Team Over-Empowerment in Market Research: A Virtue-Based Ethics Approach

Journal of Business Ethics 176 (1):159-173 (2021)
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Abstract

Few scholars have investigated the considerations of over-empowered teams from a non-consequential ethics approach. Leveraging a virtue-based ethics lens of team empowerment, we provide a framework of team ethical orientation and over-empowerment using highly influential market research teams as a basis for our analysis. The purpose of this research is to contrast how teams founded on virtue-based ethics can attenuate ethical dilemmas and negative organizational outcomes from team over-empowerment. We provide a framework of four conditions that include Sophisticated, Suppressed, Contagion, and Impeded to discuss alignment between team ethical orientation and team empowerment. Through this framework, we aim to further our understanding of empowered team behavior between action that is virtuous, moral, and ethical and activity that threatens organizational values and goals.

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References found in this work

Morals from motives.Michael A. Slote - 2001 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Exemplarist virtue theory.Linda Zagzebski - 1996 - Metaphilosophy 41 (1-2):41-57.
Morals from Motives.Michael Slote - 2002 - Philosophical Quarterly 52 (208):415-418.
Divine Motivation Theory.Linda Zagzebski - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (225):629-632.
Exemplarist virtue theory.Linda Zagzebski - 2010 - In Heather Battaly, Virtue and Vice, Moral and Epistemic. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 39–55.

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