Title |
Development, Poverty and Business Ethics |
ID_Doc |
72973 |
Authors |
Hartman, L; Werhane, P; Clark, KL |
Title |
Development, Poverty and Business Ethics |
Year |
2011 |
Published |
|
DOI |
|
Abstract |
The central purpose of this article is to demonstrate that it is feasible to alleviate, if not actually eradicate, global poverty, but only if we change the way in which we approach global free enterprise, and only if we deconstruct and effectively reexamine our mental models regarding how poverty issues are addressed. Proposals surrounding poverty alleviation are greatly affected by the ways in which we think about people living in conditions of extreme poverty. The success or failure of those proposals, when operationalized, depends upon our mental models and the ways in which we calibrate and then integrate the narratives we encounter. While others have envisioned a role for multinational enterprises (MNEs) in alleviating global poverty, these schemes lack the catalysts of moral imagination and systems thinking necessary to modify MNE mental models toward sustainable solutions that also create board-based stakeholder value. We will outline the parameters of the challenge, explain the elements of the 'profitable partnerships' approach, illustrate it via an example and distinguish it from alternative approaches. |
Author Keywords |
Business ethics; health; mental models; moral imagination multinational enterprises; profitable partnerships; Tanzania |
Index Keywords |
Index Keywords |
Document Type |
Other |
Open Access |
Open Access |
Source |
Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) |
EID |
WOS:000292075700008 |
WoS Category |
Business |
Research Area |
Business & Economics |
PDF |
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