unethical behaviorself-construalrelational selfWe suggest that understanding unethical behavior in organizations involves understanding how people view themselves and their relationships with others, a concept known as self-construal. Across multiple studies, employing both field and laboratory settings, we ...
From the New England Journal of Medicine “In some cases, Pasteur’s behavior may be termedshowmanship,but in othersit clearly amounted to deception”(Fee 1995).” doi: 10.1086/393744. These are clearly descriptions of a man who manipulated the data from his experiments in order to obtain th...
Unethical behaviorThere is a substantial body of scientific literature on the use of third-party services (TPS) by academics to assist as "publication consultants" in scholarly publishing. TPS provide a wide range of scholarly services to research teams that lack the equipment, skills, motivation,...
The Herpes vaccine trial defiantly shows that there is still room for this type of unethical behavior, so does that mean that there is always room for some sort of utilitarian practice in medical research? This is hard to answer because, with the strict procedure that researchers have to ...
Australian paediatric psychiatrist Prof Jon Jureidini says: ‘It’s just shocking to me that anybody could conceive of not informing people that they are part of a research project. The pharmacy and device industry have a huge history of unethical behavior. ...
. Hence, in circumstances where the customer is in a stronger bargaining position, their unethical behaviors are salient, but remain largely unknown. Examination of customers’ unethical behavior is important, particularly in light of high-profile cases. One prominent example is the case of General ...
14 This behavior may, or may not, be optimal in utilitarian terms (it is often very difficult to deter- mine what maximises utility in the long term and some economic behavior may be harmful, all things considered). Even if it is optimal in utilitarian terms, it may not be ethical, ...
The positive indirect path suggested that yielding to temptation (e.g., high cognitive impairment and lack of self-control) led to poor MI (low stewardship behavior, but high cognitive meaning) that, in turn, led to high unethical intentions (theft, corruption, and deception). Our ...
14 This behavior may, or may not, be optimal in utilitarian terms (it is often very difficult to deter- mine what maximises utility in the long term and some economic behavior may be harmful, all things considered). Even if it is optimal in utilitarian terms, it may not be ethical, ...