MHR 452 – Quiz No. 1 TRUE/FALSE 1. In business and elsewhere‚ an action can be legal and morally wrong. TRUE 2. For philosophers‚ the important question is not how we come to have the particular moral principles we have‚ but whether we can justify them. TRUE 3. 3. Organizational norms always and inevitably lead to groupthink. FALSE 4. Enron executives acted wrongly simply because they broke the law. FALSE 5. 5. If you do the right thing only because you think you will profit from it
Premium Morality Ethics
The Association of Business Executives QCF Marketing Policy‚ Planning and Communication 1 December 2011‚ Afternoon 1. 2. Time allowed: 3 hours. 5MPPC1211 Read the instructions at the top of each section carefully. The number of questions you have to answer is marked clearly at the top of each section. Do not answer more questions than instructed. The number of marks per question may vary. Marks for subdivisions of questions and the total marks for each question are shown in brackets after
Premium Marketing
Is business ethics important? If so why? Before we discuss the importance of ethics in business‚ it is very essential to examine a prominent theory when conducting business ethics and that is utilitarianism. This theory accounts for the concepts of duty or obligation‚ rights‚ and justice. It is routine that the utilitarianism theory is divided up into two groups. These two groups are that of teleological and deontological theory. The teleological approach deals with consequences. “It states that
Premium Ethics
principles with everyday business operations and policies and then translates all of this into bottom-line results. For sustainability to be long lasting and useful‚ it must be representative of and integrated into day-to-day corporate activities and corporate performance. If sustainability is seen only as an attempt to provide effective public relations‚ it does not create long-term value and can even be a value destroyer. The key to success is integrating sustainability into business decisions‚ identifying
Premium Sustainability Corporate finance Decision making
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
Premium Trigraph
Passenger/Itinerary Receipt Electronic ticket 220-2985548741 Page/Seite:1 Please print this receipt and retain throughout your journey. Bitte drucken Sie diesen Beleg aus und führen ihn bei Ihrer Reise mit. Travel data for/Reisedaten für: Booking reference/Buchungscode: Ticket number/Ticketnummer: Nassiakou Maria Mrs ZCDK2U 220-2985548741 Flight Flug LH 1285* Date Datum 05.December from von Athens to nach Frankfurt Departure Status Abflug Status 05:55 Confirmed Class
Premium
The purpose of this essay is to critically evaluate the influence of stakeholders on encouraging responsible business practices. This essay will look in to the different stakeholder theories and how these theories help on encouraging responsible business practices in an organization or company. Firstly as mentioned the different forms of stakeholder theories will be outlined to have a clear understanding of these different theories‚ this will also go in to explaining what is the role of managers
Premium Ethics Business ethics Corporate social responsibility
Outcomes: The Institute of Business Ethics defines business ethics as ‘the application of ethical values to business behaviour.’ As Aristotle recognised‚ ethics is not an ethereal abstraction but is a practical aid to business problem solving. This module takes ideas from a range of disciplines (including some of the greatest thinkers of all time) to help understand‚ analyse and resolve ethical dilemmas in management. There has been a growing interest in the ethics of business and what is generally referred
Premium Business ethics Corporate social responsibility
DUTIES OF DIRECTORS Directors of a company normally have exclusive power to manage the company’s business and exercise its powers. At common law‚ the duties were owed to the company‚ to employees‚ to individual shareholders and creditors. 1.0 Duties of Directors to the company It is convenient to categorise the duties of directors into fiduciary duties which arise because they are quasi-trustees of the assets of the company. The word ‘fiduciary’ refers to trust and confidence. ‘A fiduciary is
Premium Fiduciary Trustee Stock
❖ S 9: “Officer” includes directors‚ secretaries‚ receivers‚ administrators‚ liquidators‚ administrating trustees. ❖ S 9: “Director” includes shadow & de facto directors. enforcement of directors’ duties enforcement of statutory duties Civil penalties Who may apply for a Declaration or Order? ❖ S 1317J(1): ASIC may apply for a declaration of contravention‚ a pecuniary penalty order or a compensation order. ❖ S 1317J(2): The company may apply for a compensation order. ❖
Premium Fiduciary Board of directors Stock