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Everyone’s Business

What Companies Owe Society

Business is political. What are the ethics of it?

Businesses are political actors. They not only fund political campaigns, take stances on social issues, and wave the flags of identity groups – they also affect politics in their everyday hiring and investment decisions. As a highly polarized public demands political alignment from the powerful businesses they deal with, what’s a company to do?

Amit Ron and Abraham Singer show that the unavoidably political role of companies in modern life is both the fundamental problem and inescapable fact of business ethics: corporate power makes business ethics necessary, and business ethics must strive to mitigate corporate power. Because of its economic and social influence, Ron and Singer forcefully argue that modern business’s primary social responsibility is to democracy. Businesses must work to avoid wielding their power in ways that undermine key democratic practices like elections, public debate, and social movements. Pragmatic and urgent, Everyone’s Business offers an essential new framework for how we pursue profit—and democracy—in our increasingly divided world.


256 pages | 2 tables | 6 x 9

Economics and Business: Business--Business Economics and Management Studies

Political Science: Political and Social Theory

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Business Ethics Is Political
2. Democracy and Business Ethics
3. The Rule of Law and Ethical Obligation
4. Lobbying and Democratic Corruption
5. Marketing and Democratic Deliberation
6. The Bottom Line and the Picket Line
7. Democratic Relations and the Workplace
8. Exit, Voice, and Business Investment Decisions
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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