ethics
They lurk around cubicle corners and infiltrate mission statements. Proverbs and old marketers’ tales that have for years colored the way many of us do business, whether we care to admit it or not. We take a close-up look to see what really works.
In politics and life, there’s a certain charm to “going rogue.” It evokes images of fictional rascals like Jack Bauer or Captain Jack Sparrow. In the world of banking and investments, though, it’s a phrase that sends chills up a CEO’s spine.
Bhargav Srinivasan, BBA ’12, and Kelley Rytlewski, BBA ’12, won the University of Arizona's ninth annual Collegiate Ethics Case Competition. They bested 28 other teams from across the country.
Fraud and abuse cost U.S. organizations more than $400 billion annually. Professor Janet Dukerich explains some of the causes and possible solutions of organizational corruption.
Whistleblowers still face retaliation from corporations, despite the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002. Professor Robert Prentice discussed the implications of the decade-old law.
McCombs' commitment to social, ethical and environmental concerns lands the school in the top 30 of the Aspen Institute's biennial global MBA ranking.
It is better to take the harder right than the easier wrong. That was the lesson shared by a former FBI white collar criminal investigator during the MPA Lyceum Speaker Series Sept. 6.
"In love with the law" since age 6, Charlie Baird, BBA ’76, was recently named Civil Libertarian of the Year by the Central Texas Chapter of the ACLU.
Could Eliot Spitzer, Jeff Skilling, Dennis Kozlowski and former congressman Anthony Weiner be fundamentally moral people? Professor Robert Prentice discussed ethical leadership during a Knowledge To Go webinar June 14.
Business law professor Robert Prentice spoke to the New York Times about the Securities and Exchange Commission's apparent renewed focus on prosecuting insider trading after it failed to disrupt notable Ponzi schemes.


