Deck 5: Ethics,Social Responsibility and Sustainable Development

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Question
At the conventional stage of personal ethical development,a person lives up to the expectations of others,and fulfils their duties to others even if they break the law.
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Question
Individualism asserts that when people maximise their own outcomes without deception or fraud,the greatest good for society is achieved.
Question
The right of free consent,the right to privacy and the right of freedom of conscience are rights that should be considered in the moral rights approach.
Question
On the scale of personal moral development,the great majority of managers operate at level two,the conventional level.
Question
Most ethical dilemmas involve a conflict between the needs of the part and the needs of the whole.
Question
Any group that has an interest in the organisation's performance and/or actions is referred to as a stakeholder.
Question
The principled level of moral development is also referred to as the postconventional level.
Question
Found between the domains of law and free choice,ethics is the code of principles that governs individuals and/or groups.
Question
The distributive justice concept suggests that people should not be based on arbitrary characteristics.
Question
The justice approach is closest to the thinking underlying the domain of free choice.
Question
The utilitarian approach to ethical decision-making contends that acts are ethical when they promote the individual's best long-term interests.Individual self-direction is paramount,and external forces that restrict self-direction should be severely limited
Question
At the pre-conventional level,individuals are concerned with external rewards and punishments and obey authority to avoid detrimental personal consequences.
Question
A situation that arises when all alternative choices or behaviour have been deemed undesirable because of potentially negative ethical consequences,making it difficult to distinguish right from wrong is known as an ethical dilemma.
Question
The government of a foreign country can never be considered a stakeholder of a locally owned Australian organisation.
Question
The utilitarian approach to ethical decision-making holds that the action that produces the greatest good to the greatest number is the only ethical action to take.
Question
Under the distributive justice approach,equals must be treated equally,while those that are unequal should be treated unequally.
Question
The four approaches that guide ethical decision making are utilitarian,individualism,moral rights and objective dualism.
Question
Compensatory justice refers to the establishment of clearly stated rules which are consistently and impartially and forced.
Question
The justice approach to ethical decision-making asserts that human beings have fundamental rights and liberties that cannot be taken away by an individual's decision.
Question
Corporate Social Responsibility is management's obligation to make choices and take actions that will contribute to the welfare and interests of society as well as the organisation.
Question
Organisations that adopt obstructive responses deny all responsibility,claim that evidence of wrongdoing is misleading or distorted,and place obstacles to delay investigation.
Question
Which of these refers to the code of moral principles and values that govern behaviour with respect to what is right and wrong?

A) Social responsibility
B) Free domain
C) Ethics
D) Codified law
E) Discretionary responsibility
Question
A new drug has not been approved by the federal government to sell in Australia because further testing is needed.The company has a chance to sell its product in Asia immediately to start recovering the costs of R & D and production three years ahead of time.This example places the decision in which of the categories from the text?

A) The ethical domain
B) The domain of free choice
C) The legal domain
D) The obstructive category
E) The protective domain
Question
Ethics deals with __________ values that are a part of corporate culture and shapes decisions concerning social responsibility with respect to the __________ environment.

A) internal; external
B) external; external
C) internal; internal
D) external; internal
E) None of these choices.
Question
Shareholders should never be considered stakeholders of an organisation for the purposes of ethical analysis.
Question
Discretionary responsibility includes behaviour that is not necessarily codified into law and may not serve the organisation's direct economic interests.
Question
In the domain of ethical behaviour,obedience is to:

A) enforceable norms and standards
B) oneself
C) laws prescribed by the legal system
D) unenforceable norms and standards
E) the organisation.
Question
A group of executives assigned to oversee the organisation's ethics by ruling on questionable issues are known as chief ethics officers.
Question
The notion of 'being progressive' describes businesses' active and consistent efforts to build,lengthen and strengthen relationships with their stakeholders.
Question
The hierarchy of total corporate social responsibility (from most basic to most important)is considered to be the following: economic responsibility,ethical responsibility,legal responsibility,discretionary responsibility.
Question
A proactive response means that the organisation accepts social responsibility for its actions,although it may do so in response to external pressure.
Question
Socially responsible investment involves investing in companies which,in the judgement of the investor,do not harm people or the environment through their activities.
Question
Shareholder mapping provides a systematic way to identify the expectations,needs,importance and relative power of various stakeholder groups.
Question
Triple bottom line reporting involves measuring an organisation in terms of its financial,environmental and human resource performance.
Question
An accommodative response means that the organisation accepts social responsibility for its actions,although it may do so in response to external pressure.
Question
A code of ethics is a formal statement of the organisation's values regarding moral principles and governing its response to social values.
Question
The four corporate responses to social demands are obsessive,defensive,accommodative and protective behaviours.
Question
A journalist's disclosure of illegal,unethical or illegitimate practices by any corporation is called whistle-blowing.
Question
Four areas of social responsibility can evaluate corporate social performance: economic,legal,ethical and discretionary responsibilities.
Question
Ethical structures represent the various systems,positions and programs an organisation can undertake to implement ethical behaviour.
Question
A person mostly concerned with external rewards and personal consequences of an action is in what stage of personal moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Principled
D) Discretionary
E) None of these choices.
Question
Hood Sails has just completed a procedure manual to handle employee grievances.One of the main criteria is to make it clear to employees that rules will be administered fairly and consistently.Hood Sails operates on:

A) the procedural justice approach
B) the utilitarian approach
C) the individual approach
D) the defensive approach
E) the free-choice approach.
Question
A situation that arises when all alternative choices or behaviours have been deemed undesirable because of the potentially negative ethical consequences,making it difficult to distinguish right from wrong,is considered:

A) a moral agent
B) a social responsibility
C) an ethical dilemma
D) an ethical standard
E) discretionary responsibility.
Question
____________________ requires that different treatment of people not be based on arbitrary characteristics.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
Question
____________________ argues that individuals should be compensated for the cost of their injuries by the party responsible.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
Question
Which ethical approach are companies citing to justify their policing of employees' personal habits on and off the job,if they argue that they are maximising the greatest good for the greatest number?

A) Justice approach
B) Utilitarian approach
C) Individualism approach
D) Moral-justice approach
E) Discretionary responsibility
Question
Which of the following employee behaviours matches with the pre-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Work group collaboration
B) Task accomplishment
C) Empowered employees
D) Full participation
E) Transforming
Question
The assumption that 'if it's not illegal,it must be ethical',ignores which of the following?

A) Domain of codified law
B) Domain of ethics
C) Domain of free choice
D) Discretionary responsibility
E) Domain of symbolism
Question
The pre-conventional stage of moral development is best illustrated by which of these?

A) Everybody else is doing it, so it must be okay.
B) What would my boss think if I did this?
C) I know this is not right and I will not do it even if everyone else is.
D) What am I going to get from making this decision?
E) Oh well, you only live once.
Question
Most people have learned to conform to expectations of good behaviour expected by colleagues,family,friends and society.They are in what stage of moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Discretionary
D) Principled
E) Traditional
Question
When everyone is pursuing self-direction,the greater good is ultimately served because people learn to accommodate each other in their own long-term interest.This is an example of:

A) utilitarian approach
B) individualism approach
C) moral-justice approach
D) justice approach
E) social responsibility.
Question
People making decisions based on an internal set of beliefs that has more meaning to them than the expectations of others are:

A) in the pre-conventional level of moral development
B) in the conventional level of moral development
C) in the principled level of moral development
D) narcissistic
E) None of these choices.
Question
The stage of personal moral development in which an individual develops an internal set of standards and values is called:

A) pre-conventional
B) principled
C) conventional
D) discretionary
E) social.
Question
A person that bases their decisions on prevailing standards of the profession and larger society,taking the interests of all stakeholders into account,is said to have taken which of the following approaches?

A) Pre-conventional approach
B) Conventional approach
C) Principled approach
D) Discretionary approach
E) Practical approach
Question
When a person follows self-chosen principles of justice,and they are aware that people hold different values and seek creative solutions to ethical dilemmas,they are said to be in what stage of moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Discretionary
D) Post-conventional
E) Traditional
Question
____________________ requires that rules be administered fairly.Rules should be clearly stated,and consistently and impartially enforced.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
Question
Which of these refers to the ethical concept that moral decisions are those that best maintain the rights of those people affected by them?

A) Individualism approach
B) Justice approach
C) Utilitarian approach
D) Moral rights approach
E) Discretionary responsibility approach
Question
Under the justice approach,all of these are of concern to managers,except:

A)compensatory justice
B)distributive justice
C)procedural justice
D)obstructive justice
E)A and B.
Question
Tamako is a manager at Ozzy No-waste Corporation.One of her employees has been cheating the company out of expense money.Tamako must decide whether or not to fire this employee.In this role,Tamako is acting as:

A) a moral agent
B) an ethical theorist
C) a symbolic leader
D) an authoritarian leader
E) an obstructive manager.
Question
The individual who must make an ethical choice in an organisation is called:

A) the symbolic leader
B) an obstructive manager
C) the defensive individual
D) the moral agent
E) an authoritarian manager.
Question
An organisation can build an ethical culture by including all of the following in their structure,except:

A) ethical leadership
B) code of ethics
C) appointing a chief ethics officer
D) providing support for whistle-blowers
E) All of these can build an ethical culture.
Question
____________________involves investing in companies which,in the judgement of the principal investor,does no harm to people or the environment through the activities:

A) Socially responsible investment
B) Corporate social responsibility
C) Stakeholder management
D) Stakeholder mapping
E) None of these choices.
Question
A formal statement of an organisation's values regarding the role of ethics,which prescribes the required responses to foreseeable events is called a:

A) mission statement
B) vision statement
C) press statement
D) code of ethics
E) moral organisational stance.
Question
Responsibility that goes beyond societal expectations to contribute to the community welfare is:

A) ethical responsibility
B) discretionary responsibility
C) economic responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) technical responsibility.
Question
Which of these is the disclosure by an employee of an illegal and/or unethical activity?

A) Organisational communication
B) Whistle-blowing
C) The filing of a disclosure statement
D) Spying
E) Betraying
Question
The process that provides a systematic way to identify the expectations,needs,importance and relative power of various stakeholders is known as:

A)corporate social responsibility
B)stakeholder management
C)stakeholder mapping
D)Both A and C.
E)None of these choices.
Question
The model presented within the text for judging corporate social performance,divides social responsibility into four sections.Which of the following sets contains the four parts?

A) Ethical, legal, technical and rational
B) Mandatory, technical, discretionary and economic
C) Legal, mandatory, economic and ethical
D) Discretionary, legal, economic and ethical
E) Legal, economic, mechanical and environmental
Question
__________________ is an example of an ethical structure.

A) An ethics ombudsman
B) A formal statement of company values
C) An equal opportunity policy
D) A corporate speech
E) A statement of finances
Question
Which leadership style matches with the post-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Team oriented
B) Autocratic
C) Guiding/encouraging
D) Coercive
E) Servant leadership
Question
Managers that generally believe that 'harmful things happen,but they are nobody's fault' are likely to be espousing which type of ethical response?

A) Unethical
B) Proactive
C) Accommodative
D) Defensive
E) Obstructive
Question
Which of these employee behaviours matches with the conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Task accomplishment
B) Empowered employees
C) Work group collaboration
D) Full participation
E) Act in own interest
Question
All of the following are examples of special interest groups,except:

A) Australian Shareholders Association
B) Miscellaneous Workers Union
C) Doctors for Forests
D) consumerists
E) The High Court of Australia
Question
The triple bottom line of organisational performance measurement includes all the following factors,except:

A)financial performance
B)human resource performance
C)environmental performance
D)stakeholder performance
E)Both B and D.
Question
What society deems as important,with respect to appropriate corporate behaviour,is:

A) ethical responsibility
B) discretionary responsibility
C) economic responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) moral responsibility.
Question
All modern societies lay down ground rules,laws and regulations that businesses are expected to follow.The organisation's ___________________ defines what society deems as important with respect to appropriate corporate behaviour.

A) ethical responsibility
B) obstructive responsibility
C) social responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) None of these choices
Question
A group of executives assigned to oversee the organisation's ethics by ruling on questionable issues and disciplining violators is known as a(n):

A) a code of ethics
B) ethical ombudsman
C) ethics committee
D) the thought police
E) the ACCC.
Question
Which of these employee behaviours matches with the post-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Empowered employees, full participation
B) Task accomplishment
C) Act in own interest
D) Work group collaboration
E) Autocratic
Question
The obligation of organisation management to make decisions and take actions that will enhance the welfare and interests of society as well as the organisation is referred to as:

A) organisational responsibility
B) corporate social responsibility
C) discretionary responsibility
D) economic responsibility
E) educational responsibility.
Question
Primary stakeholders of an organisation include:

A) employees
B) customers
C) investors and shareholders
D) suppliers
E) All of these choices.
Question
The responsibility to adhere to actions that are justifiable,even if they are harmful to society in some way,equates with:

A) illegal activity
B) ethical responsibility
C) unethical activity
D) economically unsound practice
E) None of these choices.
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Deck 5: Ethics,Social Responsibility and Sustainable Development
1
At the conventional stage of personal ethical development,a person lives up to the expectations of others,and fulfils their duties to others even if they break the law.
False
2
Individualism asserts that when people maximise their own outcomes without deception or fraud,the greatest good for society is achieved.
True
3
The right of free consent,the right to privacy and the right of freedom of conscience are rights that should be considered in the moral rights approach.
True
4
On the scale of personal moral development,the great majority of managers operate at level two,the conventional level.
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k this deck
5
Most ethical dilemmas involve a conflict between the needs of the part and the needs of the whole.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
6
Any group that has an interest in the organisation's performance and/or actions is referred to as a stakeholder.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
7
The principled level of moral development is also referred to as the postconventional level.
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k this deck
8
Found between the domains of law and free choice,ethics is the code of principles that governs individuals and/or groups.
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k this deck
9
The distributive justice concept suggests that people should not be based on arbitrary characteristics.
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k this deck
10
The justice approach is closest to the thinking underlying the domain of free choice.
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k this deck
11
The utilitarian approach to ethical decision-making contends that acts are ethical when they promote the individual's best long-term interests.Individual self-direction is paramount,and external forces that restrict self-direction should be severely limited
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k this deck
12
At the pre-conventional level,individuals are concerned with external rewards and punishments and obey authority to avoid detrimental personal consequences.
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k this deck
13
A situation that arises when all alternative choices or behaviour have been deemed undesirable because of potentially negative ethical consequences,making it difficult to distinguish right from wrong is known as an ethical dilemma.
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k this deck
14
The government of a foreign country can never be considered a stakeholder of a locally owned Australian organisation.
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k this deck
15
The utilitarian approach to ethical decision-making holds that the action that produces the greatest good to the greatest number is the only ethical action to take.
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16
Under the distributive justice approach,equals must be treated equally,while those that are unequal should be treated unequally.
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k this deck
17
The four approaches that guide ethical decision making are utilitarian,individualism,moral rights and objective dualism.
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k this deck
18
Compensatory justice refers to the establishment of clearly stated rules which are consistently and impartially and forced.
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19
The justice approach to ethical decision-making asserts that human beings have fundamental rights and liberties that cannot be taken away by an individual's decision.
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20
Corporate Social Responsibility is management's obligation to make choices and take actions that will contribute to the welfare and interests of society as well as the organisation.
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k this deck
21
Organisations that adopt obstructive responses deny all responsibility,claim that evidence of wrongdoing is misleading or distorted,and place obstacles to delay investigation.
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k this deck
22
Which of these refers to the code of moral principles and values that govern behaviour with respect to what is right and wrong?

A) Social responsibility
B) Free domain
C) Ethics
D) Codified law
E) Discretionary responsibility
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23
A new drug has not been approved by the federal government to sell in Australia because further testing is needed.The company has a chance to sell its product in Asia immediately to start recovering the costs of R & D and production three years ahead of time.This example places the decision in which of the categories from the text?

A) The ethical domain
B) The domain of free choice
C) The legal domain
D) The obstructive category
E) The protective domain
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24
Ethics deals with __________ values that are a part of corporate culture and shapes decisions concerning social responsibility with respect to the __________ environment.

A) internal; external
B) external; external
C) internal; internal
D) external; internal
E) None of these choices.
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25
Shareholders should never be considered stakeholders of an organisation for the purposes of ethical analysis.
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26
Discretionary responsibility includes behaviour that is not necessarily codified into law and may not serve the organisation's direct economic interests.
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k this deck
27
In the domain of ethical behaviour,obedience is to:

A) enforceable norms and standards
B) oneself
C) laws prescribed by the legal system
D) unenforceable norms and standards
E) the organisation.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
28
A group of executives assigned to oversee the organisation's ethics by ruling on questionable issues are known as chief ethics officers.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
29
The notion of 'being progressive' describes businesses' active and consistent efforts to build,lengthen and strengthen relationships with their stakeholders.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
30
The hierarchy of total corporate social responsibility (from most basic to most important)is considered to be the following: economic responsibility,ethical responsibility,legal responsibility,discretionary responsibility.
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k this deck
31
A proactive response means that the organisation accepts social responsibility for its actions,although it may do so in response to external pressure.
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k this deck
32
Socially responsible investment involves investing in companies which,in the judgement of the investor,do not harm people or the environment through their activities.
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k this deck
33
Shareholder mapping provides a systematic way to identify the expectations,needs,importance and relative power of various stakeholder groups.
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34
Triple bottom line reporting involves measuring an organisation in terms of its financial,environmental and human resource performance.
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35
An accommodative response means that the organisation accepts social responsibility for its actions,although it may do so in response to external pressure.
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36
A code of ethics is a formal statement of the organisation's values regarding moral principles and governing its response to social values.
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37
The four corporate responses to social demands are obsessive,defensive,accommodative and protective behaviours.
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38
A journalist's disclosure of illegal,unethical or illegitimate practices by any corporation is called whistle-blowing.
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k this deck
39
Four areas of social responsibility can evaluate corporate social performance: economic,legal,ethical and discretionary responsibilities.
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k this deck
40
Ethical structures represent the various systems,positions and programs an organisation can undertake to implement ethical behaviour.
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41
A person mostly concerned with external rewards and personal consequences of an action is in what stage of personal moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Principled
D) Discretionary
E) None of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Hood Sails has just completed a procedure manual to handle employee grievances.One of the main criteria is to make it clear to employees that rules will be administered fairly and consistently.Hood Sails operates on:

A) the procedural justice approach
B) the utilitarian approach
C) the individual approach
D) the defensive approach
E) the free-choice approach.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
A situation that arises when all alternative choices or behaviours have been deemed undesirable because of the potentially negative ethical consequences,making it difficult to distinguish right from wrong,is considered:

A) a moral agent
B) a social responsibility
C) an ethical dilemma
D) an ethical standard
E) discretionary responsibility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
____________________ requires that different treatment of people not be based on arbitrary characteristics.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
____________________ argues that individuals should be compensated for the cost of their injuries by the party responsible.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Which ethical approach are companies citing to justify their policing of employees' personal habits on and off the job,if they argue that they are maximising the greatest good for the greatest number?

A) Justice approach
B) Utilitarian approach
C) Individualism approach
D) Moral-justice approach
E) Discretionary responsibility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Which of the following employee behaviours matches with the pre-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Work group collaboration
B) Task accomplishment
C) Empowered employees
D) Full participation
E) Transforming
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
The assumption that 'if it's not illegal,it must be ethical',ignores which of the following?

A) Domain of codified law
B) Domain of ethics
C) Domain of free choice
D) Discretionary responsibility
E) Domain of symbolism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The pre-conventional stage of moral development is best illustrated by which of these?

A) Everybody else is doing it, so it must be okay.
B) What would my boss think if I did this?
C) I know this is not right and I will not do it even if everyone else is.
D) What am I going to get from making this decision?
E) Oh well, you only live once.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Most people have learned to conform to expectations of good behaviour expected by colleagues,family,friends and society.They are in what stage of moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Discretionary
D) Principled
E) Traditional
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
When everyone is pursuing self-direction,the greater good is ultimately served because people learn to accommodate each other in their own long-term interest.This is an example of:

A) utilitarian approach
B) individualism approach
C) moral-justice approach
D) justice approach
E) social responsibility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
People making decisions based on an internal set of beliefs that has more meaning to them than the expectations of others are:

A) in the pre-conventional level of moral development
B) in the conventional level of moral development
C) in the principled level of moral development
D) narcissistic
E) None of these choices.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
The stage of personal moral development in which an individual develops an internal set of standards and values is called:

A) pre-conventional
B) principled
C) conventional
D) discretionary
E) social.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
A person that bases their decisions on prevailing standards of the profession and larger society,taking the interests of all stakeholders into account,is said to have taken which of the following approaches?

A) Pre-conventional approach
B) Conventional approach
C) Principled approach
D) Discretionary approach
E) Practical approach
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
When a person follows self-chosen principles of justice,and they are aware that people hold different values and seek creative solutions to ethical dilemmas,they are said to be in what stage of moral development?

A) Pre-conventional
B) Conventional
C) Discretionary
D) Post-conventional
E) Traditional
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56
____________________ requires that rules be administered fairly.Rules should be clearly stated,and consistently and impartially enforced.

A) Distributive justice
B) Compensatory justice
C) Procedural justice
D) Retributive justice
E) All of these choices.
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57
Which of these refers to the ethical concept that moral decisions are those that best maintain the rights of those people affected by them?

A) Individualism approach
B) Justice approach
C) Utilitarian approach
D) Moral rights approach
E) Discretionary responsibility approach
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
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58
Under the justice approach,all of these are of concern to managers,except:

A)compensatory justice
B)distributive justice
C)procedural justice
D)obstructive justice
E)A and B.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
59
Tamako is a manager at Ozzy No-waste Corporation.One of her employees has been cheating the company out of expense money.Tamako must decide whether or not to fire this employee.In this role,Tamako is acting as:

A) a moral agent
B) an ethical theorist
C) a symbolic leader
D) an authoritarian leader
E) an obstructive manager.
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60
The individual who must make an ethical choice in an organisation is called:

A) the symbolic leader
B) an obstructive manager
C) the defensive individual
D) the moral agent
E) an authoritarian manager.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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61
An organisation can build an ethical culture by including all of the following in their structure,except:

A) ethical leadership
B) code of ethics
C) appointing a chief ethics officer
D) providing support for whistle-blowers
E) All of these can build an ethical culture.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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62
____________________involves investing in companies which,in the judgement of the principal investor,does no harm to people or the environment through the activities:

A) Socially responsible investment
B) Corporate social responsibility
C) Stakeholder management
D) Stakeholder mapping
E) None of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
A formal statement of an organisation's values regarding the role of ethics,which prescribes the required responses to foreseeable events is called a:

A) mission statement
B) vision statement
C) press statement
D) code of ethics
E) moral organisational stance.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Responsibility that goes beyond societal expectations to contribute to the community welfare is:

A) ethical responsibility
B) discretionary responsibility
C) economic responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) technical responsibility.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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65
Which of these is the disclosure by an employee of an illegal and/or unethical activity?

A) Organisational communication
B) Whistle-blowing
C) The filing of a disclosure statement
D) Spying
E) Betraying
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
The process that provides a systematic way to identify the expectations,needs,importance and relative power of various stakeholders is known as:

A)corporate social responsibility
B)stakeholder management
C)stakeholder mapping
D)Both A and C.
E)None of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
The model presented within the text for judging corporate social performance,divides social responsibility into four sections.Which of the following sets contains the four parts?

A) Ethical, legal, technical and rational
B) Mandatory, technical, discretionary and economic
C) Legal, mandatory, economic and ethical
D) Discretionary, legal, economic and ethical
E) Legal, economic, mechanical and environmental
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68
__________________ is an example of an ethical structure.

A) An ethics ombudsman
B) A formal statement of company values
C) An equal opportunity policy
D) A corporate speech
E) A statement of finances
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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69
Which leadership style matches with the post-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Team oriented
B) Autocratic
C) Guiding/encouraging
D) Coercive
E) Servant leadership
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
70
Managers that generally believe that 'harmful things happen,but they are nobody's fault' are likely to be espousing which type of ethical response?

A) Unethical
B) Proactive
C) Accommodative
D) Defensive
E) Obstructive
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
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71
Which of these employee behaviours matches with the conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Task accomplishment
B) Empowered employees
C) Work group collaboration
D) Full participation
E) Act in own interest
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
All of the following are examples of special interest groups,except:

A) Australian Shareholders Association
B) Miscellaneous Workers Union
C) Doctors for Forests
D) consumerists
E) The High Court of Australia
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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73
The triple bottom line of organisational performance measurement includes all the following factors,except:

A)financial performance
B)human resource performance
C)environmental performance
D)stakeholder performance
E)Both B and D.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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74
What society deems as important,with respect to appropriate corporate behaviour,is:

A) ethical responsibility
B) discretionary responsibility
C) economic responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) moral responsibility.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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75
All modern societies lay down ground rules,laws and regulations that businesses are expected to follow.The organisation's ___________________ defines what society deems as important with respect to appropriate corporate behaviour.

A) ethical responsibility
B) obstructive responsibility
C) social responsibility
D) legal responsibility
E) None of these choices
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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76
A group of executives assigned to oversee the organisation's ethics by ruling on questionable issues and disciplining violators is known as a(n):

A) a code of ethics
B) ethical ombudsman
C) ethics committee
D) the thought police
E) the ACCC.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Which of these employee behaviours matches with the post-conventional level of personal moral development?

A) Empowered employees, full participation
B) Task accomplishment
C) Act in own interest
D) Work group collaboration
E) Autocratic
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
The obligation of organisation management to make decisions and take actions that will enhance the welfare and interests of society as well as the organisation is referred to as:

A) organisational responsibility
B) corporate social responsibility
C) discretionary responsibility
D) economic responsibility
E) educational responsibility.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Primary stakeholders of an organisation include:

A) employees
B) customers
C) investors and shareholders
D) suppliers
E) All of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The responsibility to adhere to actions that are justifiable,even if they are harmful to society in some way,equates with:

A) illegal activity
B) ethical responsibility
C) unethical activity
D) economically unsound practice
E) None of these choices.
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Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 128 flashcards in this deck.