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DOAJ Open Access 2025
Relational Perspective of Coopetition, Cooperative Efforts and Effects on Firm Performance

Miloudi Kobiyh, Adil El Amri, Abdelhak Sahib Eddine et al.

Firms can act according to individual or collective strategies to achieve their growth objectives. Thus, part of the strategic activity of firms is located at the inter-organizational level, through multiple forms of collective strategies. The notion of collective strategy refers to the different dynamic relationships of firms collaborating and simultaneously competing. Effective collaborations and cooperative relationships are concepts that underpin research on collective strategies. This logic consists of competing in some aspects and cooperating with others. In this regard, this conceptual work provides a framework to introduce the perspective of cooperation-competition interaction and attempts to help better understand the dynamic nature of this relational perspective. It examines the potential impact of the development of coopetition efforts between firms. This research, therefore, aims to provide a broader perspective on the notion of coopetition and how it triggers evolutions towards new forms of cooperation. When firms decide to move to a coopetitive strategy, it contributes to building a vision that examines the nature of coopetition, its challenges, its effect on firm performance, and its implications for inter- and intra-organizational relationships. This work also suggests directions for future studies on this relational perspective by investigating why the relational context that bears on coopetition is so important.

DOAJ Open Access 2025
Educators’ perceptions of the teaching of bioethics in primary and secondary schools in Greece

ES Livanis, KV Tsihrintzis, AK Tsaroucha

In recent years, a growing number of studies have emphasized the importance of integrating ethics education into the school curriculum. The objective of the present study is to investigate the perspectives of educators on the teaching of bioethics in primary and secondary education in Greece. A survey was conducted using google.forms. Through the official websites of the Directorates of Primary and Secondary Education throughout Greece, the email addresses of schools were identified. The link to the questionnaire was sent to these email addresses and the director of each school was asked to forward it to his/her fellow teachers. A total of 1274 educators responded to the survey. We found that there is strong support for integrating bioethics education into both primary and secondary education, with a clear preference for incorporating it into existing courses rather than creating separate bioethics courses. The necessity of teaching bioethics is viewed as slightly more important in secondary education compared to primary education, reflecting the increased complexity and relevance of bioethical issues as students mature. This is the first large-scale survey in Greece to examine the views of teachers in primary and secondary schools on issues related to bioethics. The study supports the argument for the introduction of bioethics education in the early years of school life. This, however, requires the enhancement of teacher training programs in bioethics and the development of appropriate teaching materials and techniques for use at each level of education.

Environmental sciences, Business ethics
DOAJ Open Access 2025
Designing digital sovereignty—an open federated EU web index for search  

Renée Ridgway

Google crawls and indexes the web, providing hyperlinks and search results that are extremely profitable based on exchanges between users, advertisers and data brokers. Due to this “logic of accumulation” of data, the human expectation of sovereignty over one’s own life and authorship of personal experience is at stake (Zuboff 2019). Also of concern is state sovereignty and its ability to “reign in” Big Tech, which has been further undermined by lobbyists and regulatory bodies. Encompassing information and communication technologies, “digital sovereignty” is often viewed as a “third way,” committed to European norms and values instead of US or China’s business models. Applying document and critical discourse analysis, this article explores the “media and sovereignty” dilemma of search technologies structured by John Durham Peter’s “political-ethical urgencies” (2022): Section 230, conspiracy theory, a burning planet and surveillance capitalism. It then introduces a forthcoming EU funded Open Web Index (OWI) based on European values and jurisdiction. In tandem with its technical development, a Working Group Ethics (WGE) is generating an “ethics compass” including the value “Sovereignty/ Autonomy,” which is collectively discussed and then analysed by the author. Contributing to media and communication scholarship, the article proposes how this federated search index could embody digital sovereignty by instilling “digital communality” (Lehuedé 2024), thereby simultaneously challenging world capitalism’s accumulative and extractive ethos.

Language and Literature, Communication. Mass media
DOAJ Open Access 2024
The role of corporate environmental ethics in shaping environmental management accounting adoption under the institutional theory

Chetanraj D. B., Senthil Kumar J. P., Velaga Sri Sai et al.

This study aims to investigate the complex association between institutional pressure, adoption of environmental management accounting (EMA), and financial performance, with corporate environmental ethics as a moderating component. It explains why and how firms adopt EMA in response to institutional demand to factor environmental factors into their strategic decision-making processes. Quantitative information is gathered using a structured questionnaire from 256 manufacturing companies’ environmental managers and executives who monitor environmental practices and policies and decision-makers who shape business environmental ethics and strategy in the Indian state of Karnataka. Data are analyzed using SmartPLS 4, and PLS-SEM tests the hypotheses. The results show that coercive pressure (β = 0.244, p = 0.000), mimetic pressure (β = 0.221, p = 0.000), and normative pressure (β = 0.209, p = 0.000) have a major role in determining the rate of EMA adoption. It is further identified that EMA adoption (β = 0.217, p = 0.000) positively influences the organization's financial performance. Furthermore, EMA adoption mediates the relationship between coercive pressure (β = 0.053, p = 0.000), normative pressure (β = 0.045, p = 0.000), mimetic pressure (β = 0.048, p = 0.000), and firm’s financial performance. Coercive pressure is associated with higher EMA adoption, although the impact of this link is moderated by corporate environmental ethics (β = 0.069, p = 0.000).

Environmental sciences
DOAJ Open Access 2024
The Bioethics-CSR Divide

Caio Caesar Dib

Photo by Sean Pollock on Unsplash ABSTRACT Bioethics and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) were born out of similar concerns, such as the reaction to scandal and the restraint of irresponsible actions by individuals and organizations. However, these fields of knowledge are seldom explored together. This article attempts to explain the motives behind the gap between bioethics and CSR, while arguing that their shared agenda – combined with their contrasting principles and goals – suggests there is potential for fruitful dialogue that enables the actualization of bioethical agendas and provides a direction for CSR in health-related organizations. INTRODUCTION Bioethics and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) seem to be cut from the same cloth: the concern for human rights and the response to scandal. Both are tools for the governance of organizations, shaping how power flows and decisions are made. They have taken the shape of specialized committees, means of stakeholder inclusion at deliberative forums, compliance programs, and internal processes. It should be surprising, then, that these two fields of study and practice have developed separately, only recently re-approaching one another. There have been displays of this reconnection both in academic and corporate spaces, with bioethics surfacing as part of the discourse of CSR and compliance initiatives. However, this is still a relatively timid effort. Even though the bioethics-CSR divide presents mostly reasonable explanations for this difficult relationship between the disciplines, current proposals suggest there is much to be gained from a stronger relationship between them. This article explores the common history of bioethics and corporate social responsibility and identifies their common features and differences. It then explores the dispute of jurisdictions due to professional and academic “pedigree” and incompatibilities in the ideological and teleological spheres as possible causes for the divide. The discussion turns to paths for improving the reflexivity of both disciplines and, therefore, their openness to mutual contributions. I.     Cut Out of the Same Cloth The earliest record of the word “bioethics” dates back to 1927 as a term that designates one’s ethical responsibility toward not only human beings but other lifeforms as well, such as animals and plants.[1] Based on Kantian ethics, the term was coined as a response to the great prestige science held at its time. It remained largely forgotten until the 1970s, when it resurfaced in the United States[2] as the body of knowledge that can be employed to ensure the responsible pursuit and application of science. The resurgence was prompted by a response to widespread irresponsible attitudes toward science and grounded in a pluralistic perspective of morality.[3] In the second half of the twentieth century, states and the international community assumed the duty to protect human rights, and bioethics became a venue for discussing rights.[4] There is both a semantic gap and a contextual gap between these two iterations, with some of them already being established. Corporate social responsibility is often attributed to the Berle-Dodd debate. The discussion was characterized by diverging views on the extent of the responsibility of managers.[5] It was later settled as positioning the company, especially the large firm, as an entity whose existence is fomented by the law due to its service to the community. The concept has evolved with time, departing from a largely philanthropic meaning to being ingrained in nearly every aspect of a company’s operations. This includes investments, entrepreneurship models, and its relationship to stakeholders, leading to an increasing operationalization and globalization of the concept.[6] At first sight, these two movements seem to stem from different contexts. Despite the difference, it is also possible to tell a joint history of bioethics and CSR, with their point of contact being a generalized concern with technological and social changes that surfaced in the sixties. The publishing of Silent Spring in 1962 by Rachel Carson exemplifies this growing concern over the sustainability of the ruling economic growth model of its time by commenting on the effects of large-scale agriculture and the use of pesticides in the population of bees, one of the most relevant pollinators of crops consumed by humans. The book influenced both the author responsible for the coining bioethics in the 1971[7] and early CSR literature.[8] By initiating a debate over the sustainability of economic models, the environmentalist discourse became a precursor to vigorous social movements for civil rights. Bioethics was part of the trend as it would be carried forward by movements such as feminism and the patients’ rights movement.[9] Bioethics would gradually move from a public discourse centered around the responsible use of science and technology to academic and government spaces.[10]  This evolution led to an increasing emphasis on intellectual rigor and governance. The transformation would unravel the effort to take effective action against scandal and turn bioethical discourse into governance practices,[11] such as bioethics and research ethics committees. The publication of the Belmont Report[12] in the aftermath of the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, as well as the creation of committees such as the “God Committee,”[13] which aimed to develop and enforce criteria for allocating scarce dialysis machines, exemplify this shift. On the side of CSR, this period represents, at first, a stronger pact between businesses and society due to more stringent environmental and consumer regulations. But afterward, a joint trend emerged: on one side, the deregulation within the context of neoliberalism, and on the other, the operationalization of corporate social responsibility as a response to societal concerns.[14] The 1990s saw both opportunities and crises that derived from globalization. In the political arena, the end of the Cold War led to an impasse in the discourse concerning human rights,[15] which previously had been split between the defense of civil and political rights on one side and social rights on the other. But at the same time, agendas that were previously restricted territorially became institutionalized on a global scale.[16] Events such as the European Environment Agency (1990), ECO92 in Rio de Janeiro (1992), and the UN Global Compact (2000) are some examples of the globalization of CSR. This process of institutionalization would also mirror a crisis in CSR, given that its voluntarist core would be deemed lackluster due to the lack of corporate accountability. The business and human rights movement sought to produce new binding instruments – usually state-based – that could ensure that businesses would comply with their duties to respect human rights.[17] This rule-creation process has been called legalization: a shift from business standards to norms of varying degrees of obligation, precision, and delegation.[18] Bioethics has also experienced its own renewed identity in the developed world, perhaps because of its reconnection to public and global health. Global health has been the object of study for centuries under other labels (e.g., the use of tropical medicine to assist colonial expeditions) but it resurfaced in the political agenda recently after the pandemics of AIDS and respiratory diseases.[19] Bioethics has been accused from the inside of ignoring matters beyond the patient-provider relationship,[20] including those related to public health and/or governance. Meanwhile, scholars claimed the need to expand the discourse to global health.[21] In some countries, bioethics developed a tight relationship with public health, such as Brazil,[22] due to its connections to the sanitary reform movement. The United Kingdom has also followed a different path, prioritizing governance practices and the use of pre-established institutions in a more community-oriented approach.[23] The Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Rights followed this shift toward a social dimension of bioethics despite being subject to criticism due to its human rights-based approach in a field characterized by ethical pluralism.[24] This scenario suggests bioethics and CSR have developed out of similar concerns: the protection of human rights and concerns over responsible development – be it economic, scientific, or technological. However, the interaction between these two fields (as well as business and human rights) is fairly recent both in academic and business settings. There might be a divide between these fields and their practitioners. II.     A Tale of Jurisdictions It can be argued that CSR and business and human rights did not face jurisdictional disputes. These fields owe much of their longevity to their roots in institutional economics, whose debates, such as the Berle-Dodd debate, were based on interdisciplinary dialogue and the abandonment of sectorial divisions and public-private dichotomies.[25] There was opposition to this approach to the role of companies in society that could have implications for CSR’s interdisciplinarity, such as the understanding that corporate activities should be restricted to profit maximization.[26] Yet, those were often oppositions to CSR or business and human rights themselves. The birth of bioethics in the USA can be traced back to jurisdictional disputes over the realm of medicine and life sciences.[27] The dispute unfolded between representatives of science and those of “society’s conscience,” whether through bioethics as a form of applied ethics or other areas of knowledge such as theology.[28] Amid the civil rights movements, outsiders would gain access to the social sphere of medicine, simultaneously bringing it to the public debate and emphasizing the decision-making process as the center of the medical practice.[29] This led to the emergence of the bioethicist as a professional whose background in philosophy, theology, or social sciences deemed the bioethicist qualified to speak on behalf of the social consciousness. In other locations this interaction would play out differently: whether as an investigation of philosophically implied issues, a communal effort with professional institutions to enhance decision-making capability, or a concern with access to healthcare.[30] In these situations, the emergence and regulation of bioethics would be way less rooted in disputes over jurisdictions. This contentious birth of bioethics would have several implications, most related to where the bioethicist belongs. After the civil rights movements subsided, bioethics moved from the public sphere into an ivory tower: intellectual, secular, and isolated. The scope of the bioethicist would be increasingly limited to the spaces of academia and hospitals, where it would be narrowed to the clinical environment.[31] This would become the comfort zone of professionals, much to the detriment of social concerns. This scenario was convenient to social groups that sought to affirm their protagonism in the public arena, with conservative and progressive movements alike questioning the legitimacy of bioethics in the political discourse.[32] Even within the walls of hospitals and clinics, bioethics would not be excused from criticism. Afterall, the work of bioethicists is often unregulated and lacks the same kind of accountability that doctors and lawyers have. Then, is there a role to be played by the bioethicist? This trend of isolation leads to a plausible explanation for why bioethics did not develop an extensive collaboration with corporate social responsibility nor with business and human rights. Despite stemming from similar agendas, bioethics’ orientation towards the private sphere resulted in a limited perspective on the broader implications of its decisions. This existential crisis of the discipline led to a re-evaluation of its nature and purpose. Its relevance has been reaffirmed due to the epistemic advantage of philosophy when engaging normative issues. Proper training enables the bioethicist to avoid falling into traps of subjectivism or moralism, which are unable to address the complexity of decision-making. It also prevents the naïve seduction of “scientifying” ethics.[33] This is the starting point of a multitude of roles that can be attributed to the bioethicists. There are three main responsibilities that fall under bioethics: (i) activism in biopolicy, through the engagement in the creation of laws, jurisprudence, and public policies; (ii) the exercise of bioethics expertise, be it through the specialized knowledge in philosophical thought, its ability to juggle multiple languages related to various disciplines related to bioethics, or its capacity to combat and avoid misinformation and epistemic distortion; (iii) and, intellectual exchange, by exercising awareness that it is necessary to work with specialists from different backgrounds to achieve its goals.[34] All of those suggest the need for bioethics to improve its dialogue with CSR and business and human rights. Both CSR and business and human rights have been the arena of political disputes over the role of regulations and corporations themselves, and the absence of strong stances by bioethicists risks deepening their exclusion from the public arena. Furthermore, CSR and business and human rights are at the forefront of contemporary issues, such as the limits to sustainable development and appropriate governance structures, which may lead to the acceptance of values and accomplishment of goals cherished by bioethics. However, a gap in identifying the role and nature of bioethics and CSR may also be an obstacle for bridging the chasm between bioethics and CSR. III.     From Substance to Form: Philosophical Groundings of CSR and Bioethics As mentioned earlier, CSR is, to some extent, a byproduct of institutionalism. Institutional economics has a philosophical footprint in the pragmatic tradition[35], which has implications for the purpose of the movement and the typical course of the debate. The effectiveness of regulatory measures is often at the center of CSR and business and human rights debates: whatever the regulatory proposal may be, compliance, feasibility, and effectiveness are the kernel of the discussion. The axiological foundation is often the protection of human rights. But discussions over the prioritization of some human rights over others or the specific characteristics of the community to be protected are often neglected.[36] It is worth reinforcing that adopting human rights as an ethical standard presents problems to bioethics, given its grounding in the recognition of ethical pluralism. Pragmatism adopts an anti-essentialist view, arguing that concepts derive from their practical consequences instead of aprioristic elements.[37] Therefore, truth is transitory and context dependent. Pragmatism embraces a form of moral relativism and may find itself in an impasse in the context of political economy and policymaking due to its tendency to be stuck between the preservation of the status quo and the defense of a technocratic perspective, which sees technical and scientific progress as the solution to many of society’s issues.[38] These characteristics mean that bioethics has a complicated relationship with pragmatism. Indeed, there are connections between pragmatism and the bioethics discourse. Both can be traced back to American naturalism.[39] The early effort in bioethics to make it ecumenical, thus building on a common but transitory morality,[40] sounds pragmatic. Therefore, scholars suggest that bioethics should rely on pragmatism's perks and characteristics to develop solutions to new ethical challenges that emerge from scientific and technological progress. Nonetheless, ethical relativism is a problem for bioethics when it bleeds from a metaethical level into the subject matters themselves. After all, the whole point of bioethics is either descriptive, where it seeks to understand social values and conditions that pertain to its scope, or normative, where it investigates what should be done in matters related to medicine, life sciences, and social and technological change. It is a “knowledge of how to use knowledge.” Therefore, bioethics is a product of disillusionment regarding science and technology's capacity to produce exclusively good consequences. It was built around an opposition to ethical relativism—even though the field is aware of the particularity of its answers. This is true not only for the scholarly arena, where the objective is to produce ethically sound answers but also for bioethics governance, where relativism may induce decision paralysis or open the way to points of view disconnected from facts.[41] But there might be a point for more pragmatic bioethics. Bioethics has become an increasingly public enterprise which seeks political persuasion and impact in the regulatory sphere. When bioethics is seen as an enterprise, achieving social transformation is its main goal. In this sense, pragmatism can provide critical tools to identify idiosyncrasies in regulation that prove change is needed. An example of how this may play out is the abortion rights movement in the global south.[42] Despite barriers to accessing safe abortion, this movement came up with creative solutions and a public discourse focused on the consequences of its criminalization rather than its moral aspects. IV.     Bridging the Divide: Connections Between Bioethics and CSR There have been attempts to bring bioethics and CSR closer to each other. Corporate responsibility can be a supplementary strategy for achieving the goals of bioethics. The International Bioethics Committee (IBC), an institution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), highlights the concept that social responsibility regarding health falls under the provisions of the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights (UDBHR). It is a means of achieving good health (complete physical, mental, and social well-being) through social development.[43] Thus, it plays out as a condition for actualizing the goals dear to bioethics and general ethical standards,[44] such as autonomy and awareness of the social consequences of an organization’s governance. On this same note, CSR is a complementary resource for healthcare organizations that already have embedded bioethics into their operations[45] as a way of looking at the social impact of their practices. And bioethics is also an asset of CSR. Bioethics can inform the necessary conditions for healthcare institutions achieving a positive social impact. When taken at face value, bioethics may offer guidelines for ethical and socially responsible behavior in the industry, instructing how these should play out in a particular context such as in research, and access to health.[46] When considering the relevance of rewarding mechanisms,[47] bioethics can guide the establishment of certification measures to restore lost trust in the pharmaceutical sector.[48] Furthermore, recognizing that the choice is a more complex matter than the maximization of utility can offer a nuanced perspective on how organizations dealing with existentially relevant choices understand their stakeholders.[49] However, all of those proposals might come with the challenge of proving that something can be gained from its addition to self-regulatory practices[50] within the scope of a dominant rights-based approach to CSR and global and corporate law. It is evident that there is room for further collaboration between bioethics and CSR. Embedding either into the corporate governance practices of an organization tends to be connected to promoting the other.[51] While there are some incompatibilities, organizations should try to overcome them and take advantage of the synergies and similarities. CONCLUSION Despite their common interests and shared history, bioethics and corporate social responsibility have not produced a mature exchange. Jurisdictional issues and foundational incompatibilities have prevented a joint effort to establish a model of social responsibility that addresses issues particular to the healthcare sector. Both bioethics and CSR should acknowledge that they hold two different pieces of a cognitive competence necessary for that task: CSR offers experience on how to turn corporate ethical obligations operational, while bioethics provides access to the prevailing practical and philosophical problem-solving tools in healthcare that were born out of social movements. Reconciling bioethics and CSR calls for greater efforts to comprehend and incorporate the social knowledge developed by each field reflexively[52] while understanding their insights are relevant to achieving some common goals. - [1]. Fritz Jahr, “Bio-Ethik: Eine Umschau Über Die Ethischen Beziehungen Des Menschen Zu Tier Und Pflanze,” Kosmos - Handweiser Für Naturfreunde 24 (1927): 2–4. [2]. Van Rensselaer Potter, “Bioethics, the Science of Survival,” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 14, no. 1 (1970): 127–53, https://doi.org/10.1353/pbm.1970.0015. [3]. Maximilian Schochow and Jonas Grygier, eds., “Tagungsbericht: 1927 – Die Geburt der Bioethik in Halle (Saale) durch den protestantischen Theologen Fritz Jahr (1895-1953),” Jahrbuch für Recht und Ethik / Annual Review of Law and Ethics 21 (June 11, 2014): 325–29, https://doi.org/10.3726/978-3-653-02807-2. [4] George J. Annas, American Bioethics: Crossing Human Rights and Health Law Boundaries (Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, 2005). [5] Philip L. Cochran, “The Evolution of Corporate Social Responsibility,” Business Horizons 50, no. 6 (November 2007): 449–54, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bushor.2007.06.004. p. 449. [6] Mauricio Andrés Latapí Agudelo, Lára Jóhannsdóttir, and Brynhildur Davídsdóttir, “A Literature Review of the History and Evolution of Corporate Social Responsibility,” International Journal of Corporate Social Responsibility 4, no. 1 (December 2019): 23, https://doi.org/10.1186/s40991-018-0039-y. [7] Potter, “Bioethics, the Science of Survival.” p. 129. [8] Latapí Agudelo, Jóhannsdóttir, and Davídsdóttir, “A Literature Review of the History and Evolution of Corporate Social Responsibility.” p. 4. [9] Albert R. Jonsen, The Birth of Bioethics (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003). p. 368-371. [10] Jonsen. p. 372. [11] Jonathan Montgomery, “Bioethics as a Governance Practice,” Health Care Analysis 24, no. 1 (March 2016): 3–23, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-015-0310-2. [12]. The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, “The Belmont Report: Ethical Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of Human Subjects of Research” (Washington: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, April 18, 1979), https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/sites/default/files/the-belmont-report-508c_FINAL.pdf. [13] Shana Alexander, “They Decide Who Lives, Who Dies,” in LIFE, by Time Inc, 19th ed., vol. 53 (Nova Iorque: Time Inc, 1962), 102–25. [14]. Latapí Agudelo, Jóhannsdóttir, and Davídsdóttir, “A Literature Review of the History and Evolution of Corporate Social Responsibility.” [15]. Boaventura de Sousa Santos, “Por Uma Concepção Multicultural Dos Direitos Humanos,” Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais, no. 48 (June 1997): 11–32. 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[30] Volnei Garrafa, Thiago Rocha Da Cunha, and Camilo Manchola, “Access to Healthcare: A Central Question within Brazilian Bioethics,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27, no. 3 (July 2018): 431–39, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963180117000810. [31] Jonsen, “Social Responsibilities of Bioethics.” [32] Evans, The History and Future of Bioethics. p. 75-79, 94-96. [33] Julian Savulescu, “Bioethics: Why Philosophy Is Essential for Progress,” Journal of Medical Ethics 41, no. 1 (January 2015): 28–33, https://doi.org/10.1136/medethics-2014-102284. [34] Silvia Camporesi and Giulia Cavaliere, “Can Bioethics Be an Honest Way of Making a Living? A Reflection on Normativity, Governance and Expertise,” Journal of Medical Ethics 47, no. 3 (March 2021): 159–63, https://doi.org/10.1136/medethics-2019-105954; Jackie Leach Scully, “The Responsibilities of the Engaged Bioethicist: Scholar, Advocate, Activist,” Bioethics 33, no. 8 (October 2019): 872–80, https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.12659. [35] Philip Mirowski, “The Philosophical Bases of Institutionalist Economics,” Journal of Economic Issues, Evolutionary Economics I: Foundations of Institutional Thought, 21, no. 3 (September 1987): 1001–38. [36] David Kennedy, “The International Human Rights Movement: Part of the Problem?,” Harvard Human Rights Journal 15 (2002): 101–25. [37] Richard Rorty, “Pragmatism, Relativism, and Irrationalism,” Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 53, no. 6 (August 1980): 717+719-738. [38]. Mirowski, “The Philosophical Bases of Institutionalist Economics.” [39]. Glenn McGee, ed., Pragmatic Bioethics, 2nd ed, Basic Bioethics (Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2003). [40]. Tom L. Beauchamp and James F. Childress, Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 7th ed (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013). [41]. Montgomery, “Bioethics as a Governance Practice.” [42]. Debora Diniz and Giselle Carino, “What Can Be Learned from the Global South on Abortion and How We Can Learn?,” Developing World Bioethics 23, no. 1 (March 2023): 3–4, https://doi.org/10.1111/dewb.12385. [43]. International Bioethics Committee, On Social Responsibility and Health Report (Paris: Unesco, 2010). [44]. Cristina Brandão et al., “Social Responsibility: A New Paradigm of Hospital Governance?,” Health Care Analysis 21, no. 4 (December 2013): 390–402, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-012-0206-3. [45] Intissar Haddiya, Taha Janfi, and Mohamed Guedira, “Application of the Concepts of Social Responsibility, Sustainability, and Ethics to Healthcare Organizations,” Risk Management and Healthcare Policy Volume 13 (August 2020): 1029–33, https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S258984. [46]The Biopharmaceutical Bioethics Working Group et al., “Considerations for Applying Bioethics Norms to a Biopharmaceutical Industry Setting,” BMC Medical Ethics 22, no. 1 (December 2021): 31–41, https://doi.org/10.1186/s12910-021-00600-y. [47] Anne Van Aaken and Betül Simsek, “Rewarding in International Law,” American Journal of International Law 115, no. 2 (April 2021): 195–241, https://doi.org/10.1017/ajil.2021.2. [48] Jennifer E. Miller, “Bioethical Accreditation or Rating Needed to Restore Trust in Pharma,” Nature Medicine 19, no. 3 (March 2013): 261–261, https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0313-261. [49] John Hardwig, “The Stockholder – A Lesson for Business Ethics from Bioethics?,” Journal of Business Ethics 91, no. 3 (February 2010): 329–41, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-009-0086-0. [50] Stefan van Uden, “Taking up Bioethical Responsibility?: The Role of Global Bioethics in the Social Responsibility of Pharmaceutical Corporations Operating in Developing Countries” (Mestrado, Coimbra, Coimbra University, 2012). [51] María Peana Chivite and Sara Gallardo, “La bioética en la empresa: el caso particular de la Responsabilidad Social Corporativa,” Revista Internacional de Organizaciones, no. 13 (January 12, 2015): 55–81, https://doi.org/10.17345/rio13.55-81. [52] Teubner argues that social spheres tend to develop solutions autonomously, but one sphere interfering in the way other spheres govern themselves tends to result in ineffective regulation and demobilization of their autonomous rule-making capabilities. These spheres should develop “reflexion mechanisms” that enable the exchange of their social knowledge and provide effective, non-damaging solutions to social issues. See Gunther Teubner, “Substantive and Reflexive Elements in Modern Law,” Law & Society Review 17, no. 2 (1983): 239–85, https://doi.org/10.2307/3053348.

Medical philosophy. Medical ethics, Ethics
DOAJ Open Access 2023
BISNIS DIGITAL APLIKASI HIBURAN HIGGS DOMINO ISLAND DALAM PERSPEKTIF ETIKA BISNIS ISLAM

Peni Sarijuddin Mappolean, Muhammad Ruslan Abdullah

Several previous studies have discussed the impact of user activity on the Higgs domino island application has had a negative impact on its users. Meanwhile, this research focuses on the view of Islamic business ethics towards consumption practices of the Higgs Domino Island entertainment application. This type of research uses descriptive qualitative by collecting data through player reviews on the Higgs Domino Island application. The discovery of the digital business entertainment application Higgs Domino Island is prohibited for Muslims to play because it contains the practices of maysir and gharar. Where this practice is contrary to Islamic business ethics, namely fatanah, where players and developers must understand what business is permitted and prohibited in Islam. The implication of the research is that after knowing what entertainment is permitted and prohibited in Islam, Muslim communities will be more careful in choosing entertainment applications to pass the time and not neglect their faith.   Beberapa penelitian sebelumnya telah membahas dampak aktivitas pengguna aplikasi Higgs Domino Island memberikan efek negatif bagi penggunanya. sementara itu penelitian ini fokus pada pandangan etika bisnis islam terhadap praktik konsumsi aplikasi hiburan Higgs Domino Island. Penelitian ini menggunakan kualitatif deskriptif dengan  mengumpulkan data melalui ulasan player pada aplikasi Higgs Domino Island. Temuan pada bisnis digital aplikasi hiburan higgs domino island ini dilarang untuk dimainkan oleh umat muslim karena di dalamnya terdapat praktik maysir dan gharar.  Dimana praktik tersebut bertolak belakang dengan etika bisnis islam yaitu fatanah, dimana player dan developer harus mengerti bisnis yang dibolehkan dan diharamkan dalam islam. Implikasi dari penelitian kiranya setelah mengetahui hiburan yang diperbolehkan dan dilarang dalam islam masyarakat muslim akan lebih berhati-hati dalam memilih aplikasi hiburan untuk menghabiskan waktu dan tidak lalai dalam akidah.

Islamic law, Banking
DOAJ Open Access 2023
Services with Care:

Seiichiro Honjo

In recent years, there has been a lot of discussion about care and it has been suggested that society should be structured around the idea of care. However, the question of whether a successful business can be structured around this idea of care has not been asked. In this study, we examined whether care-centered services or “services with care” can be established and succeed as a business through an exploratory case study of Kurashicom Inc., which operates “Hokuoh, Kurashi no douguten”. We found three characteristics of the case: (1) building a unique cultural asset, (2) hiring from customers, and (3) agile management, all of which can be explained by ethics of care, rather than ethics of justice. This case shows that businesses that follow ethics of care can be successful. The findings identify new research directions to explore with regard to design of a care-centered business.

Marketing. Distribution of products
DOAJ Open Access 2023
The Impact of Effective Leadership on Public Sector’s Financial Instruments: Empirical Evidence from Greece

Viktoria Gentsoudi

Leadership management refers to leading and managing a team or an organization. It involves developing a vision, setting goals, and providing guidance and support to employees to achieve those goals. Effective leadership management is crucial for organizations to achieve their objectives, as it helps build a positive work environment, encourage innovation, and promote teamwork. Leadership plays a vital role in enhancing the performance of private holding organizations and driving quantitative and qualitative success in a nation's public sector comprised of a range of services offered to the public. This paper aims to investigate the financial impact of leadership management on the Greek public sector using empirical data and analysis extracted from the dissertation under the title “Leadership and organizational change in the financial decision making in Greek public sector in a time of financial and humanitarian crises”, also written by the paper's author. The study employs fixed OLS regression and UQR models to examine the effects of leadership on the systematic, idiosyncratic, and total risk as well as the value of the public sector, i.e., governance and corruption levels, during the aftermath of the financial crisis that hit the country between the years 2015 and 2019. Additionally, it explores the potential benefits of team leadership on public services' quality. The results indicate that leadership demonstrates a statistically significant impact on all public sector risk components. Furthermore, increasing team leadership across public sector divisions may enhance the public sector's overall value. While verifying the positive impact of leadership on value, and despite the confirmation of a risk-reducing effect of leadership only regarding idiosyncratic risk, this impact appears not only to be of low magnitude but also to account for minor statistical significance.

DOAJ Open Access 2023
Evaluación de la equidad en el acceso a los medicamentos financiados por el Sistema Nacional de Salud español mediante el régimen de copago del RDL 16/2012

Gemma García-Calderó, Enric Sospedra-Martínez

El acceso equitativo a las prestaciones sanitarias constituye uno de los principios del Sistema Nacional de Salud español. No obstante, se ha evidenciado la existencia de un porcentaje de ciudadanos que padecen dificultades económicas para adquirir medicamentos de prescripción. Este oscila en torno a un 2,4%, y afecta a determinadas personas en situación socioeconómica vulnerable, especialmente aquellas polimedicadas o con enfermedades crónicas. Este artículo fundamenta el derecho al acceso a los medicamentos en condiciones de igualdad, y evalúa los datos recogidos por organismos del Estado y organizaciones no gubernamentales que evidencian inequidades en dicho acceso. Dado que el copago farmacéutico puede constituir una barrera económica para la adquisición de los medicamentos de prescripción, se analizan a la luz de la bibliografía existente los posibles efectos sobre la equidad de acceso a los medicamentos del actual sistema de copago reformado mediante el RDL 16/2012, así como los planteamientos para su mejora.

Medical philosophy. Medical ethics, Business ethics
DOAJ Open Access 2022
Organizational Learning and Risk Management Maturity: Systematic and Meta-Analyses Approach

Chinelo Ifeyinwa Nwaibe, Joseph Ugochukwu Ogbuefi, Idu Robert Egbenta

This paper summarizes the arguments and counterarguments within the scientific discussion on the issue of investigating the role of developers in the economic development of the country. The relevance of this scientific problem decision is that the risk management maturity on the part of developers is often underestimated when researching developing real estate markets. Systematization of the literary sources and approaches for solving the problem of risk management proved the presence of a significant number of studies that confirm the hypothesis that some of the developers have not reached the normalized risk management maturity scale. The main purpose of the paper is to explore the role of organizational learning in enhancing risk management maturity, as a means of setting research agenda for its empirical evaluation in emerging economies. Using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) approach, the article systematizes the scientific literature on the importance of organizational learning in managing real estate investment maturity risks in emerging economies like Nigeria. The object of the research was indexed studies on Web of Scholar, Google Scholar, Emerald and Pubmed databases. Qualitative analysis methods have become a methodical toolkit for determining the parameters of organizational learning that contribute to the achievement of risk management maturity. The paper confirms and theoretically proves that risk knowledge acquisition, integration and transformation had potentials of respectively leading to sustainable risk identification, assessment and mitigation in property development projects. The results of the study form the basis for the understanding by scholars, practitioners and policy makers of their contribution to scientific research on the issues of a risk management mature property development sector in emerging economies. The strengths of this study are that it aims to identify the importance of organizational learning in risk management mature property investment in emerging markets.

DOAJ Open Access 2021
Bioética ambiental: aproximações entre Fritz Jahr e Van R. Potter

Valquiria Renk, Mirian Celia Catellain Guebert, Cristoph Enns

Este artigo analisa a concepção de Bioética Ambiental apresentada por Fritz Jahr em 1927 e V. R. Potter em 1971. Os procedimentos da pesquisa historiográfica orientam a seleção e análise das fontes documentais. A história cultural analisa o corpus documental. Jahr propôs o imperativo bioético e Potter a Bioética como a ciência de sobrevivência. Ambos propõem a Bioética como um paradigma de vida. Seus legados contribuíram na consolidação da Bioética e reconhecidos na formação de uma memória histórica. Os autores compreendiam que havia a necessidade de uma nova ética, para construir um novo projeto civilizatório.

Medical philosophy. Medical ethics, Business ethics
DOAJ Open Access 2021
<i>Standing by or Standing Up?</i>—How Philosophy Can (In)form Our Understanding of Bystander Behaviours in Workplace Bullying Dynamics

Declan Fahie, Gerry Dunne

There is increasing awareness of the value of interdisciplinary collaboration within academia. Scholars argue that by drawing upon the conceptual, methodological, and interrogative paradigms of at least two disparate disciplines, researchers are challenged to re-evaluate and reconsider their own discipline-centric assumptions. A consequence of such purposeful <i>boundary-blurring</i> is an increased rigour and richness in the analysis of raw data, as well as the development of revealing insights through the novel application of discrete conceptual perspectives and theories. In such a way, dominant, taken-for-granted methodological and analytical assumptions are destabilised, as researchers are obliged to embrace contrasting perspectives while reassessing the epistemological foundations of their work. This paper focuses on the phenomenon of bystander responses to workplace bullying dynamics. While traditional scholarship into workplace bullying emanates from disciplines such as business, psychology, law, medicine and sociology, for example, this paper argues that philosophy, as a subject/field, may provide the researcher with a fresh interrogative lens through which to (re)view the phenomenon of workplace bullying, along with the consequential response of bystanders to such noxious behaviours. It suggests that, by drawing upon the philosophical concept of virtue ethics—which posits the question “What would a <i>good</i> or <i>virtuous</i> person do?”—we are afforded a robust theoretical framework to support a thoughtful and reasoned destabilization of contemporary perspectives on bystander behaviours and motivations.

Social sciences (General)
DOAJ Open Access 2021
Religion as a Source of Islamic Ethics and its Impact on the Islamic Accounting System

Małgorzata M.E. Czerny

The article introduces religion as a source of Muslim ethics and shows how it is shaping the system of Islamic accounting and the ethical behaviour of Muslim accountants. Cultural differences are an increasingly important factor to be taken into account in running a business. They are also the subject of scientific research, for example, in the context of their impact on the development of accounting systems in various cultural circles. The relevant reference literature and the Qur’an were used for qualitative analysis carried out by means of induction and deduction methods. The analysis conducted indicates that although the scope of ethical codes in Muslim and non‑Muslim countries is very similar, in the case of Islam, its message is strengthened by religion seen as a source of law as well as professional ethics. This means that the legal sanctions envisaged for breaking the rules are accompanied by the fear of being excluded from the community and losing an opportunity for salvation. This article can fulfill an informative role, allowing the reader to understand the reasons for some differences in perceiving ethical issues and the way of doing business in different cultural circles.

Marketing. Distribution of products, Finance

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