Financial Management and Corporate Governance from the Feminist Ethics of Care Perspective [electronic resource] /
Author(s)
Adhariani, Desi.author.Sciulli, Nick.author.
Clift, Robert.author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Keywords
Finance.Business enterprises
Leadership.
Business ethics.
Corporations
Feminist theory.
Feminist anthropology.
Finance.
Corporate Finance.
Business Finance.
Business Strategy/Leadership.
Business Ethics.
Feminism.
Feminist Anthropology.
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https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33518-6Abstract
This book investigates how businesses can adapt their executive and fiscal practices to adopt an ethical, equal-opportunity approach. The authors demonstrate how corporations can create sustainable work environments that embrace feminist care ethics and ground their research in a strong theoretical discussion of this relatively new framework. The discussion has a multidisciplinary outlook and explores how the concept of care ethics might be successfully applied to various professional contexts. Later chapters present findings from an empirical case study conducted in Australia and use both qualitative and quantitative methods to analyse the potential power of a feminist care of ethics approach within commercial and corporate management.Chapter 1) Introduction -- Chapter 2) An Introduction to the Ethics of Care -- Chapter 3) Corporate Governance Practices from the Ethics of Care Perspective -- Chapter 4) Research Methodology -- Chapter 5) Case Study Part 1 -- Chapter 6) Case Study Part 2 -- Chapter 7) Conclusion.
This book investigates how businesses can adapt their executive and fiscal practices to adopt an ethical, equal-opportunity approach. The authors demonstrate how corporations can create sustainable work environments that embrace feminist care ethics and ground their research in a strong theoretical discussion of this relatively new framework. The discussion has a multidisciplinary outlook and explores how the concept of care ethics might be successfully applied to various professional contexts. Later chapters present findings from an empirical case study conducted in Australia and use both qualitative and quantitative methods to analyse the potential power of a feminist care of ethics approach within commercial and corporate management.
Type
textIdentifier
oai:search.ugent.be:ebk01:3710000001010747http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33518-6
URN:ISBN:9783319335186