Christian Ethics and Corporate Culture [electronic resource] :A Critical View on Corporate Responsibilities / edited by Bartholomew Okonkwo.
by Okonkwo, Bartholomew [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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HD60-60.5 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | HD62.6 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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HD62.4 .T56 2015 Cross - cultural mangement: | HD62.4 .T56 2015 Cross-cultural management: | HD62.5 .K55 2020 Entrepreneurial mindset and performance of small and medium enterprises in Kenya | HD62.6 Christian Ethics and Corporate Culture | HD62.6 Corporate Social Responsibility in Asia | HD62.6 CSR in Private Enterprises in Developing Countries | HD62.6 Balanced Growth |
Seeing the World of Business -- The Business in Society: Can Companies Save the World -- Philosophical Underpinnings of Good Company -- The Challenge of Clashing Theories -- Social Vocation of the Firm -- Non Profit and Business Sector Collaboration -- The Common Good and Social Competitive Creativity -- Maximizing the Shareholder Value -- Consumer, Client,Customer or Citizen - Can the State be a Good Company -- Doing Well by Doing Good: Distinguishing the Right from Good in Theories of Corporate Social Responsibility -- Moral Intuition and Transformative Organizations -- The Game of Exchange: Towards Justice in Bargaining -- The Posture of Services -- When Being Good Isn't Good Enough: the Case of Malden Mills -- What of Financialization? -- Accounting for Just Wages: A Proposal -- A Framework for CSR Assessment, Measurement and Reporting.
The essays collected in this book discuss the contemporary pratice of corporate responsibility by applying the Christian principles of the unity of knowledge and pursuit of truth to the traditional principles of justice, human dignity and the common good, to rediscover a corporate culture that will help transform our economic system and the characteristics required to build an enduring trust in economic relationships. In this volume a select group of management theorists, theologians, legal scholars, economists and ethicists jointly strive to give back to the market economy its ethical and political dimensions. They assess the quality of present day corporate social responsibility, discuss the social and environmental costs of production and argue for an agenda that can be used in modern corporations in their effort to align profitability and growth with business ethics.
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