News
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Notre Dame Ethics Week: The power of ‘local’
Notre Dame Ethics Week 2018, "Lead Local, Lead Global," will feature entrepreneurs, civic leaders and others who exemplify the power of local leadership in advancing the greater good.
Carol Elliott -
Students create/share international business ethics cases
Students write and present international ethics cases that are headed for wider distribution.
Christine Cox -
BlackRock CEO Says Companies Need To Do More Than Deliver Profits
Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of Management & Organization, speaks with NPR about the role of social responsibility for businesses.
NPR -
‘Doxxing’ someone, even if he’s a Nazi sympathizer, poses a serious ethical dilemma
One thing to consider: Is the doxxing being done with a positive moral purpose?
Joseph Holt -
College football’s real hustlers: The ticket scalping syndicate
Sports economy expert RIchard Sheehan discusses the practice and principles of ticket scalping.
247 Sports -
Here’s the real problem for tech companies trying to fix the fake news crisis
Social media platforms can't dwell on last year's fake news battles, technology expert Timothy Carone writes for CNBC.
Timothy Carone for CNBC -
Russia meddling mess will cost tech giants big bucks to fix
Cybersecurity expert Mike Chapple says artificial intelligence isn't the only solution to fixing problems with misleading social media advertising.
Mike Chapple op-ed for CNBC -
When Doing Good Ends Badly for CEOs
CEOs of socially responsible companies are 84% more likely to be fired than other CEOs, according to research by Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of Management & Organization.
Fox Business -
Heads-up, CEOs — corporate social responsibility may get you fired, study finds
“CEOs running firms with higher levels of CSR are 84 percent more likely to be dismissed when financial performance is poor," says Timothy Hubbard, management and organization assistant professor.
Shannon Roddel -
Wells Fargo needs to appoint a new CEO immediately
Business ethics professor Joseph Holt argues that Tim Sloan lacks credibility to get Wells back on the straight and narrow.
Joseph Holt