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Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Standard

Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role. / Rozuel, Cecile; Kakabadse, Nada.
Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility. ed. / Samuel Idowu; Celine Louche. Berlin: Springer, 2011. p. 3-22.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Rozuel, C & Kakabadse, N 2011, Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role. in S Idowu & C Louche (eds), Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility. Springer, Berlin, pp. 3-22. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1

APA

Rozuel, C., & Kakabadse, N. (2011). Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role. In S. Idowu, & C. Louche (Eds.), Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility (pp. 3-22). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1

Vancouver

Rozuel C, Kakabadse N. Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role. In Idowu S, Louche C, editors, Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility. Berlin: Springer. 2011. p. 3-22 doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1

Author

Rozuel, Cecile ; Kakabadse, Nada. / Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR : the person behind the role. Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility. editor / Samuel Idowu ; Celine Louche. Berlin : Springer, 2011. pp. 3-22

Bibtex

@inbook{0b15c575023f4a10b199cc87489bc3e1,
title = "Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR: the person behind the role",
abstract = "Managers occupy a particular position in organisations that make them morally responsible for their own actions as well as key influences on the moral mindset of the staff they supervise. Nevertheless, the concepts of “manager” and “management” remain elusive. Successive management theories have unveiled various organisational and moral implications of managerial responsibilities, and a role-based analysis of managers{\textquoteright} moral responsibilities has proved appealing to researchers, but comes with its own ethical traps. A sustainable ethic requires consistency of character, something a mere role-performer lacks. The moral point of view needs to examine the moral qualities of the self behind the roles, where the self pre-empts the role. In this chapter, we argue that managerial ethics should first and foremost celebrate people rather than organisational actors, selves rather than roles. Anchored in humanity and individuality, we offer a self-based approach to a more sustainable, fulfilling and authentic ethical practice in management. Managerial ethics thus calls for self-reflection and examination, with subtler but no less effective implications for organisational life, ethical business practice and genuine CSR.",
author = "Cecile Rozuel and Nada Kakabadse",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783642164606",
pages = "3--22",
editor = "Samuel Idowu and Celine Louche",
booktitle = "Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Managerial ethics as a prerequisite to CSR

T2 - the person behind the role

AU - Rozuel, Cecile

AU - Kakabadse, Nada

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Managers occupy a particular position in organisations that make them morally responsible for their own actions as well as key influences on the moral mindset of the staff they supervise. Nevertheless, the concepts of “manager” and “management” remain elusive. Successive management theories have unveiled various organisational and moral implications of managerial responsibilities, and a role-based analysis of managers’ moral responsibilities has proved appealing to researchers, but comes with its own ethical traps. A sustainable ethic requires consistency of character, something a mere role-performer lacks. The moral point of view needs to examine the moral qualities of the self behind the roles, where the self pre-empts the role. In this chapter, we argue that managerial ethics should first and foremost celebrate people rather than organisational actors, selves rather than roles. Anchored in humanity and individuality, we offer a self-based approach to a more sustainable, fulfilling and authentic ethical practice in management. Managerial ethics thus calls for self-reflection and examination, with subtler but no less effective implications for organisational life, ethical business practice and genuine CSR.

AB - Managers occupy a particular position in organisations that make them morally responsible for their own actions as well as key influences on the moral mindset of the staff they supervise. Nevertheless, the concepts of “manager” and “management” remain elusive. Successive management theories have unveiled various organisational and moral implications of managerial responsibilities, and a role-based analysis of managers’ moral responsibilities has proved appealing to researchers, but comes with its own ethical traps. A sustainable ethic requires consistency of character, something a mere role-performer lacks. The moral point of view needs to examine the moral qualities of the self behind the roles, where the self pre-empts the role. In this chapter, we argue that managerial ethics should first and foremost celebrate people rather than organisational actors, selves rather than roles. Anchored in humanity and individuality, we offer a self-based approach to a more sustainable, fulfilling and authentic ethical practice in management. Managerial ethics thus calls for self-reflection and examination, with subtler but no less effective implications for organisational life, ethical business practice and genuine CSR.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1

DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-16461-3_1

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9783642164606

SP - 3

EP - 22

BT - Theory and practice of corporate social responsibility

A2 - Idowu, Samuel

A2 - Louche, Celine

PB - Springer

CY - Berlin

ER -