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RESEARCH PRODUCT
European vs. American approaches to institutionalisation of business ethics: the Spanish case
Patrick E. MurphyDomènec MeléManuel Guillénsubject
Economics and Econometricsbusiness.industryStatement (logic)InstitutionalisationPolitical scienceMission statementBusiness and International ManagementPublic relationsBusiness ethicsbusinessEthical valuesFocus (linguistics)description
This paper reports on a study of the largest Spanish corporations concerning the status of corporate ethics policies. The research project, the first of its kind in Spain, has two parts. First, the types of formal documents the companies use are analysed, including those dealing with ethical values or norms. Three groups of companies are distinguished: the first group has no formal documents dealing with ethical values, and the reasons given for not having any ethical statement are discussed. A second group has one document mentioning ethical values (generally the vision and/or mission statement), and a third group has in place two or more documents (one generic and the other more detailed, such as a code of conduct). The findings show that the latter group is more proactive than the former in implementing measures for promoting business ethics throughout the organisation. In the second part of the research, the study analyses the differences between companies whose headquarters are in Spain, Europe and USA regarding the arguments, the focus and the practices used to formalise business ethics.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2002-04-01 | Business Ethics: A European Review |