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Moral Rights in the Workplace Chapter Six. Jerry Estenson. Framework. Work is important and a highly valued human activity because it is necessary to acquire other central human goods.
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Moral Rights in the WorkplaceChapter Six Jerry Estenson
Framework • Work is important and a highly valued human activity because it is necessary to acquire other central human goods. • Work and moral rights are connected because opportunities to work can be jeopardized by the actions of others.
Rights in the work place • Remember rights cannot be bought, sold, or forcibly taken away • Legal • Derived from legislation and judicial rulings • Contractual • Negotiated in good faith or a result of a policy or procedure • Respect owed human beings. This is the domain of moral rights in the workplace • Freedom • Equality • Autonomy
The rights equation • Greater the rights = Greater the obligation
Right to work • First definition is based on employee requirement to join a union • This is done to eliminate “free rider” (those who enjoy the benefit without contributing) • Collective bargaining view as way to balance power in the workplace
Right to work - Macro • Basis for Catholic Church and UN declaration of work as a human right • Means to an end • Expression of a meaningful human life
Who should provide jobs? • Private Industry and the free market • Government • Safety Net
Private Industry • Who should they be required to hire? • How long should they be required to employ? • At what rate should workers be paid? • What about property rights of employers?
Government • Employer of “Last Resort” • Government employment drains from the public
Safety Net • Unemployment Insurance • Tax Incentives to hire folks on welfare
Rights in the Workplace • Employment at will • Trade off for the elimination of slavery and indentured servitude • Employee free to quit employer free to fire for: • Good cause, for no cause, or even for cause morally wrong.
Changes in the “At Will Doctrine” • Never applied to government workers • Civil rights protections • Union activity protections • OSHA whistle blowing • Whistle blowing • Employee handbooks as “implied contracts” • Practices such as payment of bonuses as handled in the past
Termination of employment • Magna Carta doctrine – limit the authority of the King • Due process required • Seen as inefficient • Just cause required • All an attempt to balance power in the workplace. Employees cannot be bought and sold.
Participatory Decision Making • Who has authority • Authority is given with consent of those governed • McCall – Employees should be treated as autonomous decision makers free of coercive interference by others. Human dignity is tied to the ability of humans to guide their own life and activities.
Benefits of Participation • Reduces possibility of alienenatation • Reduces burnout • Workers may not have specific expertise but do have other valuable knowledge • May appear inefficient but creates a high degree of buy in and quick execution
Health and Safety • Who determines the degree of risk a worker should take? • The individual • Experts • Senior Managers • Government • Who has perfect knowledge? • Who is thinking beyond first generation solutions to a problem?
Privacy in the workplace • Right to be left alone within a personal zone of solitude • Right to control information about oneself • Important because it establishes boundaries • Workplace violations • Infringes on personal decisions that are irrelevant to work contract • Personal information that is irrelevant to work contract that is collected, stored or used without consent • Polygraphs, drug tests, surveillance, background checks, psychological tests
Break Down our options in the Discussion Case • Right involved • Actors involved • Interest of the actors • Ethical recommendation
What rights are in jeopardy • Urine Test • Commission payment • Abortion discussion • HIV • Email • Psychological test • Exposure to hazardous material