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  4. Ethical Orientation and Research Misconduct Among Business Researchers Under the Condition of Autonomy and Competition
 
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Ethical Orientation and Research Misconduct Among Business Researchers Under the Condition of Autonomy and Competition

Journal
Journal of Business Ethics
ISSN
0167-4544
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2023-03-01
Author(s)
Fink, Matthias
Gartner, Johannes
Harms, Rainer
Hatak, Isabella  
DOI
10.1007/s10551-022-05043-y
Abstract
The topics of ethical conduct and governance in academic research in the business field have attracted scientific and public attention. The concern is that research misconduct in organizations such as business schools and universities might result in practitioners, policymakers, and researchers grounding their decisions on biased research results. This study addresses ethical research misconduct by investigating whether the ethical orientation of business researchers is related to the likelihood of research misconduct, such as selective reporting of research findings. We distinguish between deontological and consequentialist ethical orientations and the competition between researchers and investigate the moderating role of their perceived autonomy. Based on global data collected from 1,031 business scholars, we find that researchers with a strong deontological ethical orientation are less prone to misconduct. This effect is robust against different levels of perceived autonomy and competition. In contrast, researchers having a consequentialist ethical orientation is positively associated with misconduct in business research. High levels of competition in the research environment reinforce this effect. Our results reveal a potentially toxic combination comprising researchers with a strong consequentialist orientation who are embedded in highly competitive research environments. Our research calls for the development of ethical orientations grounded on maxims rather than anticipated consequences among researchers. We conclude that measures for ethical governance in business schools should consider the ethical orientation that underlies researchers’ decision-making and the organizational and institutional environment in which business researchers are embedded.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
Global Center for Entrepreneurship + Innovation
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Reidel
Volume
183
Start page
619
End page
636
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/107673
Subject(s)

business studies

Division(s)

KMU - Swiss Research ...

Eprints ID
265776
File(s)
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Thumbnail Image

open.access

Name

JBE 2022 final.pdf

Size

819.92 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

1995a086aafa9a42c959d82ad277199e

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