Ethics and CSR
President Barack Obama
White House
Dear Mr. President:
First, let me congratulate you on your recent stance regarding both the U.S. Budget and your healthcare package. Indeed, both of these issues speak to the reason for my letter today. In general, I am concerned that the 21st century, while certainly improving organizational opportunities at home and abroad through technology and globalization, have not been as robust within the area of business and organizational ethics as both expected by 21st century stakeholders, or necessary to proactively and positively interact in a global environment.
Much like the First Lady's initiatives for movement and health, I would like to encourage you to form a bipartisan Congressional Committee to examine ways in which the government can assist and encourage Corporate Social Responsibility within the American business and organizational community.
There are numerous ways we have all noted how organizations have changed in the 21st century: new technologies, new methods of delivering messages, new expectations, greater educational demand and opportunities, shifts in delivery of government information (e-Gov., etc.), and new products and services. Organizations have also undergone a change in their overall philosophy -- not just moving toward entrepreneurial thought as a way to change the operational paradigm, but through consumer and corporate expectations of marketing in a more ethical and sustainable manner -- regardless of the business or service (ASHE-ERIC, 2002). For organizations, this translates out as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), or the idea that any organization now has a responsibility to not only produce products in a sustainable manner, but to ensure that they market those products in the same way, treat employees ethically, and are generally transparent and working in a utilitarian manner for the common good (Jahdi, K., et al., 2009). 21st century consumers are individuals, but also groups -- and to market successfully in the 21st century, organizations need to go beyond broad segmentation and ask, listen and implement both CSR principles and anticipate individual behaviors.
One of the reasons this may be important both for your administration and the needs of the American people focuses on the gradual erosion of trust in government and institutions over the last several years. Within the public sector, there seems to have always been a view towards the nature of public institutions and the psychological means of trust. Within the context of society and culture, trust has several connotations. Typically, definitions of trust focus on situations in which one party or group believes that they can relinquish control over a situation because they have faith (trust) in another group's willingness to act in the best interests of all parties to come to a positive solution. There is uncertainty, and particularly over centuries of governmental paradigms, a tendency for citizens to hold varying degrees of trust to both elected public officials and governments in general (Mayer, R.C., et al., 1995).
When dealing with the ethical responsibility of qualitative research, one must also look into the issues of corporate social responsibility (CSR), which is a more self-regulated approach that integrates strategic and tactical business paradigms that comply with the spirit, ethics and standards of the law. CSR encourages actions and functions so that it does not become necessary for governmental regulations to force compliance. CSR does this by looking at issues before they happen so that they encourage morality within the community and negative practices that may be of potential harm -- legal or not. The basic thrust is doing what is right -- in the public interest while still maintaining corporate growth and profitability. There is historical and philosophical precedent for this in the Social Contract Theories of Locke, Rousseau and Jefferson -- if one acts in a moral and ethical way for the individual, this will translate into societal and organizational behaviors as well (Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethics, 2012).
In many ways, this forms the basis of trust in government -- the notion of how humans interact with social institutions and explains the manner in which individuals, by necessity, must therefore trust and hand over a varying degree of power to either elected representatives, empowered rulers, or a combination of governing bodies to ensure a better and more organized society (Lewis & Gilman, 2005). For more ethical behavior to exist in organizations there must be trust both bottom up and top down. We can see, too, that the trust factor between individuals and government is part of the ethics of the stakeholder and the organization; and has evolved and intensified into citizen/stakeholder trust -- with the concepts of utilitarianism and deontology backing...
65). By controlling these two aspects of a scientific experiment, researchers are able to establish the specific causality of the phenomenon being studied. In this regard, Kahle and Riley note that, "Traditionally, causality is established through strict control and randomization over all other factors while experimentally manipulating the variable or variables in question" (2004, p. 165). Finally, Gliner and Morgan (2000) report that the internal validity (discussed further below)
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now