business ethics

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
a
Alias: 
business ethics

How good people make tough choices

1995
Offers guidelines for making values based decisions in various areas of one's public and personal life.

Corporate corruption

2011
Contains articles that provide a variety of perspectives on corporate corruption and its effects on democracy, the rights of individuals, the economy, and other aspects of American life.

Taking sides

business ethics and society
1995
Examines some leading issues from the perspective of sharply opposing points of view to show clearly the controversies of a given issue.

Teen, Inc.

2007
Fourteen-year-old Jaiden has been raised by NECorp. since his parents were killed when he was a baby, so when he discovers that the corporation has been lying about producing illegal levels of mercury emissions, he and his two friends decide to try to do something about it.

Best foot forward

2005
Between school and Al-Anon meetings, Jenna helps Mrs. Gladstone cope with escalating problems that result from the merger of Gladstone Shoes with Shoe Warehouse Corporation, while managing a new employee with a shoplifting record.

Pro

Economics
2002
A series of essays analyzing questions or dilemmas relating to social issues.

Just business

multinational corporations and human rights
Explores issues of human rights and international business ethics, detailing a number of international problems caused by the rapid globalization of a variety of industries--such as the oil-based fighting in Nigeria, or the sweatshops that force thousands of Indonesians into hard labor. Presents guiding principles, originally submitted to the UN, for business operating overseas.

Comeback

how seven straight-shooting CEOs turned around troubled companies
1999
Profiles seven leaders who saved their failing companies by focusing on the truth and sharing it with their employees.

Company

a novel
2006
Stephen Jones, a young recruit, reports to the Zephyr Holding Building on his first day of training to find a building numbered in reverse, an invisible CEO, and a crisis over the theft of a donut.

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