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Discriminating ethics

journal contribution
posted on 2005-06-01, 00:00 authored by H Collins, Edward Wray-Bliss
This article examines ethics in work organization and in academic, particularly Critical Management Studies, research. It is centred on empirical data exploring the actions of three employees of a higher education institution who variously failed to resist and/or colluded in the sex discrimination of a colleague.We bring ethics to bear in our analysis of these data in three ways. First, reflecting upon our own methodology, we highlight the difficulties of balancing competing ethical responsibilities when engaging in critical research in contexts defined by adversarial relationships. Second, we highlight how research subjects, who we interpret as exercising problematic agency, draw upon discourses of care, friendship and responsibility to discursively construct their behaviour as moral. Third, drawing upon feminist theory, we reflect upon the ethical warrant of academic critiques of research subjects’ agency. Our analysis raises unsettling implications both for the ethics of Critical Management Studies research and for the function of ethics in organizations.We end by being as concerned by the capacity of ethical discourse to enable and legitimize discrimination as we are reassured by its utility to enable us to discriminate right from wrong behaviour in organizations.

History

Journal

Human relations

Volume

58

Issue

6

Pagination

799 - 824

Publisher

Sage Publications

Location

London, U. K.

ISSN

0018-7267

eISSN

1741-282X

Language

eng

Notes

A version of this paper, entitled 'Discriminating Ethics : Local truths – critical authority?', was communicated at 'Organization, Identity, Locality (OIL) II', A one-day conference on Critical Management Studies in Aotearoa, New Zealand, 10 February 2006. http://www.massey.ac.nz/~cprichar/OIL/OIL4_call.htm

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, The Tavistock Institute

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