ABSTRACT

The first edition of this work, published in 1993, refuted the notion that administrative ethics could not be studied empirically. In this second edition, Frederickson (public administration, University of Kansas) and Ghere (political science, University of Dayton) expand their scope to include both the managerial and individual/moral dimensions of ethical behavior, and add a new section on administrative ethics and globalization. Other sections cover organizational designs that support ethical behavior, market forces that compromise administrative ethics, and unintended outcomes of anticorruption reforms. The book is appropriate for a graduate course in public sector ethics.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I. The Moral Architecture of Organizations

part |2 pages

Part II. Reassessing Corruption in the Twenty-First Century

part |2 pages

Part III. Individual Volition in Public Institutions

part |2 pages

Part V. Ethical Issues in Global Contexts