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Does Being Ethical Pay?
For corporations, social
responsibility has become a big business. Companies spend billions of
dollars doing good works—everything from boosting diversity in their ranks
to developing eco-friendly technology—and then trumpeting those efforts to
the public.
Tiffany & Co: A Case Study in Diamonds and Social
Responsibility
Michael J. Kowalski, chairman and
CEO of Tiffany & Co., the world-famous luxury jeweler and specialty
retailer, wasted no time correcting what he called a "misperception" about
his company's products.
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The Billion-Dollar Body Parts Industry: Medical
Research alongside Greed and Corruption
Cooke has become
emblematic of a macabre and little-known market: America's distinctly shady
traffic in human remains.
The Hidden Market for Babies
"It is difficult to conceive of a child as commerce," writes Harvard
Business School professor Debora L. Spar in her new book, The Baby Business:
How Money, Science, and Politics Drive the Commerce of Conception.
Death of a Drug: The Aftermath of Merck's Recall
Less than a week after Merck & Co.'s voluntary
withdrawal of its blockbuster arthritis pain medication Vioxx, following an
extended clinical trial that linked the drug to heart attacks and strokes,
the jury is still out on whether the pharmaceutical giant followed this
cardinal rule.
Definition of Business
Ethics | Business Ethics Articles, Case Studies, Journal, Reports | Code of
Business Ethics | Business Ethics Issues | Importance of Business Ethics |
Business Ethics in China | Business Ethics and Nike |
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