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Keywords

Corporate social responsibility Business ethics China Ethics Sustainability Corporate responsibility Financial crisis Leadership Triple Bottom Line Accountability Accounting ethics education Agency costs Altruism Appreciation Attitude

Month Published

 

Jan 2012 Dec 2013

Country

( see all 14)

  • China 7 (%)
  • United States 5 (%)
  • Australia 4 (%)
  • Canada 2 (%)
  • Hong Kong 2 (%)

Institution

( see all 32)

  • Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences 3 (%)
  • Hong Kong Baptist University 2 (%)
  • Lingnan University 2 (%)
  • The University of Alabama 2 (%)
  • University of St. Thomas 2 (%)

Author

( see all 43)

  • Ki, Eyun-Jung 2 (%)
  • Lam, Kit-Chun Joanna 2 (%)
  • Lu, Xiaohe 2 (%)
  • Snell, Robin Stanley 2 (%)
  • Sridhar, Kaushik 2 (%)

Publication


  • Asian Journal of Business Ethics 27 (%)

Publication Type


  • Journal 27 (%)

Publisher


  • Springer 27 (%)

Subject


  • Economic Growth 27 (%)
  • Ethics 27 (%)
  • Management/Business for Professionals 27 (%)
  • Philosophy 27 (%)
  • Quality of Life Research 27 (%)

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  • 43 Authors
  • 32 Institutions
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Showing 1 to 10 of 27 matching Articles Results per page: Export (CSV)


Conservative transformation: actively managed corporate volunteerism in Hong Kong

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2013) 2: 35-63 , January 01, 2013

By  Snell, Robin Stanley; Wong, Amy Lai Yu

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Our Hong Kong-based study used interviews with volunteers and other stakeholders to investigate the perceived integrity and commitment of firms’ adoption of actively managed corporate volunteerism (AMCV), to examine whether AMCV was removing barriers against voluntary community service work and to identify volunteers’ motives for AMCV involvement. Interviewees perceived that firms were adopting strategically instrumental approaches to AMCV, combining community service provision with corporate image promotion and/or with organisational development. They indicated that although AMCV was mobilizing people, who would not otherwise have chosen to volunteer, instances of ‘conscription’ were uncommon. Those who had served as volunteers described positive motives for their own involvement, such as altruism, principlism, self-development, loyalty to the firm and relationship building with colleagues and service recipients. Some expressed that volunteering had been a highly rewarding self-transformation experience. Our study also used the career orientations inventory (COI) to examine career anchors. COI scores indicated that non-governmental organisation (NGO)-based employees and some firm-based paid AMCV organisers preferred the service/dedication to a cause anchor and that firm-based unpaid organisers-cum-participants preferred the lifestyle anchor. Volunteers without organiser roles had miscellaneous preferences but leaned toward the security anchor. From our findings, we argue that it would benefit all parties if firms, in close collaboration with NGOs, were to expand the range of volunteering opportunities that are available to employees and help them to choose activities and roles that are congruent with their career anchors, if they so wish.

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On the impact of corporate social responsibility on poverty in Cambodia in the light of Sen’s capability approach

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2013) 2: 1-33 , January 01, 2013

By  Schölmerich, Maike J.

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The debate on corporate social responsibility (CSR) has been going on for decades, without leading to a clearer understanding of the term. Furthermore, the current literature on the topic remains relatively silent on the actual impact of CSR, especially the impact on issues of international development, for example poverty reduction in the Global South. By developing a conceptual assessment framework with a bipolar differentiated definition of CSR and a Sen-based notion of poverty, the article analyses the effects and impact of two different types of CSR-strategies on the reduction of poverty. For this, two case studies have been conducted in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The results imply that CSR measures which are built into the core business of a company (both transnational companies and small/medium sized companies) have larger effects on poverty than CSR measures which are located outside of the core business activities.

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Post-credit crisis: what new concepts are needed? Which old notions or practices should be abandoned?

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 1: 35-45 , January 01, 2012

By  Koehn, Daryl

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The recent financial meltdown in the US mortgage markets and the ongoing budgetary crises in Europe suggest that we are at an economic and ethical crossroads. What has caused the problems? Do we need to rethink in some fundamental way our ethical notions and some of our practices? These questions clearly are not separable, for, as I shall argue, some of our ideas about corporate responsibilities, technological innovations, and nation states’ ability to regulate corporations have been a cause of the recent problems. Key ethical notions need to be rethought.

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Examination of existing arguments on business oriented towards poverty reduction with the case of people with disabilities in Vietnam

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012): 1-15 , August 17, 2012

By  Nguyen, Nghia Chi

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With an eye ultimately to answering the question of how business can alleviate poverty completely, the paper examines existing arguments about the approach of business to poverty reduction with the case of people with disabilities living in poverty in Vietnam. The paper suggests that business should take the knowledge and potential of poor people into consideration in its interfaces with different types of poor people: consumers, workers, property owners, etc. Furthermore, investigating how business can help reduce poverty while still earning a profit and ensuring customer satisfaction limits research on business approach to poverty, since it assumes that business will have some “not-for-profit” purposes. The findings point out that businesses with “not-for-profit” purposes serve as a promising area for further exploration and research of business approach to poverty alleviation.

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Molding the nascent corporate social responsibility agenda in Singapore: of pragmatism, soft regulation, and the economic imperative

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012): 1-20 , November 13, 2012

By  Tan, Eugene K. B.

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This paper seeks to examine the putative growth of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Singapore. A key impetus for the nascent CSR movement in twenty-first century Singapore is the economic imperative. As a trade-dependent industrializing economy, the economic development drive coupled with the need for international expansion has made it necessary for Singapore businesses to be cognizant of the growing CSR movement in the western, industrialized world. The government supports the CSR endeavour with an instrumental bent, where CSR ideas and concepts are adapted, incorporated, and promoted in various sectors of the economy. This paper assesses the state’s active encouragement of CSR in various facets of economic life in Singapore. The government sees itself as a promoter and practitioner of CSR. For instance, Singapore’s unique tripartite labor relations have recently emphasized a CSR gloss while CSR is also touted as being beneficial for corporate governance as well as improving the competitiveness of companies and improving the quality of life. However, CSR is too often seen as another form of corporate governance. This paper argues that the CSR drive in Singapore coheres with the government’s pragmatic approach to governance broadly conceived. There are many intrinsic and tangible benefits in the government being seen as an active promoter of CSR in various facets of Singapore life. The close association with the various concerns of CSR ensures that the government is seen to be involved in issues, such as environmentalism, work–life balance, anti-corruption, and philanthropy, that concern and appeal to the younger generation of Singaporeans. The CSR endorsement by the state, while not taking a legislative framework and still very much a private sector-driven initiative, is in accord with Singapore’s political and cultural values where the promotion of social responsibility (individual and group), harmony, cohesion, and stability in a multi-racial, multi-religious, and multi-lingual society are very much valued. In studying the putative CSR movement in Singapore, a sense of the values that the state, in partnership with the business world, hopes to inculcate would be evident.

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Exploring antecedents of attitude and intention toward Internet piracy among college students in South Korea

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 1: 177-194 , July 01, 2012

By  Khang, Hyoungkoo; Ki, Eyun-Jung; Park, In-Kon; Baek, Seon-Gi Show all (4)

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Abstracts

This study aims to examine the predictors of attitude and intentions toward Internet piracy in South Korea. Also, it intends to suggest a model of Internet piracy demonstrating the casual effects of factors of individual attitude and intentions toward Internet piracy. The results demonstrated that moral obligations and subjective norms are significant predictors of an individual’s attitude toward Internet piracy. Moreover, three factors—moral obligation, perceived behavioral control, and attitude—are essential antecedents of an individual’s intention to engage in Internet piracy. The findings of this study embrace multiple implications for factors affecting piracy and promote future research around this topic.

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Observations on some papers presented at the Shanghai forum, October 2010

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 1: 5-13 , January 01, 2012

By  Michalos, Alex C.

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This paper is a set of comments on papers from the Third Shanghai International Conference on Business Ethics, October 29–30, 2010, Shanghai, China. I would like to thank the organizers of this conference for the opportunity to share some of my observations on some of the papers presented. As a result of some serious health problems, I could not make the conference and engage in the discussions. However, I am glad to be able to make some comments on a subset of the papers that the adjudication committee thought should go into this collection. Some excellent papers were not included in the collection because they did not fit the scope of the Asian Journal of Business Ethics. So nothing in my comments should be regarded as any kind of comment on papers not mentioned here. I hope I can add some value to the good work already displayed in these papers. My comments are presented in the order in which I read the papers.

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Business students’ cheating in classroom and their propensity to cheat in the real world: a study of ethicality and practicality in China

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2013) 2: 65-78 , January 01, 2013

By  Ma, Zhenzhong

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Widespread cheating among business students has been a great concern for educators and business managers in the West, but this issue is largely unexamined in Eastern cultures. This study explores the relationship between cheating at school and cheating in the real world in an international context by investigating Chinese business students’ perception of ethicality and practicality of common business practice. The results show that many Chinese students have engaged in academic dishonesty at school. It was further found that Chinese students have a good understanding of what constitutes ethical behaviors in the real business world and the need for such behaviors. They also believe that business people fail to act in an ethical manner, yet they are unwilling to compromise their ethical standards in order to get ahead in their future career, except when they have a strong need for competitive success. The findings show that Chinese business students view the ethicality of an action as being more important than its practicality in the real business world even though they hold a completely opposite view in their classrooms. Concern arises when self-centered values like competitive success become more accepted in modern Chinese society.

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Introduction to the inaugural collection

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 1: 1-4 , January 01, 2012

By  Lu, Xiaohe; Lam, Kit-Chun Joanna

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No abstract available

Factors affecting ethical practice of public relations professionals within public relations firms

Asian Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 1: 123-141 , July 01, 2012

By  Ki, Eyun-Jung; Lee, Junghyuk; Choi, Hong-Lim

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This study was designed to investigate the factors affecting ethical practices of public relations professionals in public relations firms. In particular, the following organizational ethics factors were examined: (1) presence of ethics code, (2) top management support for ethical practice, (3) ethical climate, and (4) perception of the association between career success and ethical practice. Analysis revealed that the presence of an ethics code along with top management support and a non-egoistic ethical climate within public relations firms significantly influenced public relations professionals' ethical practices.

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