Sub-theme 18: Redesigning Leadership in Organizations: The Economic Imperative and Ethical Practice
Call for Papers
In recent years, we have witnessed a plethora of failures in ethical corporate leadership with varying consequences. The business ethics research community has responded largely by focusing on (1) the nature, dynamics, limitations and improvement of corporate social responsibility policies and practices, (2) the ways in which corporate citizenship should be understood, implemented and improved, (3) the ways in which globalization and internationalization of business are changing the ethical questions and problems faced by corporations and their leaders, and (4) what can be done to help managers recognize and be sensitive to moral issues and ethical questions in their work.
Most of the research can be
divided roughly into prescriptive and descriptive approaches. The prescriptive approach builds primarily on philosophical
ethics and focuses on principles that, if adhered to, constitute 'ethical leadership' (cf. Bass & Steidlemeier, 1999;
Ciulla, 2004). The descriptive approach draws on psychology, sociology and organization studies and focuses more on how leadership
is perceived as ethical (or not) in particular organizational and social settings (cf. Brown et al., 2005; Treviño et al.,
2000; Treviño et al., 2003). What is common to much of the ethical leadership research in both approaches is the tendency
to conceptualize ethics as an issue, question or problem. In fact, ethics is simply one more variable that
has an effect on how business is done and how leaders and managers (ought to) behave (Sandberg 2008).
Despite
recurrent crises, the leadership and ethics literature seems comparatively unaffected by critical perspectives. There are
some examples of earlier critical work (cf. e.g. Takala, 1989), and some inroads have been made more recently (cf. Parker,
2003; Knights & O'Leary, 2005,; 2006; Case & Gosling, 2007; Banerjee, 2008, 2010; Crane et al., 2008; Jones, 2010;
Case et al., 2011). These interventions have raised such questions as the importance of analyses of power in studies on ethical
leadership, the insufficiency of some of the existing dominant conceptualizations in the field (such as 'Corporate Social
Responsibility') and the possibilities of approaching both the practice of ethics in leadership as well as the notions of
ethics and leadership themselves from novel directions.
This sub-theme aims to advance the leadership and ethics
agenda. More specifically, it is concerned with redesigning studies of leadership and ethics in organizations. We
argue that to gain critical understanding of ethics, it is necessary to find ways to understand leadership, management and
organization as ethical practices; practices that have an inherent ethical quality to them. But, if there is no escaping from
ethics in leadership in contrast to leadership as ethics, how should we approach it as a research subject?
We
invite contributions with theoretical, methodological or empirical perspectives that approach leadership and ethics from a
critical perspective. We are particularly eager to hear from authors inspired by theoretical perspectives (e.g. gender and
diversity studies) that are outside or at the margins of current leadership and ethics research and help us both to challenge
and think more carefully about its assumptions, conceptualizations and truths.
We welcome proposals for papers
addressing leadership and ethics, including:
- The ethics of difference in leadership and organization
- Feminist ethical leadership
- The politics of ethical leadership
- Charismatic leadership and ethics
- Ethical leadership and globalization
- Ethical leadership beyond good and evil
- The practice of leadership and forms and traditions of ethics
- New methodologies and research designs for leadership and ethics research
References
Bass, B.M. & P. Steidlmeier (1999): "Ethics, character,
and authentic transformational leadership behavior." Leadership Quarterly, 10 (1), 181–218
Banerjee, S. (2010):
"Governing the global corporation: A critical perspective." Business Ethics Quarterly, 20 (2), 265–274
Banerjee,
S.B. (2008): "Corporate social responsibility: The good, the bad and the ugly." Critical Sociology, 34 (1), 51–79
Brown, M.E., L.K. Treviño & D.A. Harrison (2005): "Ethical leadership: A social learning perspective for construct
development and testing." Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 97 (1), 117–134
Case, P. &
J. Gosling (2007): "Wisdom of the moment: Premodern perspectives on organizational action." Social Epistemology,
21 (2), 87–111
Case, P., R. French & P. Simpson (2011): "The philosophy of leadership." In: A. Bryman et al. (eds),
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Ciulla, J.B. (ed.) (2004): Ethics, The Heart of
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Crane, A., D. Knights & K. Starkey (2008): "The conditions of our
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Jones, C. (2010):
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Knights,
D. & M. O'Leary (2005): "Reflecting on corporate scandals: the failure of ethical leadership." Business Ethics: A
European Review, 14 (4), 359–366
Knights, D. & M. O'Leary (2006): "Leadership, Ethics and Responsibility to
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Parker, M. (2003): "Business, ethics and business ethics:
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