Ethics & Consciousness in Organizations: A Conceptual Hierarchical Model

Authors

  • Hershey Friedman Brooklyn College
  • Kenneth Globerman Management & Private Equity Finance

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35478/jime.2021.3.02

Abstract

The authors posit that one should not take a binary approach to business ethics because there are gradations. They propose that firms may be classified according to the following metric: Level I: The Totally Unethical Organization; Level II: The Legalistic Unethical Organization; Level III: The Superficially Ethical Organization; Level IV: The Ethical Organization; and Level V: The Totally Ethical Organization/Fully Conscious Capitalism. Firms at the lowest level of ethics are only concerned about profits and not getting caught. Firms at the highest level are advocates of conscious capitalism. Conscious business leaders aim to use capitalism to "elevate humanity" by serving all stakeholders and making the world a better place. 

Author Biography

Kenneth Globerman, Management & Private Equity Finance

Kenneth A. Globerman is a business consultant and educator. He has taught at Brooklyn College and specializes in management and private equity finance.  

 

 

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Published

2021-10-29

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Section

Articles