
A Conference, March 8-10, 2007, Santa Clara University
Campus
Call for Papers
Two of the world's fastest growing economies-China and India-will
be the focus of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics fourth
biennial business ethics conference. The themes will center
on the cultural, economic, and social factors that form the
ethical business practices in these countries and the challenges
facing global business organizations in creating a consistent
and effective ethical culture capable of crossing national boundaries.
The 2005 conference attracted 145 academics from 11 countries
and 50 senior business executives from the San Francisco Bay
Area. Past conferences have featured executives from Adobe Systems,
Cisco Systems, Agilent, Network Associates, and Hewlett-Packard.
Scholars such as Richard De George, Patricia Werhane, Linda
Trevino, S. Prakash Sethi, James O'Toole, and David Vogel have
participated.
The Conference is divided into three segments:
Day One (3/8-p.m.) Corporate Visits will feature an on-site
visit for scholars to the corporate headquarters of a major
Silicon Valley company. Presentations and discus-sions will
focus on the challenges of creating and maintaining an effective,
global ethical culture while dealing with the unique ethical
issues involved in information technology. The day will conclude
with a dinner where a CEO of a second Silicon Valley organization
will share experiences, frustrations, and successes in creating
and maintaining an ethical organizational culture.
Day Two (3/9-a.m. and p.m.) Executive Forum will offer business
executives and scholars the opportunity to hear from several
prominent executives with extensive business experience in India
and China. These presentations will be followed by panels and
interactive discussion with scholar attendees to further explore
the conference themes. The panels will include subject matter
experts, experienced business personnel, and academicians. The
day will conclude with a session identifying five questions
posed by the executive attendees that might be the focus of
future research.
Day Three (3/10-a.m. and p.m.) Academic Forum will provide
a platform for scholars to discuss contemporary topics in business
ethics and a forum for the presentation of selected research.
Two plenary sessions will anchor the day, one a retrospective
and the other a forward-looking survey of the discipline. In
the morning, sessions conducted by established scholars will
be featured on topics of their choosing. In the afternoon, papers
by emerging (non-tenured) scholars will be featured. The Markkula
Center is proud to have supported such scholars as Joshua Margolis
(Harvard Business School), Rob Philips (Richmond), Lori Ryan
(San Diego State), Alexei Marcoux (Loyola Chicago), and Scott
Reynolds (Washington) early in their careers in previous conferences.
Submission Guidelines
Submission Deadline: October 15, 2006
Established Scholars should submit abstracts or panel proposals
to Dennis Moberg, SCU professor of management: DMoberg@scu.edu
Emerging Scholars should submit abstracts to Shawn Berman,
SCU assistant professor of management: SBerman@scu.edu
All submissions must be in electronic Word form-nothing in
PDF, rich text format, etc.
Abstracts, 3-5 pages double spaced, should fully describe the
objectives and scope of your research. All conference proposals
will be subjected to a blind review process. Each submission
should include a cover sheet with author information (name,
address, phone, fax, e-mail).
We expect 6-8 papers/panels will be selected; topics in support
of the conference themes will be given priority; notification
will take place by December 15. Recommendations for publication
of papers in the Journal of Business Ethics, Business Ethics
Quarterly, or Business and Professional Ethics Journal will
be forthcoming after the conference's conclusion.
Submission of an abstract for review constitutes a commitment
that one paper author will attend the conference if the submission
is accepted.
All lodging expenses and meals for full-time faculty members
will be borne by the Ethics Center. Travel expenses are the
responsibility of attendees. Authors of papers in the emerging
scholars' session will also have their reasonable and customary
travel expenses reimbursed by the Markkula Center for Applied
Ethics.
For additional information about the conference, contact Markkula
Ethics Center Executive-in-Residence Jim Balassone: JBalassone@scu.edu.
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