Moral Management Methodology/Mythology: Erroneous Ethical Equations.Andrew Sikula -2009 -Ethics and Behavior 19 (3):253-261.detailsUnderstanding the falsity of certain common beliefs helps students move toward better business ethics and a higher degree of moral management. This article explains one method for teaching moral management, by using ethical equation inequalities, and offers 10 implications and suggestions to managers.
A "New" Theory of Management.Andrew Sikula,Kurt Olmosk,Chong W. Kim &Stephen Cupps -2001 -Ethics and Behavior 11 (1):3-21.detailsThis article presents a "new" theory of management for the new millennium: "new" not because singularly the ideas are recent, but because the combination of these older ideas collectively is novel. To some extent, this article represents the reestablishment of previously existing employment ethics that for various and sundry reasons lapsed into disuse in the past several decades. This article discusses employee relations ethics (ERE) in terms of an ERE credo and a set of assumptions. The modern millennium mission states (...) that all organizations (public and private) should primarily be employee centered, not owner or administrator controlled, customer or client driven, or both. (shrink)
A model of reasoned responses: Use of the golden mean and implications for management practice. [REVIEW]Chong W. Kim,Margie McInerney &Andrew Sikula -2004 -Journal of Business Ethics 51 (4):387-395.detailsThe concept of the Golden Mean, which has been accepted as a behavioral guideline of human beings for thousands of years, is briefly reviewed. Several empirical studies in the field of organizational behavior are summarized as evidence that the concept has practical management applications. Based on the Golden Mean concept and its management empirical evidence, the authors propose a model of Reasoned Responses and its practical application to the decision-making process.