adopted, we can learn some important l…Read more
  •  138
    A Response to Rorty
    Business Ethics Quarterly 16 (3): 391-399. 2006.
  •  64
    The Ethics of Policing (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 19 (4): 412-415. 1996.
  •  108
    Report from Executive Director
    The Society for Business Ethics Newsletter 13 (4): 1-1. 2003.
  •  79
    Claus Dierksmeier admirably combats the misperception that Kant is a deontologist with no regard for virtue. Dierksmeier contends Kant offers a theory of virtue that can contribute in significant ways to advancing the analysis of, e.g., stakeholder theory and internal compliance programs. His plea that business ethicists should view Kant as a resource for thinking more widely and deeply about virtue seems eminently sensible. However, there are grounds for questioning whether a Kantian approach w…Read more
  •  88
    Ethics, Morality, and Art in the Classroom
    Journal of Business Ethics Education 7 213-232. 2010.
    Scholars are increasingly interested in possible relationships between aesthetics and ethics and in the pedagogical value of art. This paper considers some specific works of art and explores their multi-faceted relation to ethics and morality. I argue that art has both positive and negative relationships to ethics and morality (which I distinguish in a very rough way as the paper progresses). Art works of various sorts may productively be used in the business ethics classroom,but instructors nee…Read more
  •  122
    Why the New Benefit Corporations May Not Prove to Be Truly Socially Beneficial
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 35 (1): 17-50. 2016.
    Social enterprises may take a variety of legal forms (limited liability companies, nonprofit entities, etc.). This paper focuses primarily upon one particular new form increasingly popular within the United States—the “Benefit Corporation.” I evaluate whether US Benefit Corporations are likely to realize as much social benefit as is frequently claimed. Part One of the paper describes the features of Benefit Corporations as they are constituted in many states. Part Two lays out the benefits extol…Read more
  •  62
    Corporate governance metrics for Asian companies: are they reliable indicators of corporate performance?
    with Joe Ueng
    International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics 5 (4): 241-260. 2010.
  •  117
    Traversing the Inferno
    Business Ethics Quarterly 10 (1): 255-268. 2000.
    The discipline of business ethics traditionally has paid too much attention to articulating and applying the moral law and has devoted too little thinking to the nature and consequences of evil for our souls. For purposes of this discussion, I shall limit myself to Dante’s vision of evil as a diminution of human being. On his journey through hell, Dante encounters the shades—people who, through their own actions, have rendered themselves less than fully human. This paper concentrates especially …Read more
  •  83
    Are Benefit Corporations Truly Beneficial?
    with Michael Hannigan
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 35 (2): 165-178. 2016.
    Michael Hannigan is the CEO and co-founder of Give Something Back Office Supplies, the third largest office supply company on the west coast of the United States. Hannigan began his business in 1991, long before any benefit corporation legislation was enacted. He reincorporated his business as a benefit corporation after California passed such legislation in 2011. On April 23, 2015, he spoke at the 22nd Annual Stakeholder Dialogue Speaker Series convened at the University of St. Thomas, Minneapo…Read more
  •  85
    Trust and Business
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 16 (1-2): 7-28. 1997.
  •  73
    Prepare, Prepare, Prepare!
    Business Ethics Quarterly 13 (1): 95-98. 2003.
  •  38
    From the President
    The Society for Business Ethics Newsletter 14 (2): 1-1. 2003.
  •  79
    Ethics in a Technological Age
    Business and Society Review 104 (1): 57-90. 1999.
  •  36
    What Form of Business Regulation is Workable?
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 23 (1): 43-63. 2004.
  •  147
    Business and game-playing: The false analogy (review)
    Journal of Business Ethics 16 (12-13): 1447-1452. 1997.
    A number of business writers have argued that business is a game and, like a game, possesses its own special rules for acting. While we do not normally tolerate deceit, bluffing is not merely acceptable but also expected within the game of poker. Similarly, lies of omission, overstatements, puffery and bluffs are morally acceptable within business because it, like a game, has a special ethic which permits these normally immoral practices. Although critics of this reasoning have used deontologica…Read more
  •  2
    The nature of evil
    Palgrave-Macmillan. 2005.
    In The Nature of Evil, Daryl Koehn takes us on a sweeping tour of different interpretations of evil. In this timely and serious discussion she argues that evil is not intentional malice, but rather violence that stems from a false sense of self. Violence is not true evil but a symptom of the underlying evil of our failure to really know who we are. Koehn examines situations in which good intentions can have horrific results. She explores such works as The Talented Mr. Ripley , Dante's Inferno , …Read more