Book contents
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- 1 Next-Generation Ethics
- 2 Ethical Distinctions for Building Your Ethical Code
- Part I Technology
- Part II Business Enterprises
- 9 Next-Generation Business Ethics: The Impact of Artificial Intelligence
- 10 Big Data Privacy, Ethics, and Enterprise Continuous Monitoring Systems
- 11 How Management Theories and Culture Fads Kill Organizational Ethics
- 12 How Next-Generation Teams and Teaming May Affect the Ethics of Working in Teams
- 13 Transparency: The What, Why, and How of Organizational Effectiveness and Ethics
- 14 Global Engagement by Leaders Is a Moral Imperative: Building the Next Generation of Ethical Corporate Cultures
- Part III Engineering
- Part IV Society
- Index
- References
13 - Transparency: The What, Why, and How of Organizational Effectiveness and Ethics
from Part II - Business Enterprises
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 October 2019
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Next-Generation Ethics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- 1 Next-Generation Ethics
- 2 Ethical Distinctions for Building Your Ethical Code
- Part I Technology
- Part II Business Enterprises
- 9 Next-Generation Business Ethics: The Impact of Artificial Intelligence
- 10 Big Data Privacy, Ethics, and Enterprise Continuous Monitoring Systems
- 11 How Management Theories and Culture Fads Kill Organizational Ethics
- 12 How Next-Generation Teams and Teaming May Affect the Ethics of Working in Teams
- 13 Transparency: The What, Why, and How of Organizational Effectiveness and Ethics
- 14 Global Engagement by Leaders Is a Moral Imperative: Building the Next Generation of Ethical Corporate Cultures
- Part III Engineering
- Part IV Society
- Index
- References
Summary
In the 1990s, British writers began using “transparency” as a portmanteau word to describe that desirable state of organizational management and governance characterized by candor, openness, honesty, clarity, legal compliance, and full disclosure (Handy, 1990). At first, the word didn’t take hold on this side of the Atlantic, perhaps because it was too vague and philosophical for American tastes in managerial buzz words (which tend to run more to the precise and practical).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Next-Generation EthicsEngineering a Better Society, pp. 182 - 193Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
References
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