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Professional Ethics
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Professional ethics refers to the moral principles and standards that guide conduct within specific occupational fields. Students encounter this topic across a wide range of disciplines, including healthcare, law, business administration, public institutions, and fitness and wellness. What makes it academically compelling is the tension it surfaces between individual responsibility and institutional codes of conduct — professionals must navigate personal judgment, formal standards, and the potential for harm to real persons, often simultaneously. Because nearly every career field has developed its own ethical frameworks, the topic invites both broad theoretical analysis and highly practical application.

The papers archived on this subject reflect a variety of approaches. Some take argumentative positions on specific conduct questions, such as whether dual relationships are contra-therapeutic or whether gift giving violates ethical codes. Others examine real-world cases of unethical business behavior or analyze how criminal defense lawyers manage professional responsibility. Several papers focus on sector-specific concerns, including bioethics, health information management, California healthcare businesses, and ethics in the fitness industry. Policy-oriented work also appears, with papers addressing state laws, board regulations, and the administration of public institutions.

A strong essay on professional ethics needs a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific standard or code to a concrete situation or outcome — broad claims about "ethics in general" rarely carry analytical weight. Evidence drawn from established codes of conduct, documented cases, or relevant law tends to be most persuasive. The most common pitfall is treating ethical codes as self-explanatory; effective papers interrogate what those codes mean in practice, where they fall short, and who bears responsibility when harm occurs.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Business and professional ethics
¶ … business and professional ethics in the movie "Wall Street." Discussed are the ethical principles that are violated as related to business; how greed is presented as part of American business; Gecko's view; how…
Paper Doctorate
Ethical Responsibilities of the Nurse Educator Role
The scenario chosen for this analysis is one in which a colleague failed to conduct a class as was planned allowing students to leave early and not following instructions for the class.
Paper Undergraduate
Professional ethics in practice and workplace conduct
Professional Ethics -- Eggertson v. Alberta Teachers Association
Essay Doctorate
Accounting Ethics the Harmless or Not-So-Harmless Lies
This paper is an accounting ethics case study. Bobby Glick is a recently-graduated accountant who lies about the fact he took his CPA exam to his firm: he waits to reveal this fact until he is certain that he passed. The firm dismisses him for this subterfuge, even though his concealment caused no demonstrable harm. Glick's actions are viewed through the lens of utilitarian, deontological, and virtue ethics perspectives.
Essay Doctorate
IT Ethics and Professionalism in Information Technology
This essay examines the importance of ethics within the IT industry. The essay introduces professionalism as important quality to attain in order to display ethical behavior. Codes of ethics are discussed and applied in terms of the information technology industry. The essay concludes by offering ideas on how to best serve the profession.
Paper Undergraduate
Ethics in management and organizational decision-making
The Moral rights of stockholders and shareholders
Paper Undergraduate
Health Care -- Ethical Issues in Evaluation
Health Care – Ethical Issues in Evaluation Research Ben is a professor and Alyssa is his graduate student in health sciences. Ben is the program chair for a conference with publications that are "refereed" or reviewed by an expert board of editors before publication. The conference has a policy that accepted papers must be presented by their authors but Ben does not mention this policy to Alyssa. He suggests that Alyssa submit a paper to the conference and that he will present it because the conference is being held abroad and he cannot support her trip to the conference. Alyssa writes the paper entirely with her own research while funded by an external fellowship, and submits it with herself as the sole author. She gives several drafts to Ben, who does not comment on any of them. Alyssa's paper is accepted by the conference, she is then advised of their policy about paper presentation by authors and she is surprised by it. She asks Ben about the policy and he curtly replies that she will have to make him a co-author on her paper. Alyssa finds this unreasonable under the circumstances but cannot afford to attend the conference on her own. Ben committed several ethical violations. He used his superior educational/professional position to induce unethical behavior by Alyssa and use Alyssa's research and resulting paper as his own without contributing to either the research or the paper. In addition, Ben acted unethically as a fellow researcher/writer, again by inducing unethical behavior and treating its fruits as his own. Alyssa acted unethically by using her external fellowship to perform research and write a resulting paper for another conference, though the fruits of her research/writing belong to the source of her external fellowship. In view of those unethical behaviors, Alyssa can take several courses of action, the best of which appears to be submitting the paper to the source of her external fellowship and withdrawing the paper from consideration by Ben's conference.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Challenger launch decision
JOE KILMINSTER'S ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE CHALLENGER DISASTER
Paper Undergraduate
Informed Consent and Ethics
Patients are entitled and must be informed of all possible medical procedures that they are likely to undergo in a clinical setting. Complications stemming from patient-counselor interactions remain a key source of ethical violations and complaints. Informed consent is a major issue with a direct bearing on the counselor-patient relationship. some patients tend to decline to be evaluated although they are likely to be beneficiaries of neuropsychological consultations. However, patients have the absolute right of exercising this prerogative with the assumption that they have the intact capacity to make decisions and assessments are not mandatory
Research Paper Doctorate
Professional ethics principles and practices
"Employee Monitoring: Is there Privacy in the Workplace?" 2003. Consumers Action Network