Jump to navigation
  • News Feed
  • Services
    • 3BL Professional
    • Sponsored Series
    • 3BL CSRwire
    • ReportAlert
    • Green Bond Alert
    • Special Announcement
    • Custom Webcasts
  • Community
    • TriplePundit
    • 3BL Forum
    • CEO of the Year Awards
    • 100 Best Corporate Citizens
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Search
  • News Feed
  • Services
    • 3BL Professional
    • Sponsored Series
    • 3BL CSRwire
    • ReportAlert
    • Green Bond Alert
    • Special Announcement
    • Custom Webcasts
  • Community
    • TriplePundit
    • 3BL Forum
    • CEO of the Year Awards
    • 100 Best Corporate Citizens
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Search

Search form

Header Nav

  • Login

Ethics pledges: If it's good enough for Harvard....

Ethics pledges: If it's good enough for Harvard....
Crane and Matten
Thursday, Jun 11th, 2009

A few weeks ago we wrote about the growing phenomenon of ethics pledges at business schools, and its likely impact on avoiding the kinds of ethical problems involved in the current financial crisis. Several people have now been pointing us to a recent article in the New York Times on an Ethics Oath instigated at Harvard Business School. As a voluntary, student-led initiative, this is pretty much in line with the vogue for pledges in the US that we discussed in the earlier posting. That it has happened at Harvard, however, appears to be news to the NYT, presumably because this is about as deep into the mainstream MBA establishment as you can get. The logic here being: if it's good enough for Harvard, it'll probably be good enough for any self-respecting business school.

 

Certainly the current financial problems have focused a few more minds on issues of ethics and responsibility. And as the NYT suggests, the new generation of MBA students tends to be interested in making a difference just as much as making a buck .... or at least some of them do. It is notable that despite the hoohaw about the Harvard Oath, less than a quarter of the graduating class actually signed it this year, so we are not exactly talking about a majority of students. Still, a sizeable minority represents something of a shift from a decade or so ago when these kinds of commitments would have been laughed out of the class at most big MBA schools. Ethics pledges like these may not be for everyone, but they do signify how far things are changing ... and how far they still have to go before a serious commitment to management integrity goes mainstream.

  • Crane and Matten's blog

CSR Bloggers

Alice Korngold - Korngold Consulting

Andrea Learned - Learned On

Benjamin Comer - Pharma Executive

Beth Bengston - Hale Advisors

Celesa Horvath - Making Sense of Responsibility

Chris Jarvis - Realized Worth

David Chase - Forbes

David Connor - Coethica

David Williams - Health Business Blog

Dorothy Davis - All Energy All the Time

Dr. Scott M. Shemwell - Governing Energy

Elaine Cohen - CSR Reporting

Future 500

James Epstein-Reeves - Citizen Polity

Joe Waters - Selfish Giving

Julie Urlaub - Taiga Company

Kate Olsen - Companies for Good

Marc Gunther - Green Biz

Marcy Murninghan - Murninghan Post

Matthew Rochte - Opportunity Sustainability

Maxwell Drommond International - Human Capital: A Global Perspective

Megan Strand - Cause Marketing Forum

Monika Mitchell - Good-B

Paul Klein - Forbes

Stephen Heiser - Nuclear Knowledge

Tracy Lloyd - Emotive Brand

Wayne Visser - CSR International

Will Henley - Responsibility Inc.

© 3BL MEDIA, LLC

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Site Map
3BL Media, LLC
136 West St Ste 104
Northampton, MA 01060
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Find Us on Social

Latest from Leading Brands

  • 3BL Professional
  • 3BL CSRwire
  • 3BL ReportAlert

Editorial & Leadership

  • TriplePundit
  • 3BL Forum
  • 100 Best Corporate Citizens