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دانلود کتاب Markets, Ethics, and Business Ethics

دانلود کتاب بازارها، اخلاق، و اخلاق تجاری

Markets, Ethics, and Business Ethics

مشخصات کتاب

Markets, Ethics, and Business Ethics

ویرایش: 2 
نویسندگان:   
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 1138580961, 9781138580961 
ناشر: Routledge 
سال نشر: 2018 
تعداد صفحات: 315 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 7 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 49,000



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فهرست مطالب

Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface for Second Edition
Acknowledgments
PART 1 Foundations
	1	Markets
		1.0 Introduction
		1.1 What Are Market Exchanges?
		1.2 Why Begin This Study With Market Exchanges?
		1.3 Debates About How to Define Markets
		1.4 Blocked Exchanges
		1.5 Background Conditions for Markets to Operate
		1.6 Dialogues That Shape This Book
		1.7 Personal and Institutional Points of View
		1.8 Summary
		1.9 Looking Ahead
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	2	Property Rights
		2.0 Introduction
		2.1 Property as Relations Among People
		2.2 Hohfeld’s Conception of Property Rights
		2.3 Tips for Learning and Applying Property Relations
		2.4 Ownership and a Bundle of Sticks
		2.5 Further Distinctions
		2.6 Patents and Intellectual Property
		2.7 The Limits of Property Rights
		2.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	3	Property Rights, Markets, and Law
		3.0 Introduction
		3.1 Property Rights and Markets
		3.2 Property Rights and Law
		3.3 Property Rights and Culture
		3.4 Economic Systems Today
		3.5 Why Study Property Rights?
		3.6 Relativism
		3.7 Two Normative Theories About Property Rights
		3.8 Summary
		3.9 Looking Ahead
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
PART 2 The Purpose and Responsibilities of Corporations
	4	Shareholder Primacy Theory of Corporations
		4.0 Introduction
		4.1 A Debate
		4.2 Corporate Purpose: Advance Shareholder Interests By Maximizing Profits Within the Law
		4.3 Debates About Shareholder Rights and Managerial Duties
		4.4 Ethical Justifications
		4.5 Interpreting the CSR Movement From the Shareholder Perspective
		4.6 Separating the Roles of Business and Government
		4.7 Self-Interest and Markets
		4.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	5	Stakeholder Theory of Corporations, and Other Perspectives
		5.0 Introduction
		5.1 A Global Perspective: “All Is Not Well”
		5.2 Corporate Purpose, Stakeholder Rights, and Managerial Duties
		5.3 Ethical Justifications
		5.4 Interpreting the CSR Movement From a Stakeholder Perspective
		5.5 Corporations and Government
		5.6 Ethics, Self-Interest, and Markets
		5.7 Personal and Institutional Points of View Revisited
		5.8 Other Theories of Corporate Purpose
		5.9 Corporate Personhood
		5.10 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
PART 3 Efficiency and Welfare: Common Ethical Guides in Business and Economics
	6	Efficiency and Welfare
		6.0 Introduction
		6.1 Pareto Efficiency as an Ethical Ideal
		6.2 How Idealized Markets Create Efficiency Gains
		6.3 Background Conditions
		6.4 How Actual Markets Approximate Ideal Markets
		6.5 How Efficiency Is a Basis for Criticizing Markets
		6.6 The Ethical and Practical Appeal of the Efficiency Standard
		6.7 Complications About the Meaning of Efficiency
		6.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	7	Public Goods and Utilitarianism
		7.0 Introduction
		7.1 Public Goods
		7.2 Two Neighborhoods and a Park: A Public Goods Problem
		7.3 The Tragedy of the Commons
		7.4 Responsibility for Collective Action Problems
		7.5 Limitations to Pareto Efficiency as a Normative Standard
		7.6 Utilitarianism
		7.7 Attractions and Limitations of Utilitarianism
		7.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	8	The Invisible Hand: Ethics, Incentives, and Institutions
		8.0 Introduction
		8.1 The Invisible Hand Model
		8.2 The Government Regulation Model
		8.3 The Professional Ethics Model
		8.4 Conflicts of Interest
		8.5 The Dance Between Ethics, Incentives, and Institutions
		8.6 Beyond Welfare
		8.7 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
PART 4 Ethics Beyond Efficiency
	9	Liberty
		9.0 Introduction
		9.1 Two Concepts of Liberty
		9.2 Freedom and Ethics
		9.3 Kantian Ethics
		9.4 Institutional Implications of Negative Freedom
		9.5 Institutional Implications of Positive Freedom
		9.6 Two Visions of a Free Society: Positive and Negative Freedom
		9.7 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
	10	Rights
		10.0 Introduction
		10.1 Preliminaries
		10.2 Rights as Side-Constraints
		10.3 Rights and Markets: Nozick’s Entitlement Theory of Justice
		10.4 Applying the Entitlement Theory to Global Capitalism
		10.5 Criticisms of Nozick’s Entitlement Theory of Justice
		10.6 Justifying Rights
		10.7 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	11	Equality
		11.0 Introduction
		11.1 Fundamental Equality
		11.2 Implications for Institutions
		11.3 Professional Ethics and the Personal Point of View
		11.4 Social Contract Theory: Liberty and Equality Joined
		11.5 Rawls’s Theory of Justice
		11.6 Beyond Rawls: Businesses and the Social Contract
		11.7 Integrative Social Contracts Theory
		11.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	12	What People Deserve
		12.0 Introduction
		12.1 The Concept of Desert
		12.2 Deserved Wages
		12.3 Desert and Professional Ethics
		12.4 Capitalism and Debates About the Relevance of Desert
		12.5 Deserving Anything at All
		12.6 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	13	Relationships and Character
		13.0 Introduction
		13.1 Relationships
		13.2 Criticisms of Markets and Capitalism Based on Relationships and Character
		13.3 Virtue Ethics
		13.4 Ayn Rand and Virtuous Rational Egoism
		13.5 The Ethics of Care
		13.6 Religious and Non-Western Ethical Approaches: Less of the Self
		13.7 Integrating Earlier Debates on Relationships and Character
		13.8 Advocating Markets and Capitalism Based on Relationships and Character
		13.9 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	14	Community and the Common Good
		14.0 Introduction
		14.1 Creative Destruction and Community: Institutional Perspective
		14.2 Change and Tradition From the Personal Point of View
		14.3 Markets That Undermine Communities
		14.4 Markets That Build Communities
		14.5 The Meaning of the Common Good
		14.6 Communitarianism
		14.7 Justice and the Common Good: Complementary or Conflicting Values?
		14.8 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
	15	The Value of an Ethical Life
		15.0 Introduction
		15.1 Why Study Ethics?
		15.2 Skepticism and Ethics
		15.3 Weighing Values
		15.4 Summary
		Key Terms
		Discussion Questions
		Further Readings
Appendix
	I. A Primer on Ethics
	II. The Overall Approach of the Book
	III. Syllabi Suggestions
	IV. Summary
	Key Terms
Glossary
Index




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