Abstract
The construction of causal models for research in business ethics has become fashionable in recent years. This paper explores four recent proposals, comparing and contrasting their views. The primary purpose of this paper is to expose several confusions inherent in such models and to account for these errors in terms of a failure to distinguish between “models as theories” and “models as representing a research tradition.” We conclude with a brief set of recommendations for linking two major research traditions in business ethics: empiricism and ethical theory.
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F. Neil Brady is Professor of Management at San Diego State University. He is the author ofEthical Managing: Rules and Results (Macmillan, 1990) and numerous articles on business ethics. His research focuses on the application of ethical theory to business decision making.
Mary Jo Hatch is an Associate Professor at San Diego State University and visiting Associate Professor at the Copenhagen Business School in Denmark. Her research interests include the link between business ethics and organizational culture, and humor in management teams. She has published articles on organizational culture and the behavioral and symbolic aspects of organizations as physical structures.
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Brady, F.N., Hatch, M.J. General causal models in business ethics: An essay on colliding research traditions. J Bus Ethics 11, 307–315 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00872173
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00872173