Meeting the Ethical Challenges of Leadership

Meeting the Ethical Challenges of Leadership
Title Meeting the Ethical Challenges of Leadership PDF eBook
Author Craig E. Johnson
Publisher SAGE Publications
Pages 837
Release 2017-01-10
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 150632164X

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Ethics is at the heart of leadership. All leaders assume ethical burdens and must make every effort to make informed ethical decisions and foster ethical behavior among followers. The Sixth Edition of Meeting the Ethical Challenges of Leadership: Casting Light or Shadow explores the ethical demands of leadership and the dark side of leadership. Author Craig E. Johnson takes a multidisciplinary approach to leadership ethics, drawing from many fields of research to help readers make moral decisions, lead in a moral manner, and create an ethical culture. Packed with real-world case studies, examples, self-assessments, and applications, this fully-updated new edition is designed to increase students’ ethical competence and leadership abilities.

Ethically Challenged

Ethically Challenged
Title Ethically Challenged PDF eBook
Author Laura Katz Olson
Publisher JHU Press
Pages 440
Release 2022-03-08
Genre MEDICAL
ISBN 142144285X

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The first book to comprehensively address private equity and health care, Ethically Challenged raises the curtain on an industry notorious for its secrecy, exposing the nefarious side of its maneuvers.

Negotiating Ethical Challenges in Youth Research

Negotiating Ethical Challenges in Youth Research
Title Negotiating Ethical Challenges in Youth Research PDF eBook
Author Kitty Te Riele
Publisher Routledge
Pages 218
Release 2013
Genre Education
ISBN 0415808464

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This title brings together contributors from across the world to explore real-life ethical dilemmas faced by researchers working with young people in a range of social science disciplines. A careful selection of chapters addresses a range of ethical challenges particularly relevant to contemporary youth researchers.

The Ethical Challenge of Auschwitz and Hiroshima

The Ethical Challenge of Auschwitz and Hiroshima
Title The Ethical Challenge of Auschwitz and Hiroshima PDF eBook
Author Darrell J. Fasching
Publisher State University of New York Press
Pages 388
Release 1993-07-01
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1438402368

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This book addresses the problem of religion, ethics, and public policy in a global technological civilization. It attempts to do what narrative ethicists have said cannot be done—to construct a cross-cultural ethic of human dignity, human rights, and human liberation which respects the diversity of narrative traditions. It seeks to do this without succumbing to either ethical relativism or ethical absolutism. The author confronts directly the dominant narrative of our technological civilization: the Janus-faced myths of "Apocalypse or Utopia." Through this myth, we view technology ambivalently, as both the object of our dread and the source of our hope. The myth thus renders us ethically impotent: the very strength of our literal utopian euphoria sends us careening toward some literal apocalyptic "final solution." The demonic narrative that dominated Auschwitz ("killing in order to heal") is part of this Janus-faced technological mythos that emerged out of Hiroshima. And it is this mythic narrative which underlies and structures much of public policy in our nuclear age. This book proposes a coalition of members of holy communities and secular groups, organized to prevent any future eruptions of the demonic. Its goal is to construct a bridge not only over the abyss between religions, East and West, but also between religious and secular ethics.

Ethical Challenges

Ethical Challenges
Title Ethical Challenges PDF eBook
Author Deni Elliott
Publisher
Pages 72
Release 2008-06
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9781434388025

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In a span of 81 days in 1978, Henry Rono broke four world records, committing the most ferocious assault on the track-and-field record books by a middle-distance runner in the history of the sport. This is what Henry Rono is known for. However, it is not who Henry Rono is. Henry Rono was born a poor Nandi in Kenya's Rift Valley. After an accident when he was two, doctors believed he would never again walk. This would be the first of countless obstacles Rono would have to overcome in order to pursue his two life goals: to first become the greatest runner in the world and then to become the best teacher he could be. Rono's first goal was accomplished in 1978, when he was considered not only the greatest track-and-field athlete in the world, but also by many to be the world's greatest athlete period. His second and greater goal, to become a teacher, was more difficult in coming. Once Rono became a star, coaches, agents, meet directors, and corrupt Kenyan athletic officials (whose boycotts of the 1976 and 1980 Olympics turned Rono's dreams of Olympic gold into Olympic smoke rings), wanted him to serve as their personal moneymaker, and so they did everything they could to discourage Rono's pursuit of an education and dream of teaching. The corruption and discouragement Rono encountered, as well as his alienation and exile from his homeland and family, pushed him to 20 years of alcoholism and even occasional homelessness. This is the life story of Henry Rono, whose descent from triumph to abyss, and whose subsequent ascent from abyss to triumph, are perhaps steeper than those of any track-and field athlete in history.

Ethics in Action

Ethics in Action
Title Ethics in Action PDF eBook
Author Daniel A. Bell
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 257
Release 2006-10-16
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1139459066

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This book is the product of a multi-year dialogue between leading human rights theorists and high-level representatives of international human rights NGOs (INGOs). It is divided into three parts that reflect the major ethical challenges discussed at the workshops: the ethical challenges associated with interaction between relatively rich and powerful northern-based human rights INGOs and recipients of their aid in the South; whether and how to collaborate with governments that place severe restrictions on the activities of human rights INGOs; and the tension between expanding the organization's mandate to address more fundamental social and economic problems and restricting it for the sake of focusing on more immediate and clearly identifiable violations of civil and political rights. Each section contains contributions by both theorists and practitioners of human rights.

Ethical Challenges in the Behavioral and Brain Sciences

Ethical Challenges in the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Title Ethical Challenges in the Behavioral and Brain Sciences PDF eBook
Author Robert J. Sternberg
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 249
Release 2015-01-26
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1107039738

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This book encourages readers to engage in discussions of ethical dilemmas encountered by behavioral and brain scientists.