ABSTRACT

The fundamental ethical problem in bankruptcy is that insolvents have promised to pay their debts but can not keep their promise. The Ethics of Bankruptcy examines the morality of bankruptcy. The author compares and contrasts the Humean doctrine of promises as useful conventions with the Kantian view of autonomous agency constituting promissory obligations; he explores ethical concerns raised by forgiveness, utilitarianism and distributive justice and the moral aspects of insolvents' contractual, fiduciary, tortious and criminal liability. Finally, the author assesses recent bankruptcy law reforms. Bankruptcies severly hurt creditors and society. For the insolvents and their families the experience is painful and stigmatising, yet philosophers have paid little attention to the moral aspects of this violent social phenomenon. The Ethics of Bankruptcy is the first comprehensive study that employs the tools of ethics to examine the controversies surrounding insolvency, which makes valuable and sometimes controversial reading in a decade recovering from the Recession.

chapter |4 pages

Prologue

part I|11 pages

The ethical trouble and its makers

part II|48 pages

Philosophical fundamentals of credit

chapter Chapter 2|8 pages

Natural law, consequentialism and contractualism

Theories of promising and their shortfalls

chapter Chapter 3|11 pages

In search of the ultimate obligation

Why a metaethical affair?

chapter Chapter 4|13 pages

Ethics founded on autonomy

A modest objectivist foundationalist interpretation of Kant

chapter Chapter 5|14 pages

Autonomy and promissory obligations

part III|26 pages

Ethical principles of insolvency

chapter Chapter 6|6 pages

Going broke, breaking promises

chapter Chapter 7|10 pages

Deontological ethics and insolvency

chapter Chapter 8|8 pages

What kind of discharge?

part IV|35 pages

In defence of dunning

chapter Chapter 9|9 pages

Propping up civil liability

Contract, breach of trust and tort

chapter Chapter 10|24 pages

Punishment

part V|32 pages

Applying the principles

chapter Chapter 11|12 pages

Bankruptcy law reform

An ethical perspective

chapter Chapter 12|18 pages

Gearing up, crashing loud

Should high-flyers be punished for insolvency?

part VI|33 pages

The corporate veil

chapter Chapter 13|14 pages

Corporate moral personhood

chapter Chapter 14|15 pages

Moral responsibility for corporate debts

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue