Values and Ethics
in the Workplace
Values and Ethics in the Workplace
Values and ethics in the workplace can be extremely different among various jobs, careers, companies and organizations, ages, races, and ethnic groups, cultures and parts of the world, office environments, and the individual employees themselves. For example, a secretary in the administrative office of a Catholic church, a poor and illiterate factory worker in India, and a stockbroker who works as a managing partner in a prestigious firm would all hold different and maybe even opposing morals. The secretary would probably be opposed to working on a Sunday so that she had the time to attend church, while the stockbroker would feel compelled to work even on Sunday so that he did not feel lazy and unmotivated, and the factory worker would not have the option of making such a decision as he would have to work every available hour that he could to try and make enough to buy food and avoid starvation.
As a woman in my mid-thirties, working as a legal secretary in a mid-level criminal defense firm, I have the option of formulating and adhering to my own values and ethics based on my internal standards and core beliefs, my past experiences, my vision for my future, my sense of honor, virtue, and fidelity, my expectations of others, and my priorities and goals. There are many different ethical theories that can be used to describe the process that an individual goes through when she is contemplating his personal value system, among them Consequentialism, Deontology, Social Contract Theory, and Human Nature Ethics. I will use these ethical theories to analyze my own ethical practices and value system in my work as a legal secretary, with a situational example...
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