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Chapter Five Rights and Obligations of Employers and Employees. Ethical Theory and Business, 6 th Edition Tom L. Beauchamp & Norman E. Bowie. Objectives. After studying this chapter the student should be able to:
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Chapter FiveRights and Obligations of Employers and Employees Ethical Theory and Business, 6th Edition Tom L. Beauchamp & Norman E. Bowie
Objectives • After studying this chapter the student should be able to: • Examine the advantages and disadvantages of the employment-at-will doctrine for both the employer and employee. • Explain the concept of due process. • Discern the difference between public sector and private sector employees. • Describe the concept of right to privacy.
Objectives • Discuss the arguments supporting or opposing employee drug testing. • Define the term discriminatory genetic screening. • Discuss the arguments supporting or opposing genetic screening. • Describe the ethical dilemmas genetic screening creates for insurance companies. • Argue the advantages and disadvantages of electronic performance monitoring (EPM) for both the employer and employee.
Objectives • Stress the importance of personal feedback in addition to the built-in feedback of the EPM system. • Describe the argument supporting or opposing whistle-blowing. • Contrast both sides of obligation of loyalty as it relates to whistle-blowing.
Overview • Employment-at-Will • Workplace Drug Testing • Genetics • Electronic Performance Monitoring • Whistle-blowing
Employment-at-Will • “Employment at Will and Due Process” • Patricia H. Werhane & Tara J. Radin • The authors of this article argue in defense of due process and against EAW. • Employment-at-Will - The principle that an employer may hire, fire, demote, or promote an employee whenever the employer desires, in the absence of a specific contract or law.
Employment-at-Will • Due process • Public policy exception • Reasons used to justify employment-at-will • The proprietary rights of employers guarantee that they may employ or dismiss whomever and whenever they wish. • EAW defends employee and employer rights equally.
Employment-at-Will • In choosing to take a job, an employee knows he or she is an at-will employee. • Legislation and/or regulation of employment relationships further undermine an already overregulated economy. • Public/private distinction • Employees in the private sector of the economy tend to be regarded as at-will employees. • Employees in the public sector have guaranteed rights, including due process, and are protected from demotion, transfer, or firing without cause.
Richard A. Epstein • “In Defense of the Contract at Will” • Professor of Law, University of Chicago • The author of this article discusses how employment-at-will works to the mutual benefit of both parties. • Fairness of contract at will • Freedom of contract principle
Richard A. Epstein • The utility of contract at will • Monitoring behavior • Reputational losses • Risk diversification and imperfect information • Administrative costs • Distributional concerns
Workplace Drug Testing • “Drug Testing in Employment” • Joseph DesJardins & Ronald Duska • The authors of this article argue against drug testing in that it violates the employee’s or applicant’s right to privacy. • Right to privacy involves a three-place relation between a person, some information, and another person.
Workplace Drug Testing • Job relevance arguments • Affects on job performance • Harm to employee, other employees, the employer, and consumers • Determining which jobs have a potential to cause harm • Potential for harm should be clear and present. • Test employees only when they show a potential to cause harm.
Workplace Drug Testing • Limitations on drug testing policies • Effectiveness of drug testing considerations • Does the testing help prevent harm? • Does the testing provide relevant knowledge? • Are there more effective methods for preventing harm? • Six testing possibilities • Testing prospective employees
Michael Cranford • “Drug Testing and the Right to Privacy: Arguing the Ethics of Workplace Drug Testing” • Completing a Ph.D. in Religion and Social Ethics, University of Southern California • Dissertation focus is on ethics and technology • The author of this article argues in favor of workplace drug testing.
Michael Cranford • Privacy and performance of contract • Privacy – An individual’s right to be let alone • A right to control information about themselves • Criteria for obtaining relevant information • Drug testing is not harmful or intrusive. • Drug testing is both efficient and specific. • Drug testing can be conducted in a way that guarantees a high degree of precision.
Michael Cranford • Questions of justification • Drug testing policy recommendations • Testing should focus on a specifically targeted group of employees. • When testing is indicated, it should not be announced ahead of time. • Employees who test positive for drug abuse should be permitted the opportunity to resolve their abusive tendencies and return to work without penalty or stigma.
Joseph Kupfer • “The Ethics of Genetic Screening in the Workplace” • Professor of Philosophy, Iowa State University • What is genetic screening? • Discriminatory genetic screening – A process used to exclude workers from jobs based on their genetic make-up.
Joseph Kupfer • Technical limitations • Has the gene been located or just simply correlated with other DNA material? • Is knowledge of other family members necessary to determine the presence of the affecting gene? • Causal limitations • Does the affecting gene require other genes to produce the disorder? • Does the gene cause the disorder with inevitability or just create a vulnerability to the disorder?
Joseph Kupfer • Privacy considerations • Control of information • Autonomy • Justice considerations • Genetic screening indicates merely a predisposition for a disorder • Not the inevitability of the onset of the disorder • Unjust to penalize someone when it is not known they will contract the disorder
Joseph Kupfer • Could be used to unjustly “weed out” people for employment, education, etc. • Could be used to deny certain types of benefits.
Genetics • “The Genetics Revolution, Economics, Ethics, and Insurance” • Patrick L. Brockett & E. Susan Tankersley • Human Genome Project – A 26-year, six-billion-dollar international science project designed to completely map the entire genetic structure of the human species.
Genetics • Ethical dilemmas for insurance companies • Unfair discrimination and insurance classification • Purpose of classification • Distinguishing between high- and low-risk individuals • Ethics of insuring by classification
Genetics • Employer health care insurance • Community rating – The employer is charged an amount per employee based on the average costs in the employer’s region. • Experience rating – The insurer charges different rates to different employers based upon the experience of the employees over a rolling average. • Self-insurance – The employer takes on the risks instead of the insurer.
Genetics • Recommendations to address genetic screening problems in the insurance industry • Let the insurance industry continue as usual with the current laws and encourage these companies to use all available information to decide whether or not to accept an individual as a possible risk. • Include passage of legislation which allows for some type of controlled discrimination, but which prohibits insurance companies from discrimination against individuals with specified genetic markers.
Genetics • National health care in which the government would insure everyone, and simply allow no discrimination to occur. • Genetic information for preventive health care
Electronic Performance Monitoring • “Ethical Issues in Electronic Performance Monitoring (EPM)” • G. Stoney Alder • Management Professor, Western Illinois University • The author of this article argues that the difference between ethical or unethical electronic monitoring is found in the way the organization designs and implements the system.
Electronic Performance Monitoring • Arguments for EPM • Used to protect consumer and worker safety • Safeguard company assets • Increased productivity • Improved quality and service • Gives the ability to evaluate effectiveness • Decreased costs • Can be a good tool for employee coaching and training
Electronic Performance Monitoring • Arguments against EPM • Invasion of privacy • Increased job stress and health problems • Dehumanizing • Decreases the employee’s quality of work-life • Two way communication during the design and implementation phases is important.
Electronic Performance Monitoring • Rules for ethical monitoring • Involve those who will be subjected to monitoring in the system design. • Inform employees of monitoring practices. • Supplement electronic feedback with human interaction. • Make feedback supportive, non-punitive, and non-coercive.
Ronald Duska • “Whistleblowing and Employee Loyalty” • Professor of Ethics, The American College • The author of this article argues that the employee does not have an obligation of loyalty to a company and that whistle-blowing is permissible, especially when a company is harming society.
Ronald Duska • When, if ever, is whistle-blowing permissible? • Purpose of whistle-blowing • Employee loyalty to the company v. company loyalty to the employee • 3 philosophical positions about loyalty • Idealists • Social atomists • Moderate position
Daryl Koehn • “Whistleblowing and Trust: Some Lessons from the ADM Scandal” • Cullen Chair of Business Ethics, University of St. Thomas in Houston • The author of this article focuses on whether whistle-blowing fosters or destroys personal, corporate, and public trust.
Daryl Koehn • Whistle-blowing – Persons who sound an alarm from within the very organization in which they work, aiming to spotlight neglect or abuses that threaten the public interest • Effects of whistle-blowing on trust • Reasons why an employee would consider whistle-blowing
Daryl Koehn • Whistle-blowing should be an option of last recourse • Companies and employees need to work together (two-way communication) building trust to avoid situations where employees feel whistle-blowing is the only option to address their concerns.