Business Ethics: Concepts & CasesPearson Prentice Hall, 2006 - 437 pages For courses in Business Ethics This popular text on Business Ethics introduces the reader to the ethical concepts that are relevant to resolving moral issues in business; imparts the reasoning and anaytical skills needed to apply ethical concepts to business decisions; identifies moral issues specific to a business; provides an understanding of the social, technological, and natural environments within which moral issues in business arise; and supplies case studies of actual moral conflicts faced by businesses. The ethical landscape of business is constantly changing and this edition has been revised to keep pace with those changes most effecting business: accelerating globalization, constant technological updates, proliferating of business scandals. |
From inside the book
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... manufacturing a product imposes no external costs , then the producer's costs and the total social costs are the ... manufacturing a product diverge from the social costs involved in its manufacture , markets no longer price ...
... manufacturing has experienced sub- stantial job losses . In 1979 , there were 19.5 million workers in U.S. manufacturing jobs ; in January 2004 , American manufacturing plants employed 14.3 million workers . Employment in manufacturing ...
... manufacturing jobs to service jobs is much like the shift the United States underwent earlier when it changed from an agricultural economy , in which most workers were engaged in agriculture , to a manufacturing economy . In the 1870s ...
Contents
CASES FOR DISCUSSION | 51 |
Ethical Principles in Business | 57 |
Chapter 2 | 74 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown