对合规的道德承诺:构建基于价值的文化

The Ethical Commitment to Compliance: Building Value-Based Cultures

CALIFORNIA MANAGEMENT REVIEW · 2008
被引 82
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

基于2004年联邦量刑指南修正案,通过数据表明程序公正(组织程序的客观性和一致性)能提升员工对组织的合法性认知,从而促进道德行为和合规,并指出基于奖惩的命令控制方法效果较差。

Abstract

The 2004 amendments to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines state that organizations should a culture that encourages ethical conduct and a commitment to comply with the law. This article presents data that show that procedural fairness—which concerns the objectivity and consistency of organizational procedures—is an essential component of such a culture. The data show that employees tend to believe that procedurally just organizations are legitimate. This belief legitimacy, turn, encourages them to act ethically and to comply with rules. This is a market approach to compliance because employees buy in to the organization, its values, and rules. Command-and-control approaches based on reward-and-punishment programs are significantly less effective, suggesting that rigid, rules-based approaches such as Sarbanes-Oxley are counter-productive. Procedural justice encourages employees to go beyond their job descriptions to create organizational value. This value creation aspect of procedural justice suggests a new role for ethics officers. Finally, this article includes an instrument organizations can use to measure their own level of procedural justice as well as a set of national benchmarks.

组织行为商业伦理合规管理程序公正