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The Ethical Side of Leadership. Dr. Helen Eckmann James L. Consulting www.JamesLConsulting.com. “The great conversation across the centuries.”. Michael J. Sandel, “Justice”.
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The Ethical Side of Leadership Dr. Helen Eckmann James L. Consulting www.JamesLConsulting.com “The great conversation across the centuries.”
Michael J. Sandel, “Justice” “For if we turn our gaze to the arguments about justice and animate contemporary politics – not among philosophers but among ordinary men and women – we find a more complicated picture. It is true that most of our arguments are about promoting prosperity and respecting individual freedom, at least on the surface. But underlying these arguments, and sometimes contending with them, we can often glimpse another set of convictions –about what virtues are worthy of honor and reward, and what way of life a good society should promote” (Sandel, 2009 p. 8).
Sandel’s Harvard Website + • http://www.justiceharvard.org/ • Interview on Colbert Report http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/392600/july-20-2011/michael-sandel
Why We Do What We Do Values Thoughts Decisions Behaviors
The Good Society – (Business & Government)No Agreement For 2,500 Years • Aristotle – “so some can live the good life” • Locke – “life, liberty and property” • Rousseau – “same as the state of nature” • Adam Smith – “absolute economic freedom” • Marx – “economic equality” • M.L. King – “natural rights”
Span of Control • Concentric circles • Interior working to the family/organization moving to the society/government Family Organization Me Society/Government
Learning To Decide “What Is Good” Balcony 5 Dance Floor Heifetz, R. Linsky, M. (2002). Leadership on the line. New York. Harvard University Press.
Learning To Decide “What Is Good” Tension Thinking
Learning To Decide “What Is Good” Frameworks Affect Outcomes Senge (2006). The fifth discipline; The art and practice of the learning organization. New York: Doubleday Publishers.
Three “Buckets of Moral Reasoning” • 80% of all decisions have an ethical component. • Each decision is made from one bucket. D T V Kant, I. (1959). Foundations of the metaphysics of morals. (L. W. Beck, Trans.). New York: Macmillan Publishers.
Truth Loyalty Deciding between what I love and the truth. Kidder, R. M. (1995). How good people make tough choices. New York: A Fireside Book, Simon & Schuster.
Justice Mercy Deciding between giving others what they “deserve” and “giving them another chance.”
Self Community Deciding between what is good for the smaller ‘group’ and the larger ‘group.’
Short-Term Long-Term Deciding between what is good right now and what might be good in the future.
Polite Authentic Deciding between saying or doing what I think is true or what is politically correct.
Fair Equal Deciding between who or what I think should receive an “exception” and when everyone should receive an equal amount.
Fantasy Reality Deciding between Vision/Brainstorming/Possibility and being practical and grounded in reality.
Collaboration Competition Deciding between “going my own way” and “going the way of the group.”
Testing Through Case Studies http://images.google.com/imgres http://www.underconsideration.com/brandnew/archives/walmart_detail.gif http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.altso.org http://www.afedonline.org/conference/Logos/GE-logo.jpg
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