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130How Corruption is Tolerated in the Greek Public Sector: Toward a Second-Order Theory of NormalizationBusiness and Society 61 (1): 191-224. 2022.Secrecy and “social cocooning” are critical mechanisms allowing the normalization of corruption within organizations. Less studied are processes of normalization that occur when corruption is an “open secret.” Drawing on an empirical study of Greek public-sector organizations, we suggest that a second-order normalization process ensues among non-corrupt onlookers both inside and beyond the organization. What is normalized at this level is not corruption, but its tolerance, which we disaggregate …Read more
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142The Escalation of Deception in OrganizationsJournal of Business Ethics 81 (4): 837-850. 2008.Drawing on a number of recent high-profile cases of corporate corruption, we develop a process model that explains the escalation of deception in corrupt firms. If undetected, an initial lie can begin a process whereby the ease, severity and pervasiveness of deception increases overtime so that it eventually becomes an organization level phenomenon. We propose that organizational complexity has an amplifying effect. A␣feedback loop between organization level deception and each of the escalation …Read more
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15The Move to Environmental ServicesProceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 12 283-293. 2001.In this paper, we use the concept of cognitive dissonance to understand how firms balance cognition and behavior within the framework of their enviroimiental strategies. By understanding the paths for dissonance reduction, the motives for choosing one path over another, and the factors influencing the choice of a particular path by a business firm, we develop propositions regarding how firms make strategic choices with regard to environmental behavior.
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21From Buffering to BridgingProceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 10 757-768. 1999.Managers fxing reputational crises can follow a buffering or a bridging approach. However, despite the importance of this decision, the reasons behind such a choice have not been adequately studied. This paper draws on die Brent Spar controversy to investigate the reasons behind Shell’s initial decision to buffer, and the reasons behind its subsequent change of mind into a bridging position.
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59Staging the Lie: The Impact of Framing and Content on the Visibility of Fake Business NewsBusiness and Society. forthcoming.What drives the visibility of fake business news? We investigate this timely question by analyzing the framing and content of fake news targeting Fortune 500 companies. Our research reveals that fake business news employing episodic frames—characterized by highly dramatized and unambiguous information—gains more visibility than thematic frames, regardless of an organization’s reputation, its web or media visibility. Additionally, we find that fake news about corporate governance is particularly …Read more
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72The Impact of Accidents on Firms’ Reputation for Social PerformanceBusiness and Society 40 (4): 416-441. 2001.Drawing on the literatures of industrial crises, corporate reputation, and stakeholder theory, this article is an empirical investigation into the impact that accident characteristics have on the corporate reputation for social performance of the firms involved. The main findings are the following: First, environmental damage does have an impact on the reputational scores for social performance, whereas damage to human life, surprisingly, does not. Second, the complexity of an accident plays a r…Read more
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182The social and environmental responsibilities of multinationals: Evidence from the Brent Spar case (review)Journal of Business Ethics 36 (1-2). 2002.This paper argues that multinational corporations face levels of environmental and social responsibility higher than their national counterparts. Drawing on the literatures of stakeholder salience, corporate reputation management, and evidence from the confrontation between Shell and Greenpeace over the Brent Spar, in 1995, two mechanisms – international reputation side effects, and foreign stakeholder salience – are identified and their contribution in creating an environment more restrictive, …Read more
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150Ethical Distance in Corrupt Firms: How Do Innocent Bystanders Become Guilty Perpetrators?Journal of Business Ethics 78 (1-2): 265-274. 2008.This paper develops the concept of the ‘continuum of destructiveness’ in relation to organizational corruption. This notion captures the slippery slope of wrongdoing as actors engage in increasingly dubious practices. We identify four kinds of individuals along this continuum in corrupt organizations, who range from complete innocence to total guilt. They are innocent bystanders, innocent participants, active rationalizers and guilty perpetrators. Traditional explanations of how individuals move…Read more
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129Rationalization, Overcompensation and the Escalation of Corruption in OrganizationsJournal of Business Ethics 84 (S1). 2009.An important area of business ethics research focuses on how otherwise normal and law-abiding individuals can engage in acts of corruption. Key in this literature is the concept of rationalization. This is where individuals attempt to justify past and future corrupt deeds to themselves and others. In this article, we argue that rationalization often entails a process of overcompensation whereby the justification forwarded is excessive in relation to the actual act. Such over-rationalization prov…Read more
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106The Impact of Corporate Philanthropy on Reputation for Corporate Social PerformanceBusiness and Society 58 (6): 1177-1208. 2019.This study seeks to examine the mechanisms by which a corporation’s use of philanthropy affects its reputation for corporate social performance (CSP), which the authors conceive of as consisting of two dimensions: CSP awareness and CSP perception. Using signal detection theory (SDT), the authors model signal amplitude (the amount contributed), dispersion (number of areas supported), and consistency (presence of a corporate foundation) on CSP awareness and perception. Overall, this study finds th…Read more
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442Ethical implications of text generation in the age of artificial intelligenceBusiness Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 32 (1): 201-210. 2022.We are at a turning point in the debate on the ethics of Artificial Intelligence (AI) because we are witnessing the rise of general-purpose AI text agents such as GPT-3 that can generate large-scale highly refined content that appears to have been written by a human. Yet, a discussion on the ethical issues related to the blurring of the roles between humans and machines in the production of content in the business arena is lacking. In this conceptual paper, drawing on agenda setting theory and s…Read more
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75On Becoming and Being an Ethical Leader: A Platonic InterpretationJournal of Business Ethics 173 (1): 1-11. 2020.The question of whether ethical individuals have a disadvantage in becoming leaders is an important one that has not been adequately discussed in the business ethics/leadership literature. In this paper, drawing on Plato’s middle dialogues and particularly on the Republic, I develop a Platonic framework of the constraints that might hinder the emergence of what the dialogues term ‘philosopher kings’. Subsequently, I use this framework to elucidate the emergence of ethical leaders in todays’ orga…Read more
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100The Evolution of Corporate Social Responsiveness: An Exploratory Study of Finnish and Canadian Forestry CompaniesBusiness and Society 36 (3): 296-321. 1997.In this article, the authors investigate the applicability and usefulness of three alternative perspectives on corporate issues management: issue life cycle theory, legitimacy theory, and stakeholder theory. Each perspective makes certain as- sumptions about the nature of issues management activities and certain general predictions about corporate social responsiveness. The authors test the relative applicability of the three theories through a case study of the issues management activities of f…Read more
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The evolution of corporate social responsiveness: an exploratory study of Finnish and Canadian forestry companiesBusiness and Society 36 296-321. 1997.
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95The Corporate Social Performance of Developing Country MultinationalsBusiness Ethics Quarterly 26 (3): 379-406. 2016.ABSTRACT:In this article, we explore the Corporate Social Performance (CSP) of Developing Country Multinationals (DMNCs). We argue that in competing internationally, DMNCs often face both reputation and legitimacy deficits, which they address by improving their CSP. We develop a series of hypotheses to explain the variation in CSP between DMNCs and domestic-only firms from developing countries and also examine variations in CSP between DMNCs depending on the extent of their multinationality and …Read more
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |