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Ethical Decision Making
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Ethical decision making sits at the intersection of moral philosophy and practical judgment, making it a central subject in ethics, business, public administration, criminal justice, counseling, and leadership courses. The topic asks how individuals and organizations identify the right course of action when values, interests, or obligations conflict. Because these dilemmas arise in virtually every professional field, instructors across disciplines assign essays on ethical decision making to push students beyond abstract principles and toward structured, reasoned analysis of real situations. Frameworks for working through ethical dilemmas—such as the model proposed by Uustal in 1993—give students concrete steps for navigating morally complex problems, which is part of what makes the subject academically rich and practically significant.

The papers collected here take several distinct approaches. Some examine ethical decision making within specific professional contexts, including criminal justice administration, public safety, human resource management, and counseling with multicultural populations. Others focus on leadership, exploring the attributes of ethical leaders in business and higher education or the relationship between teamwork and collective decision making. Case-study analysis appears frequently, with writers applying decision making models to situations involving organ donation, supplier monitoring, and environmental issues such as global warming. Comparative and applied approaches are both well represented, meaning students test theoretical frameworks against concrete scenarios rather than discussing ethics in purely abstract terms.

A strong essay on this topic opens with a clearly defined ethical dilemma and names the competing interests or values at stake before introducing any framework. Evidence drawn from professional guidelines, documented cases, or established ethical models carries more weight than general assertions about right and wrong. The most common pitfall is treating the conclusion as obvious from the start; a compelling argument must genuinely grapple with why the situation is difficult and explain why one course of action is more defensible than the alternatives.

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Paper Doctorate
Proxy Consent in a High
Proxy Consent in a High Stakes and Time Sensitive Healthcare Situation: A Philosophical Analysis
Research Paper Undergraduate
Elsevier Apply Case Studies -
Elsevier Apply Case Studies - Evolve Reach Exit Examination (E2) Scores
Paper Undergraduate
Non Profit Management the Purpose
The purpose of this project is to determine how the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) is addressing the underlying challenges facing all non-profits. As the organization, has become successful in supporting various…
Paper Undergraduate
Euthanasia in All Its Forms
Euthanasia in all its forms has become a topic for extreme public debate. Sadly, the issue is not a public one at all but a very personal and excruciating decision that requires self- and social mediation to develop.
Essay Doctorate
Ethical Decision Making Kimberly Gas Hub
The Kimberley Gas Hub is a controversial project to set up an LNG refinery facility at James Price Point near the Kimberley coast of Western Australia. The company Woodside is interested in setting up the project and it claims that it will boost the mining industry in the region and will bring economic development for the local people. Critics doubt these claims and state that the project would not have a big impact on economic development but it will have severe negative environmental consequences (Weber August, 09 2012). The controversy has increased since the project has been given a conditional go-ahead by Western Australia's Environmental Protection Agency (Lawson July, 16 2012). The ethical implications for any decision on this issue can be analyzed by using three different ethical approaches: utilitarianism, moral rights approach and justice approach.
Essay Doctorate
Arthur Andersen Chapter Four of Our Text
Chapter four of our text explains the mandated requirements for legal compliance. The following requirements apply to the Arthur Andersen case. Certainly, accountants are very important in this mix because they are the watchmen for the system, making sure that the books are correct and transparent so that there will be confidence in the system by all of the stakeholders. The tragedy of Arthur Anderson (as well as in the present recession) is that the watchers have falsified the books. In the view of the author, transparency is a major component of faith in the financial system for all stakeholders. When auditing agencies act illegally and unethically, it shakes faith in the system and prevents the normal operation of capitalism because such uncertainty makes it virtually impossible to have normal business planning and day to day functioning.
Essay Doctorate
Ethical theory fundamentals and applications
An examination and comparison of various ethical theories is made with an emphasis on virtue ethics. The argument is made that the ancient theories of Aristotle and Plato are the proper approach to ethical decision making and that all the attempts to discredit such approach fail to obviate the basic strengths of how Aristotle approached ethics thousands of years ago.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Theories of culture in human relations
In his attempt to argue the importance of culture in human relations, Geert Hofstede (2005) resorts to the following introductory paragraph for the first chapter of his book Culture and Organizations.
Paper Undergraduate
Ethics, Torture and Psychological Issues
During the founding of the new Republic, soon to be the United States of America, the idea of Christianity and the power of God to represent the best will of the people was part of the Founding Fathers' notions. It was inconceivable to them, in fact, to separate the idea of being religious and being political; and the notion of religion was tied with Christianity. The social view of the time was different than it is now, and there was a difference between the cultural heritage of religion and Biblical Christianity.
Paper Undergraduate
Knowledge Concerning Ethical Issues Involved
This paper provides a review of the literature to identify ethical issues involved in counseling teenagers with alcoholism, including informed consent contents in psychotherapeutic settings, a discussion concerning dual relationships and psychological testing in personnel selection. Next, a discussion concerning the rules governing sexual intimacy with clients and former clients is followed by a discussion of personal psychotherapy as a requirement of a graduate training program, including an examination of deception in research and an assessment of special concerns and particular benefits of an outpatient setting. In addition, a description of the relevant minimum HIPAA requirements for a small clinic is also provided.