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A Partial Test of the Synthesis Integrated Model of Ethical Decision Making: Cognitive Moral Development and Managerial Moral Deliberation

David C. Wyld (Assistant Professor of Management at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana. He received his doctorate in management from Memphis State University in 1993. His dissertation was nominated for the outstanding dissertation award by the Social Issues in Management Division of the Academy of Management. He has been very active in research on many contemporary management issues. He has authored over twenty articles which have been published in peer‐reviewed journals. These have included appearances in the following: Journal of Business Research, Labor Law Journal, World Business Review, Ethics Today Journal, The Health Care Supervisor, Management Research News, International Journal of Management, International Journal of Value Based Management, The Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal, Equal Opportunities International, AIDS & Public Policy Journal, National Social Science Journal, Futures Research Quarterly, Southern Law Journal, Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing, and Business Perspectives. He has also presented over forty papers at professional conferences, garnering two best paper awards for these efforts.)

Management Research News

ISSN: 0140-9174

Article publication date: 1 March 1994

448

Abstract

Lawrence Kohlberg's (1969) concept of cognitive moral development (CMD) has been one of the most investigated constructs in the field of social psychology, with over one thousand studies reported investigating this construct in only two decades of research. However, what is the relationship of this theoretical construct to actual decision making and behavior? Blasi (1980, p. 4) opined for the criticality of moral judgement research to both ethical decision making and ethical inquiry, stating that “without judgement, an action, no matter how beneficial, would not be moral.” Relating Kohlberg's model to business decision making and behavior has been central to the building of theoretical frameworks of the ethical decision making process engaged in by individuals. The models of this process proposed by Trevino and Youngblood (1990), Trevino (1986), Bommer, Gratto, Gravender, and Tuttle (1987), Ferrell and Gresham (1985), Ferrell, Gresham, and Fraedrich (1989), Swinyard, DeLong, and Cheng (1989), and Jones (1991) all contained cognitive moral development as a factor in their respective models of ethical decision making.

Citation

Wyld, D.C., Jones, C.A., Cappel, S.D. and Hallock, D.E. (1994), "A Partial Test of the Synthesis Integrated Model of Ethical Decision Making: Cognitive Moral Development and Managerial Moral Deliberation", Management Research News, Vol. 17 No. 3/4, pp. 17-39. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb028338

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1994, MCB UP Limited

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