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Behavioral Ethics: Toward a Deeper Understanding of Moral Judgment and Dishonesty

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2012

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Bazerman, Max, and Francesca Gino. "Behavioral Ethics: Toward a Deeper Understanding of Moral Judgment and Dishonesty." Annual Review of Law and Social Science 8 (2012): 85–104.

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Early research and teaching on ethics focused on either a moral development perspective or philosophical approaches, and used a normative approach by focusing on the question of how people should act when resolving ethical dilemmas. In this paper, we briefly describe the traditional approach to ethics and then present a (biased) review on the behavioral approach to ethics. We define behavioral ethics as the study of systematic and predictable ways in which individuals make ethical decisions and judge the ethical decisions of others that are at odds with intuition and the benefits of the broader society. By focusing on a descriptive rather than a normative approach to ethics, behavioral ethics is better suited than traditional approaches to address the increasing demand from society for a deeper understanding of what causes even good people to cross ethical boundaries.

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behavior, ethics, morality, ethical decision making, corruption, behavioral decision research, unethical behavior

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Behavioral Ethics: Toward a Deeper Understanding… : DASH Story 2014-07-29
After 18 years as a senior administrator in higher education, responsible for overseeing research compliance, I have now returned to the faculty and plan to spend the last part of my career contributing to research in research compliance. A colleague pointed me to Max Bazerman's work on ethical decision making and suggested that I might find his work and that of his colleagues extremely relevant to the questions I wished to address. This was a terrific suggestion! I am most grateful to have open access to some of Dr Bazerman's seminal articles through DASH. Thank you!