Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What's Right and What to Do about It

Awards:   Winner of Axiom Business Book Awards in the category of Business Ethics 2012
Author:   Max H. Bazerman ,  Ann E. Tenbrunsel
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
ISBN:  

9780691156224


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   23 December 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What's Right and What to Do about It


Awards

  • Winner of Axiom Business Book Awards in the category of Business Ethics 2012

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Max H. Bazerman ,  Ann E. Tenbrunsel
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
Imprint:   Princeton University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.312kg
ISBN:  

9780691156224


ISBN 10:   0691156220
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   23 December 2012
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.
Language:   English

Table of Contents

"Acknowledgments ix Chapter 1: The Gap between Intended and Actual Ethical Behavior 1 Chapter 2: Why Traditional Approaches to Ethics Won't Save You 24 Chapter 3: When We Act against Our Own Ethical Values 38 Chapter 4: Why You Aren't as Ethical as You Think You Are 61 Chapter 5: When We Ignore Unethical Behavior 77 Chapter 6: Placing False Hope in the ""Ethical Organization"" 100 Chapter 7: Why We Fail to Fix Our Corrupted Institutions 128 Chapter 8: Narrowing the Gap: Interventions for Improving Ethical Behavior 152 Notes 173 Index 187"

Reviews

Well-written, stuffed with intriguing research, and more than a little unnerving, this book will make readers reconsider some of their most entrenched beliefs. BizEd [Blind Spots] is full of studies in human behavior and those results can help us, and the people we manage, make better decisions... [T]he book should be required reading for anyone entering the business world ... or for those of us who still try to reconcile misdeeds that did not have to be. -- Walter Pavlo Forbes.com One explanation for what happened at News of the World can be found in a new book called Blind Spots. Its authors Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel look at how businesses, from Ford to Enron to subprime mortgage lenders, can end up mired in ethical disaster. But rather than discuss such choices as coolly calculated trade-offs between right and wrong, they look at how people actually make decisions--under pressure from shareholders, bosses and colleagues, up against tight deadlines and often worried about their careers, or even whether their contracts are going to be renewed. -- Aditya Chakrabortty Guardian This book is a step toward ... bringing together a host of studies by the authors and others that probe how easy it is for us [to] act less ethically than we would like. The book also shows how organizations can take advantage of these findings in behavioural ethics to change their informal culture ... -- Harvey Schachter The Globe & Mail Blind Spots is a bold argument against the decency of human beings, showing how we subvert our ethical principles time and time again. Noting a human tendency to justify our own actions to ourselves with little thought for their consequences, business professors Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel explain how employees can give rise to dysfunctional organizations for fear of rocking the boat... The authors adopt a lively tone throughout and harness a broad mix of examples, from lab experiments to the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster and the collapse of Enron. -- Gregor Hunter The National Bazerman and Tenbrunsel apply insights from the field of behavioral ethics to understand why individuals and organizations act unethically and what can be done to prevent such behavior. They draw on research from psychology and business to illustrate how factors outside our awareness influence decisions and behavior, and what we can do to prevent ethical lapses. -- Taya R. Cohen Pittsburgh Business Times In an era where we've watched political leaders tell blatant lies and seen the corporate world nearly sunk by an onslaught of questionable ethics, it's time to take a sober look at why people who think of themselves as moral can commit unethical and even unlawful acts--or approve the dishonest acts of others... [T]his is examined in the recent book Blind Spots, by Harvard Business School professor Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel, professor of business ethics at the University of Notre Dame. Toronto Star The style [of Blind Spots] is incisive and reassuringly uningratiating. -- Steven Poole The Guardian Bazerman ... and ... Tenbrunsel ... set out to show that if we are to make ethical decisions, we need to recognize such blind spots in ourselves as our failure to view our own immoral actions objectively and our tendency to act based on how we want to behave rather than on how we should. -- Susan Schwartz Montreal Gazette Blind Spots is a good book. It tells a story in a clear and compelling fashion, which is what a book is for. The story is that we often act unethically, not because we're faced with ethical questions and decide to pick the 'bad' option, but because we fail to see that there is an ethical issue at all. Neuroskeptic blog If you want to be an ethical person or organization and are sometimes left nonplussed by the unethical behavior that still ensues nonetheless, then this is the right book to help you understand and correctly ensure that ethical behavior happens when push comes to shove. Mouse Trap blog Are we as ethical as we think we are? An important new book by ... Max Bazerman and ... Ann Tenbrunsel says probably not. In Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What's Right and What to Do about It, Bazerman and Tenbrunsel make a convincing case that a significant gap exists between how ethical we think we are and how ethical we actually are. -- Scott Flegal Nashua Telegraph In their well-written, easily accessible text, Bazerman and Tenbrunsel rely on well-known cases of ethical failure and prior research, often previously popularized psychological studies, to frame the emerging field of behavioral ethics... [I]t serves as an excellent introduction to the discipline. Choice I enjoyed this book and think it is ideal for a team of managers to read together. Knowing how common it is for individuals to miss seeing a conflict or bias, colleagues could commit to challenging each other with candor and care. l Geisler, Poynter I will surely consider using the text in the classroom in the future... [P]articularly if one is trying to establish organizational policy that encourages ethical behavior--there is a good deal here that will be of interest. -- J. Jeremy Wisnewski Philosophy in Review


Winner of the 2012 Silver Medal Book Award in Business Ethics, Axiom Business Well-written, stuffed with intriguing research, and more than a little unnerving, this book will make readers reconsider some of their most entrenched beliefs. --BizEd [Blind Spots] is full of studies in human behavior and those results can help us, and the people we manage, make better decisions... [T]he book should be required reading for anyone entering the business world ... or for those of us who still try to reconcile misdeeds that did not have to be. --Walter Pavlo, Forbes.com One explanation for what happened at News of the World can be found in a new book called Blind Spots. Its authors Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel look at how businesses, from Ford to Enron to subprime mortgage lenders, can end up mired in ethical disaster. But rather than discuss such choices as coolly calculated trade-offs between right and wrong, they look at how people actually make decisions--under pressure from shareholders, bosses and colleagues, up against tight deadlines and often worried about their careers, or even whether their contracts are going to be renewed. --Aditya Chakrabortty, Guardian This book is a step toward ... bringing together a host of studies by the authors and others that probe how easy it is for us [to] act less ethically than we would like. The book also shows how organizations can take advantage of these findings in behavioural ethics to change their informal culture ... --Harvey Schachter, The Globe & Mail Bazerman and Tenbrunsel apply insights from the field of behavioral ethics to understand why individuals and organizations act unethically and what can be done to prevent such behavior. They draw on research from psychology and business to illustrate how factors outside our awareness influence decisions and behavior, and what we can do to prevent ethical lapses. --Taya R. Cohen, Pittsburgh Business Times Blind Spots is a bold argument against the decency of human beings, showing how we subvert our ethical principles time and time again. Noting a human tendency to justify our own actions to ourselves with little thought for their consequences, business professors Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel explain how employees can give rise to dysfunctional organizations for fear of rocking the boat... The authors adopt a lively tone throughout and harness a broad mix of examples, from lab experiments to the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster and the collapse of Enron. --Gregor Hunter, The National In an era where we?ve watched political leaders tell blatant lies and seen the corporate world nearly sunk by an onslaught of questionable ethics, it?s time to take a sober look at why people who think of themselves as moral can commit unethical and even unlawful acts--or approve the dishonest acts of others... [T]his is examined in the recent book Blind Spots, by Harvard Business School professor Max Bazerman and Ann Tenbrunsel, professor of business ethics at the University of Notre Dame. --Toronto Star The style [of Blind Spots] is incisive and reassuringly uningratiating. --Steven Poole, The Guardian Bazerman ... and ... Tenbrunsel ... set out to show that if we are to make ethical decisions, we need to recognize such blind spots in ourselves as our failure to view our own immoral actions objectively and our tendency to act based on how we want to behave rather than on how we should. --Susan Schwartz, Montreal Gazette Blind Spots is a good book. It tells a story in a clear and compelling fashion, which is what a book is for. The story is that we often act unethically, not because we?re faced with ethical questions and decide to pick the ?bad? option, but because we fail to see that there is an ethical issue at all. --Neuroskeptic blog If you want to be an ethical person or organization and are sometimes left nonplussed by the unethical behavior that still ensues nonetheless, then this is the right book to help you understand and correctly ensure that ethical behavior happens when push comes to shove. --Mouse Trap blog Are we as ethical as we think we are? An important new book by ... Max Bazerman and ... Ann Tenbrunsel says probably not. In Blind Spots: Why We Fail to Do What's Right and What to Do about It, Bazerman and Tenbrunsel make a convincing case that a significant gap exists between how ethical we think we are and how ethical we actually are. --Scott Flegal, Nashua Telegraph In their well-written, easily accessible text, Bazerman and Tenbrunsel rely on well-known cases of ethical failure and prior research, often previously popularized psychological studies, to frame the emerging field of behavioral ethics... [I]t serves as an excellent introduction to the discipline. --Choice I enjoyed this book and think it is ideal for a team of managers to read together. Knowing how common it is for individuals to miss seeing a conflict or bias, colleagues could commit to challenging each other with candor and care. --Jill Geisler, Poynter I will surely consider using the text in the classroom in the future... [P]articularly if one is trying to establish organizational policy that encourages ethical behavior--there is a good deal here that will be of interest. --J. Jeremy Wisnewski, Philosophy in Review


Author Information

Max H. Bazerman is the Jesse Isidor Straus Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. He is the author and coauthor of many books, including Negotiation Genius. Ann E. Tenbrunsel is the Rex and Alice A. Martin Professor of Business Ethics at the Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame. She is the coeditor of several books, including Codes of Conduct.

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