Durham, England, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  19
    Catholic Social Teaching and the Firm: Crowding in Virtue: A MacIntyrean Approach to Business Ethics
    with Ron Beadle and Anna Rowlands
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4): 779-805. 2014.
    Catholic Social Teaching aspires to an economy that serves needs, upholds justice, and inculcates subsidiarity. But it suffers from a significant omission—it fails to look “inside” the business organisations that comprise the fundamental building blocks of the economic system. It is therefore ill-equipped to suggest how businesses could be reformed to meet these aspirations. MacIntyre’s Thomistic Aristotelian account of the relationships between goods, virtues, practices and institutions provide…Read more
  •  32
    Catholic Social Teaching and the Firm: Crowding in Virtue: A MacIntyrean Approach to Business Ethics
    with Ron Beadle and Anna Rowlands
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4): 779-805. 2014.
    Catholic Social Teaching aspires to an economy that serves needs, upholds justice, and inculcates subsidiarity. But it suffers from a significant omission—it fails to look “inside” the business organisations that comprise the fundamental building blocks of the economic system. It is therefore ill-equipped to suggest how businesses could be reformed to meet these aspirations. MacIntyre’s Thomistic Aristotelian account of the relationships between goods, virtues, practices and institutions provide…Read more
  •  36
    Catholic Social Teaching and the Firm. Crowding in Virtue: a MacIntyrean Approach to Business Ethics
    with Ron Beadle and Anna Rowlands
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4): 779-805. 2014.
    Catholic Social Teaching aspires to an economy that serves needs, upholds justice, and inculcates subsidiarity. But it suffers from a significant omission—it fails to look “inside” the business organisations that comprise the fundamental building blocks of the economic system. It is therefore ill-equipped to suggest how businesses could be reformed to meet these aspirations. MacIntyre’s Thomistic Aristotelian account of the relationships between goods, virtues, practices and institutions provide…Read more
  •  72
    Corporate character, corporate virtues
    Business Ethics: A European Review 24 (S2): 99-114. 2015.
    This paper extends previous discussions of corporate character and corporate virtues. By drawing particularly on the work of Alasdair MacIntyre, it offers a perspective on context-dependent categories of the virtues. It then provides a philosophically grounded framework which enables a discussion of which virtues are required for business organizations to qualify as virtuous. It offers a preliminary taxonomy of such corporate virtues and provides a revised definition of corporate character
  •  16
    This book provides an integrated and philosophically-grounded framework which enables a coherent approach to organizations and organizational ethics from the perspective of practitioners in the workplace, from the perspective of managers in organizations, as well as from the perspective of organizations themselves.