Running head: Case Study Report 3 Case Study Report 3 Deb Gephart Western International University LDR 620 Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility Ray November January 28‚ 2008 Case Study Report 3 I chose to report upon the case study involving ImClone and Samuel Waksal’s deceitful practices involving selling personal shares of ImClone stock. Samuel Waksal knowingly participated in insider trading which involved selling his ImClone stock and then notifying his family of the
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Business Research Ethics Team A RES/351 Business Research Ethics Unethical behavior involved GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) LLC unethical research behavior involved criminal and civil liabilities arising from the company’s illegal advertising of certain prescription drugs‚ its fiasco to report certain safety facts and its civil obligation for so-called false price reporting practices. This is the biggest health care fraud settlement in U.S. history and the largest payment by a drug company.
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Table of content Introduction We chose to analyze the company Shell Global (Multinational)‚ which had operations running all over the globe and even now‚ with the financial drawbacks‚ is still growing. Shell Global started business back in 1833 and has gone through a lot of hardships but also many golden periods‚ of which many will be mentioned in this report as some of them concern ethical issues. In 1958 Nigeria became one of the largest oil producers for the Shell Group‚ where Shell
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Business Research Ethics Over the years unethical business research has changed the way businesses are run. Scandals were happening way too often‚ so laws and regulations have made adjustments in effort to better prevent the unethical practices. The company‚ Enron‚ was a leading reason for some of the changes because it was one of the largest scandals and fastest collapse of an entire corporation. Most individuals that were involved in the fall of Enron have been tried and convicted for their unethical
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71203 Business Ethics Assignment 1 Drawing on ethical theory to critique a claim. Businesses putting something back into the local community... ...Morally obligatory - or not? Utilitarian and Kantian Moral Theory Viewpoints Tanya Lundie 9118692 27 March 2009 Rainbow (2002) describes ethical theories as being “...the foundations of ethical analysis...” because they are viewpoints from which guidance can be obtained in the interests of determining “...what counts as acting ethically...” (The
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Business Research Ethics Lorna Goldsmit RES/351 Week 2 When it comes to ethical or moral codes‚ companies need to certify that the company as a whole follows the highest standards of moral codes at all times and for all occasions. In addition‚ having higher moral standards are important and necessary in business‚ as well as times of investigation. For this essay‚ I will be reviewing a case where dishonest business examination procedures were performed by a company
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PRACTICE OF BUSINESS ETHICS MMUI J131 • Rotua Veronika Ariester • Sarah Afifah • Samuel Krissandi • Ronald • Eldhie Sya’banni • Reffit Gustaroska ORGANIZATIONAL ETHICS DEFINITIONS Organizational Culture: The values‚ beliefs‚ and norms that all the employees of that organization share Value Chain: The key functional inputs that an organization provides in the transformation of raw materials into a delivered product or service ASTRA CREDIT COMPANIES Vision: Become
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Safan Nizar Ali Dauva Professor Kurt S. Odenwald Business Law and Ethics February 17‚ 2011 Week 6 Assignment Chapter 23 Question no.5 Answer: No. CP Clare did not seek to improve the deal to take advantage of IRI’s sunk costs; rather it sought to enforce the bargain. And it did not take unexpected action against which IRI could not have defended. That a manufacturer will want to reassess its sales structure as volume grows must be understood by everyone--especially by a professional sales
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Business Research Ethics RES/351 August 28‚ 2013 Abstract In the health care field‚ there are the right ways and unethical ways to research drugs that can save someone’s life or cure a deadly disease. Today one will discuss how a giant manufacturer company called GlaxoSmithKline put consumers’ lives at risk‚ so they can make him or herself rich. One will examine how this company put him or herself in the whole $3 billion dollars with several lawsuits from the US government through unethical
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1. Starbucks demonstrates a new focus on business ethics and social responsibility by providing health care benefits to their employees‚ giving to the welfare of the needy‚ and also by packaging their goods in recycling materials along with any other practices that are beneficial to the company-------------------. Starbucks has also demonstrated by improving their dealings with their customers as well as their suppliers. Although this may not bring in additional revenues‚ the ethical businesses are
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