It seems that with the recent headlines of high profile corporate corruption cases‚ the subject of whether ethics play much of part in modern business has come to the forefront. Connected directly to this would also be the role that communication plays in business ethics. The issues involved revolve around business ethics and how communication is used to either promote or reinforce good business ethics or is manipulated and abused to support more questionable uses. There are some that assert that
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Introduction Its fall of 2001 and you are an employee for Enron‚ one of the largest energy companies in the world at the time. As an employee you have the option of owning stock in it and you also have a retirement plan with Enron. But what you don’t know is that Enron has been committing accounting fraud for a while now and Enron’s stocks aren’t really worth $90 and that they are soon going to file for bankruptcy. The executives haven’t told you this because if they told you the truth‚ you would
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to allocate precious resources of their own if they were to prosecute white-collar criminals within the company. Prosecutions can be time and money consuming when comes to investigating the case to hiring lawyers to settle down the matter in court. This might interfere with the daily operations of the company and holds back their efficiency as part of their manpower and resources are used up in litigations of white-collar crimes. In addition to that‚ companies are less likely to prosecute if the perpetrator
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Ethics of Profit‚ Part 3: The Profit Motive Posted March 29‚ 2011 Filed under: character‚ competition‚ corporations‚ decision-making‚ ethics‚ finance‚profits‚ white collar crime | This is the third in a 3-part series on the ethics of profit. (See also Part 1 and Part 2.) As mentioned in previous postings‚ we should distinguish between our ethical evaluation of profit per se (which‚ after all‚ just means financial “gain”)‚ and our ethical evaluation of the profit motive. After all‚ I don’t worry
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White-Collar Deviance John O. Temple Jr. SOC 443 Christina Scott November 2011 White-Collar Deviance So what is white-collar crime? According to the Meridian-Webster dictionary the word white is a stereotypical association of good character‚ marked by upright fairness‚ free from spot or blemish‚ free from moral impurity ‚ innocent‚ marked by the wearing of white by the woman as a symbol of purity‚ not intended to cause harm‚ a white lie‚ favorable‚ fortunate. And there is the infamous
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Question: What are Blue-collar Workers? Blue-collar workers refer to employees performing manual labor generally‚ their jobs entails physical labor‚ such as in a factory or workshop. Blue-collar work may involve skilled or unskilled‚ manufacturing‚ mining‚ construction‚ mechanical‚ maintenance‚ technical installation and many other types of physical work. A higher level academic education is often not required for many blue-collar jobs. However‚ certain fields may require specialized
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Mehreen 1 Mehreen Rahman ENG 101 27 January 2014 Blue-Collar Brilliance Blue collar workers are the backbone of America. In the article‚ “Blue-Collar Brilliance”‚ author Mike Rose emphasizes his belief that blue collar jobs should not be viewed as mindless tasks‚ but rather should be acknowledged for the amount of skills and intelligence these tasks truly require. What the author essentially means is that blue collar workers acquire knowledge‚ intuition‚ and skills from the social dynamics of
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Offender based approaches to white collar crime is define with emphasis as an essential characteristic of crime dealing with high social status‚ power‚ and respectability of the actor. A strength to this type of approach allows the social stigmatism of the “criminal” offender to be destabilized in the public view. Drawing attention to the ideation that people within high society or social standing can and will commit crime. This approach while breaking the social norms of antisocial behavior lends
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file:///E:/Geographic Research/Topics/1 Introduction/Introduction_Blue C... AUTHOR: MIKE ROSE TITLE: Blue-Collar Brilliance SOURCE: The American Scholar 78 no3 43-9 Summ 2009 COPYRIGHT: The magazine publisher is the copyright holder of this article and it is reproduced with permission. Further reproduction of this article in violation of the copyright is prohibited. To contact the publisher: http://www.pbk.org/pubs.htm My mother‚ Rose Meraglio Rose (Rosie)‚ shaped her adult identity as a
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in society‚ many individuals consider blue-collar workers unintelligent and uneducated. Blue-collar workers are seen in this perspective because of their hands on jobs in which many individuals assume that intelligence is not required. “Our cultural iconography promotes the muscled arm‚ sleeve rolled right against biceps‚ but no brightness behind the eye‚ no image that links hand and brain.” (Rose 98) In Mike Rose’s text‚ he explains how being a blue-collar worker does not mean an individual is unintelligent
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