ABSTRACT

Winner of two National Communication Association awards:

Communication Ethics Division's 2018 Single-Author Book of the Year Award

Organizational Communication Division's 2018 Outstanding Book of the Year Award

Extensive work in psychology and neuroscience reveals that individuals are born with moral intuitions, and this volume capitalizes on that recent insight to provide a new perspective on how to lead organizational ethics. Organizational Moral Learning presents communication-based recommendations for managers and leaders to encourage authentic moral dialogue at work so that these discussions can be used to update work practices vigilantly as organizations strive for ethical excellence. Organizational ethics are crucial to individual, organizational, national, and even global well-being, and this work leads a revolution in thinking about how to manage organizational ethics. Written accessibly for students and practitioners alike, this book provides a leading-edge look at organizational ethics based on science and research applicable to a worldwide audience.

chapter 1|15 pages

Rethinking Organizational Ethics Training

chapter 2|14 pages

Moral Intuition

Advances in Moral Psychology and Neuroscience

chapter 3|18 pages

The Social Intuitionist Model

chapter 5|17 pages

How Cultur(ing) Works

chapter 7|18 pages

Here-and-Now Ethics Talk in the Workplace

chapter 8|18 pages

Substituting Here-and-Now Ethics Talk

chapter 9|18 pages

Sensemaking and Identity

What to Expect from Moral Reasoning

chapter 12|17 pages

Organizing for Moral Mindfulness