Research Catalog

Conflicting agendas : personal morality in institutional settings

Title
Conflicting agendas : personal morality in institutional settings / D. Don Welch.
Author
Welch, Don, 1947-
Publication
Cleveland, Ohio : Pilgrim Press, 1994.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library BJ1725 .W45 1994Off-site

Details

Description
195 pages; 21 cm
Summary
"All of us make decisions and act on those decisions as individuals - but we also do the same as parts of larger groups, whether in a work, family neighborhood, club, church, or other institutional setting. Those two, sometimes differing, decision-making settings can place us in extremely awkward positions. How should we behave when our personal morality conflicts with our role in a particular institution or when our personal "agenda" is not consistent with the "agenda" of the larger groups? Don Welch asserts that it is impossible to separate ourselves as social beings from the institutions of which we are a part. Using real-life examples and buildings his arguments from elements as diverse as H. Richard Niebuhr and Doonesbury, Welch defines the various roles of "agenda" and how various personalities react and respond to personal as well as corporate agendas." "Welch introduces us to the "Hermit," to the "Institutionalized Person," to the "Split Personality," to the "Reformer," to the "Accommodator," and to the "Convert"--Among whom we discover aspects of ourselves. Finally, Welch maintains that an appropriate response to the institution involves an ethic of "responsibility," one that does not simply abide by rules or calculate consequences to determine behavior, but one that integrates the constancy of one's own personal integrity with concern for the larger group."--Jacket.
Subject
  • Professional ethics
  • Corporate culture
  • Individualism
  • Decision making > Moral and ethical aspects
  • Organizational behavior > Moral and ethical aspects
  • professional ethics
  • Berufsethik
  • Corporate culture
  • Decision making > Moral and ethical aspects
  • Individualism
  • Organizational behavior > Moral and ethical aspects
  • Professional ethics
  • Corporations > Ethical aspects
  • Decision making Ethical aspects
  • Organizational sociology > Ethical aspects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [171]-190) and index.
Contents
1. Agendas -- 2. Agendas and ethical reflection -- 3, The institutional context -- 4. The hermit -- 5. The institutionalized person -- 6. The split personality -- 7. The reformer -- 8. The accommodator -- 9. The convert -- 10. The response ethic of a social self -- 11. Making the appropriate response -- Conclusion: Agendas and personal integrity.
ISBN
  • 0829810013
  • 9780829810011
LCCN
94006912
OCLC
  • ocm30029772
  • 30029772
  • SCSB-2022459
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library