Practicing Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy 1st Edition by Elizabeth Searing, Donald Searing- Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9789401773065 ,9401773068
Full download Practicing Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy 1st Edition after payment
Product details:
ISBN 10: 9401773068
ISBN 13: 9789401773065
Author: Elizabeth Searing, Donald Searing
Practicing Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy 1st Edition Table of contents:
Part I: The Role of Ethics
Chapter 1: Why Am I Reading This?
1.1 Judgment Day
1.2 Ethics and Social Science
1.3 Why Should I Read an Ethics Book?
1.4 Why Should I Read This Ethics Book?
1.5 Contents of the Text
References
Chapter 2: A Basic Primer: People to Know
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Aristotle
2.3 Arrow
2.4 Bentham
2.5 Hayek
2.6 Hobbes
2.7 Hume
2.8 Kant
2.9 Keynes
2.10 Locke
2.11 Mandeville
2.12 Marx
2.13 Mill
2.14 Rand
2.15 Rawls
2.16 Rousseau
2.17 Smith
References
Part II: Ethical Decision-Making
Chapter 3: Framing the Problem
3.1 Assemble the Data
3.1.1 What Is Data in an Ethical Decision Scenario?
3.1.2 How Is Decision Data Gathered?
3.1.3 How Is Decision Data Recorded?
3.1.4 How Is Decision Data Classified?
3.1.4.1 Facts and Factual Issues
3.1.4.2 Concepts and Conceptual Issues
3.1.4.3 Morals and Moral Issues
3.2 Verify the Data
3.2.1 Recognition of Priors
3.2.2 Resolution of Conflict
3.2.3 Iterative Looping
3.2.4 Assumption Formation
3.3 Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: Hypothesis Testing
4.1 Hypothesis Testing in Ethics
4.2 The Hypotheses
4.2.1 Forming the Null Hypothesis
4.2.2 The Alternative Hypothesis
4.2.3 The Role of the Environment
4.3 Ethical Analysis
4.3.1 Visualization Analyses
4.3.1.1 Expected Reciprocity Analysis (The Golden Rule)
4.3.1.2 New York Times Analysis
4.3.1.3 Anticipatory Self-Appraisal Analysis
4.3.1.4 Aggregate Application Analysis (Kantian Categorical Imperative)
4.3.2 Virtue Analysis
4.3.3 Utilitarianism-Based Analyses
4.3.3.1 Act Utilitarian Analysis
4.3.3.2 Rule Utilitarian Analysis
4.3.3.3 Cost-Benefit Analysis
4.3.4 Respect for Persons Analyses
4.3.4.1 Rights-Based Analysis
4.3.4.2 Pareto Efficiency Analysis
4.4 Presenting Results
References
Chapter 5: Drawing Conclusions
5.1 Coming to a Conclusion
5.2 All Analyses Agree to Reject the Null Hypothesis
5.3 All Analyses Agree to Fail in Rejecting the Null Hypothesis
5.4 When Analyses Disagree
5.4.1 Preponderance of Evidence
5.4.2 Weighting Schemas
5.4.3 Drawing a Line – The Method of Casuistry
5.5 So Your Proposed Solution Is Unethical- Reformulating the Hypothesis
5.6 Conclusion
References
Chapter 6: Case Studies
6.1 Case Study 1: Frederick
6.1.1 Introduction
6.1.2 Framing (See Chap. 4)
6.1.2.1 Facts
6.1.2.2 Factual Issues
6.1.2.3 Concepts
6.1.2.4 Conceptual Issues
6.1.2.5 Morals/Values
6.1.2.6 Moral/Value Issues
6.1.3 Ethical Analysis (See Chap. 5)
6.1.3.1 Generate the Hypotheses
6.1.3.2 Determine the Audiences
6.1.3.3 Visualization: Expected Reciprocity Analysis
6.1.3.4 Visualization: New York Times Analysis
6.1.3.5 Visualization: Anticipatory Self-Appraisal Analysis
6.1.3.6 Visualization: Aggregate Application Analysis (Categorical Imperative)
6.1.3.7 Virtue Analysis
6.1.3.8 Utilitarianism: Act Utilitarian Analysis
6.1.3.9 Utilitarianism: Rule Utilitarian Analysis
6.1.3.10 Utilitarianism: Cost-Benefit Analysis
6.1.3.11 Respect for Persons: Rights-Based Analysis
6.1.3.12 Respect for Persons: Pareto Efficiency Analysis
6.1.4 Overall Conclusion (See Chap. 6)
6.1.4.1 Concluding Judgment
6.1.4.2 Final Conclusion
6.2 Case Study 2: Johanna
6.2.1 Introduction
6.2.2 Framing the Situation (See Chap. 4)
6.2.2.1 Facts
6.2.2.2 Factual Issues
6.2.2.3 Concepts
6.2.2.4 Conceptual Issues
6.2.2.5 Morals/Values
6.2.2.6 Moral/Value Issues
6.2.3 Ethical Analysis (See Chap. 5)
6.2.3.1 Generate the Hypotheses
6.2.3.2 Determine the Audiences
6.2.3.3 Visualization: Expected Reciprocity Analysis
6.2.3.4 Visualization: New York Times Analysis
6.2.3.5 Visualization: Anticipatory Self-Appraisal Analysis
6.2.3.6 Visualization: Aggregate Application Analysis (Categorical Imperative)
6.2.3.7 Virtue Analysis
6.2.3.8 Utilitarianism: Act Utilitarian Analysis
6.2.3.9 Utilitarianism: Rule Utilitarian Analysis
6.2.3.10 Utilitarianism: Cost-Benefit Analysis
6.2.3.11 Respect for Persons: Rights-Based Analysis
6.2.3.12 Respect for Persons: Pareto Efficiency Analysis
6.2.4 Overall Conclusion (See Chap. 6)
6.2.4.1 Concluding Judgment
6.2.4.2 Final Conclusion
Part III: Perspectives on Professional Ethics
Chapter 7: Ethics and the Central Bank
7.1 Ethics in Policy Making
7.2 Ethics in the Research Environment
7.3 Ethics in Data and Statistics
7.4 Ethics in the Exercise of Authority
7.5 Concluding Remarks
References
Chapter 8: Ethics and Climate Change Policy
8.1 Enlightenment: Beyond the Beta Version
8.2 Ethics and Economics: Beyond the Split
8.3 We Must Take Action
8.4 We Must Work Together
8.4.1 Not Just “Altruism”
8.4.2 More than “Conversation”
8.5 We Must Focus on Avoiding the Worst
8.6 Concrete Steps
8.7 Conclusion
8.8 Coda
References
Chapter 9: Ethics and Experimental Economics
9.1 Ethics of Using Human Subjects
9.1.1 Deception
9.1.2 Informed Consent and Blindness
9.1.3 Monetary Incentivization
9.2 Ethics of Reporting
9.3 Conclusion
References
Chapter 10: Ethics and Health Policy
10.1 Initial Interest in Health Policy
10.2 Immediate Lessons from the Experience
10.3 Larger Questions
References
Chapter 11: Ethics and Human Resource Management
11.1 Recognizing Ethical Issues
11.2 Balancing Roles
11.3 Being an Ethical Manager
11.4 Concluding Thoughts
Chapter 12: Ethics and Forensic Economics
12.1 Introduction
12.1.1 Ethics and Professional Practices
12.1.2 Personal Perspective
12.1.3 Final Comments
Chapter 13: Ethics and Nonprofits
13.1 Ethics Within Nonprofit Organizations
13.1.1 Case 1
13.1.2 Case 2
13.1.3 Case 3
13.2 Ethics of Nonprofit Organizations
13.3 Trends in Nonprofit Ethics
13.4 Conclusion
References
Chapter 14: Ethics and Professional Practice
14.1 Introduction
14.2 The Lawmaker Model of Professional Ethics
14.2.1 The Universality of Ethics
14.2.2 Ethics as Authoritarian
14.2.3 Ethics as Counterpreferential
14.3 Preliminaries for Ethics for Economists
14.4 Closing Thoughts
References
Chapter 15: Ethics and Public Policy
15.1 Introduction
15.2 Applying Ethics to Public Policy
15.3 Theory Versus Practice
15.4 Examples from Case Law
15.5 Complex, But Necessary
References
Chapter 16: Ethics and Social Justice
16.1 Why Economics Needs a Code of Ethics
16.2 Economics as Social Engineering
16.3 Rethinking Economics from a Feminist Point of View
16.4 Conclusion
References
Chapter 17: Where Ethics Was, Is, and Should Be
17.1 Where Ethics Was
17.2 Where Ethics Is
17.3 Where Ethics Should Be
17.3.1 A More Unified Approach to Teaching Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy
17.3.2 Espousal of This Need by Leaders and Organizations
17.3.3 Continued Research into Professional Ethics
17.3.4 An Internalized Need to Behave in a Professionally Ethical Way
17.4 Final Thoughts
References
Appendix 1: Ethical Analysis Workbook
Framing the Situation (See Chap. 4)
Facts
Factual Issues
Concepts
Conceptual Issues
Morals/Values
Moral/Value Issues
Ethical Analysis (See Chap. 5)
Generate the Hypotheses
Determine the Audiences
Visualization: Expected Reciprocity Analysis
Visualization: New York Times Analysis
Visualization: Anticipatory Self-Appraisal Analysis
Visualization: Aggregate Application Analysis (Categorical Imperative)
Virtue Analysis
Utilitarianism: Act Utilitarian Analysis
Utilitarianism: Rule Utilitarian Analysis
Utilitarianism: Cost-Benefit Analysis
Respect for Persons: Rights-Based Analysis
Respect for Persons: Pareto Efficiency Analysis
Overall Conclusion (See Chap. 6)
Concluding Judgment
Final Conclusion
Appendix 2: Professional Codes of Ethics for the Social Sciences
Anthropology
Communications
Criminology
Economics
Education
Environment
History
Human Resource Management
International Relations
Law
Linguistics
Politics
Public Administration
Psychology
Public Finance
Public Management
Social Psychology
Social Work
Sociology
Statistics
Women’s Studies
Index
People also search for Practicing Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy 1st Edition:
practicing professional ethics in economics and public policy
practicing good ethics
professional ethics in teaching articles
ethics and professional practice
Tags:
Elizabeth Searing,Donald Searing,Professional Ethics,Economics,Public Policy