How Do Firms Manage Ethically-Contested Organizational Paradoxes? : Insights from two Historical Case Studies of Modern Slavery

Wong, Ncholas and Smith, Andrew and Discua Cruz, Allan and Burton, Nicholas and Charambolous, Eleni (2024) How Do Firms Manage Ethically-Contested Organizational Paradoxes? : Insights from two Historical Case Studies of Modern Slavery. Business History. ISSN 0007-6791 (In Press)

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Abstract

Management researchers, particularly those focused on socially important issues such as worker exploitation, are increasingly interested in what this study terms ethically-contested organizational paradoxes. Such paradoxes occur when there is an incongruity between the ethical dimensions of a firm’s action in one area, geographical or functional, and another. To understand how firms manage ethically-contested organizational paradoxes, this study conducts historical research on two twentieth century firms, Cadburys and Rowntree, who were lauded by contemporaries for their enlightened treatment of domestic workforces whilst simultaneously being engaged in labour practices overseas that were controversial and exploitative. This study examines how two multigenerational family firms managed the paradox inherent in the significant difference in how they treated their workers at home and abroad. This study identifies three types of strategies that firm leaders used to manage the existence of ethically-contested organizational paradoxes: disinforming, subordinating, and self-doubting.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Business History
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/no_not_funded
Subjects:
?? no - not fundednobusiness, management and accounting (miscellaneous)historybusiness and international management ??
ID Code:
226385
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
16 Dec 2024 10:05
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
In Press
Last Modified:
23 Dec 2024 02:33