Managing ethical dilemmas
Contents
• suitability of
– setting codes of ethics
– imposing sanctions
– education programs and
– the use of decision-support frameworks
as strategies for managing ethical dilemmas.
‘Ethical’?
• Being morally correct or proper according to
accepted standards of social or professional
behaviour.
• Actions may be legal but not ethical
• Examples?
‘Dilemma’?
• A state of doubt where you have to make a
decision between equally bad options.
• A situation where obeying one moral belief
would disobey another.
• A problem with no real right answer
Managing ethical-dilemmas
Sample Dilemma
• A pregnant woman is brought unconscious to
a hospital’s emergency room. She has no
identification so her family cannot be
contacted. Doctors find that if she continues
with the pregnancy, she will soon die. If she
does not continue, the baby will die.
• What does the doctor do?
Sample Dilemma
• An employer suspects his wife who works with
him is being unfaithful. The employer asks an
IT technician to install a secret keylogger on
his wife’s computer to get evidence of her
infidelity.
• The technician disagrees with this action, but
fears being fired if he refuses.
• What does he do?
Ethical dilemma
• During World War 2, Nazi doctors performed
horrific medical experiments on prisoners to
find how hypothermia killed people. Most of
the test subjects died in agony, but the tests
uncovered useful medical information.
• Should this unethical research be used to treat
people suffering hypothermia today?
Setting codes of ethics
• Common in professions
– Medicine (Hippocratic oath), nursing
– Law
– Teaching
– Journalism
– IT workers
– Investigators
Why have a code of ethics?
• to define acceptable professional behaviours
and responsibilities
• to promote high standards of practice
• to provide a benchmark for members to use
for self evaluation
• a vehicle for occupational identity
• to weed out undesirable members
Why have a code of ethics?
• To enhance the sense of community among
members
• To form a group with common values and a
common mission
• To reassure the public that the group is
trustworthy and reliable
• To gain and maintain a good reputation for
the profession
Why have a code of ethics?
• Just developing a code forces a group to
define what is important about their
profession
• Also identifies known ways the profession can
go ‘bad’ and acts against those ways
• To inspire members of the group to be good
Why have a code of ethics?
• To set down aspirations that outline what
ideals the organisation aspires to
• To list some rules or principles, which
members of the organisation will be expected
to adhere to.
• To get agreement amongst members on how
they should behave.
Aust Computer Society’s Code
• As an ACS member you must uphold and advance
the honour, dignity and effectiveness of being a
professional. This entails, in addition to being a good
citizen and acting within the law, your adherence to
the following Society values:
• 1. The Primacy of the Public Interest
You will place the interests of the public above those
of personal, business or sectional interests.
Aust Computer Society’s Code
• 2. The Enhancement of Quality of Life
You will strive to enhance the quality of life of those
affected by your work.
• 3. Honesty
You will be honest in your representation of skills,
knowledge, services and products.
• 4. Competence
You will work competently and diligently for your
stakeholders.
Aust Computer Society’s Code
• 5. Professional Development
You will enhance your own professional
development, and that of your colleagues and staff.
• 6. Professionalism
You will enhance the integrity of the Society and the
respect of its members for each other.
These are detailed in their Code of Professional
Conduct and Professional Practice.
e.g. Competence
• Accept only such work as you believe you are
competent to perform and do not hesitate to
obtain additional expertise from appropriately
qualified individuals where advisable.
• You should always be aware of your own
limitations and not knowingly imply that you
have competence you do not possess.
• Etc.
Imposing sanctions
• Sanction = A mechanism of social control for
enforcing a society's standards
• Punishments
• Oddly, sanction also means “to give
permission or approval”
Imposing sanctions
• Sanctions deter group members from acting
unethically.
• Public sanctions remind other group members
of the rules and the consequences of breaking
the rules
• Establishes that the group takes its code of
ethics seriously
Imposing sanctions
Types of sanctions:
• Official warning
• Admonition
• Supervised practice
• Enforced public apology (e.g. in newspapers)
• Expulsion from the group
(e.g. deregistration of doctors, defrocking of priests)
• Suspension of privileges or right to practice
• Others?
Education programs
• “Ignorance of the law is no excuse”
• Group members need to be educated about what
rules they must follow
• It’s better to educate people and prevent
misbehaviour than it is to punish people who are
ignorant of the rules
Education programs
• Some groups formally test newcomers on
their knowledge of the society’s ethics
• Codes of ethics are usually publicly posted
• Rule-breakers may be sentenced to a reeducation program
Decision-support frameworks
• Decision-support frameworks guide people
who have to make difficult decisions
• Difficult decisions can be made easier by
having an agreed system to handle them
• e.g. If this situation arises, you should…
• Reduces the chance of individuals making
inappropriate or inconsistent decisions
Decision-support frameworks
• E.g. If you break this rule, the punishment is…
• E.g. For a second offence the consequence is…
• E.g. Under these circumstances the penalty
should be increased/decreased…
Decision-support frameworks
• A formulated framework reduces favouritism
and unfairness in dealing with issues
• All people are treated equally, based on
established procedures.
• It gives the decision-maker more confidence
since the decision is not just his or her
opinion.
Decision-support frameworks
• Commonly used when working in complex
systems like river management or feral
camels.
• May include a knowledge base and modelling
tools
• Complex investigations within large
Government agencies use intelligence analysis
and decision support tools
Some
Sample
Dilemmas
for you to

Manage or prevent
For the following dilemmas
•
•
•
•

What is the dilemma?
What options are there to choose from?
Why is each option bad?
How could the dilemma have been either
prevented or dealt with once it did happen?

• What role could an investigator play in each
scenario?
How to handle these dilemmas?
An IT technician was undertaking a major
upgrade to all the laptops within her
company. While working on the laptop of the
Finance Director, she noticed that this laptop
contained thousands of pornographic
pictures.

•What is the dilemma?
•What options are there to choose from?
•Why is each option bad?
•How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
How to handle these dilemmas?
A trainee at a design company is learning to use
an expensive CAD program. Each day she
borrows the program’s CD-ROM and practises
using the software.
Notices in company say that copying software is
forbidden.
One day, she copies the CD so she can work on
her training at home and become a moreskilled worker.

•What is the dilemma?
•What options are there to choose from?
•Why is each option bad?
•How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
How to handle these dilemmas?
A project manager suspects a team member of
using his company email account to send
offensive messages to other employees of the
company.
She asks the company's network manager to
give her copies of the team member's emails.

•What is the dilemma?
•What options are there to choose from?
•Why is each option bad?
•How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
How to handle these dilemmas?
An IT manager is choosing a supplier of a large
fleet of computers.
One supplier’s product is slightly inferior to the
other, but the supplier offers the manager a
free computer for home use if the manager
chooses the supplier.

•What is the dilemma?
•What options are there to choose from?
•Why is each option bad?
•How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
Managing ethical-dilemmas

More Related Content

PPT
ETHICAL DILEMMA
PPTX
Steps in resolving ethical dilemmas
PPT
Business ethics, powerpoint
PPT
13.1 Ethical Behavior
PPTX
Business ethics
PPTX
Ethical dilemmas
PPT
Business Ethics
ETHICAL DILEMMA
Steps in resolving ethical dilemmas
Business ethics, powerpoint
13.1 Ethical Behavior
Business ethics
Ethical dilemmas
Business Ethics

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Mba business ethics ppt
PPTX
Business ethics and values
PPTX
PPTX
Business Ethics
PPTX
ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
PPTX
Ethical Dilemmas
PPTX
Corporate social responsibility + coca cola case study.pptx
PPTX
Business ethics
PPTX
Introduction of business ethics
PPTX
Business ethics
PPT
Ethics in business
PDF
Business ethics ethical theory
PPTX
Corporate social responsibility
PPT
Ethical Dilemmas in Business
PPT
Ethical dilemmas presentation
PPT
The Social Responsibility Of Business by Milton Friedman
PPTX
Ch-2.pptx
PPTX
Ethical Issues in Capitalism & Market System
PPT
Importance of-business-ethics
PPT
Ethical behaviour
Mba business ethics ppt
Business ethics and values
Business Ethics
ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
Ethical Dilemmas
Corporate social responsibility + coca cola case study.pptx
Business ethics
Introduction of business ethics
Business ethics
Ethics in business
Business ethics ethical theory
Corporate social responsibility
Ethical Dilemmas in Business
Ethical dilemmas presentation
The Social Responsibility Of Business by Milton Friedman
Ch-2.pptx
Ethical Issues in Capitalism & Market System
Importance of-business-ethics
Ethical behaviour
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPT
Module on ethical standards in the workplace
PPTX
COMM 3321 Week 2 Discussion: Case Activity
PPTX
Ethical dilemmas powerpoint3
PPTX
Ethical dilemmas
PPT
Gathering and managing evidence
PPT
Designing Ethical Dilemmas
PPT
Designing
PPTX
How to resolve ethical issues in practice? Western& Islamic approaches
ODP
Designing Ethical Dilemmas - Long
PPT
Working Through Ethical Dilemmas: When the Deciding Gets Tough
PPTX
Ethical dilemmas
PPTX
Ethical group presentation final
PPTX
David Resnik - MedicReS World Congress 2012
PPTX
NFAR | New Ethical Dilemmas 1.5 hour
PPTX
Engineering Ethics: Is It Black & White Or Is It Gray?
PPTX
The titanic disaster
PDF
Cyber Ethics
PPSX
497 group #4 section 200 presentation.pptx
PPTX
Ethical Dilemmas/Issues in CyberWorld
Module on ethical standards in the workplace
COMM 3321 Week 2 Discussion: Case Activity
Ethical dilemmas powerpoint3
Ethical dilemmas
Gathering and managing evidence
Designing Ethical Dilemmas
Designing
How to resolve ethical issues in practice? Western& Islamic approaches
Designing Ethical Dilemmas - Long
Working Through Ethical Dilemmas: When the Deciding Gets Tough
Ethical dilemmas
Ethical group presentation final
David Resnik - MedicReS World Congress 2012
NFAR | New Ethical Dilemmas 1.5 hour
Engineering Ethics: Is It Black & White Or Is It Gray?
The titanic disaster
Cyber Ethics
497 group #4 section 200 presentation.pptx
Ethical Dilemmas/Issues in CyberWorld
Ad

Similar to Managing ethical-dilemmas (20)

PPTX
Professional ethical issue
PDF
W03_HEFCS_Ethics Fundamentals-3-30.pdf for people
PPTX
Final professional ethics for midterm(1)
PPTX
economic Professionals and the process of conduct.pptx
PPT
Topic 6 professional ethics
PDF
Professional Ethics & Code of Ethics.pdf
PPTX
Bev module 3
PPTX
Professional ethics and responsibilities
PPT
PPIT Lecture 4
PPT
professional ethics
PPTX
CHAPTER 1 - PROFESSIONAL ISSUES (Lecture 1.3).pptx
PPTX
Professional practices week 2 lec 2.pptx
PPT
Professional Ethics and Codes of Conduct
PPTX
Ethics in IT.pptx
PPT
Week 1. intro to ethics
PPTX
professional practices in Software development .pptx
PDF
Decision Making
PPTX
Lesson 2: Ethical Codes for Social and Prof Issues.pptx
PPTX
ABS of Professional Ethics 22 Dec 25.pptx
PDF
ACM code of ethics
Professional ethical issue
W03_HEFCS_Ethics Fundamentals-3-30.pdf for people
Final professional ethics for midterm(1)
economic Professionals and the process of conduct.pptx
Topic 6 professional ethics
Professional Ethics & Code of Ethics.pdf
Bev module 3
Professional ethics and responsibilities
PPIT Lecture 4
professional ethics
CHAPTER 1 - PROFESSIONAL ISSUES (Lecture 1.3).pptx
Professional practices week 2 lec 2.pptx
Professional Ethics and Codes of Conduct
Ethics in IT.pptx
Week 1. intro to ethics
professional practices in Software development .pptx
Decision Making
Lesson 2: Ethical Codes for Social and Prof Issues.pptx
ABS of Professional Ethics 22 Dec 25.pptx
ACM code of ethics

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PDF
HVAC Specification 2024 according to central public works department
PDF
LEARNERS WITH ADDITIONAL NEEDS ProfEd Topic
PDF
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 1).pdf
PDF
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
PDF
Skin Care and Cosmetic Ingredients Dictionary ( PDFDrive ).pdf
PDF
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2020).pdf
PDF
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
PPTX
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
PPTX
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
PDF
English Textual Question & Ans (12th Class).pdf
PDF
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
PDF
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
PDF
semiconductor packaging in vlsi design fab
PDF
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2013).pdf
PDF
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2021).pdf
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
HVAC Specification 2024 according to central public works department
LEARNERS WITH ADDITIONAL NEEDS ProfEd Topic
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 1).pdf
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
Skin Care and Cosmetic Ingredients Dictionary ( PDFDrive ).pdf
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2020).pdf
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
English Textual Question & Ans (12th Class).pdf
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
semiconductor packaging in vlsi design fab
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2013).pdf
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 2).pdf
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2021).pdf

Managing ethical-dilemmas

  • 2. Contents • suitability of – setting codes of ethics – imposing sanctions – education programs and – the use of decision-support frameworks as strategies for managing ethical dilemmas.
  • 3. ‘Ethical’? • Being morally correct or proper according to accepted standards of social or professional behaviour. • Actions may be legal but not ethical • Examples?
  • 4. ‘Dilemma’? • A state of doubt where you have to make a decision between equally bad options. • A situation where obeying one moral belief would disobey another. • A problem with no real right answer
  • 6. Sample Dilemma • A pregnant woman is brought unconscious to a hospital’s emergency room. She has no identification so her family cannot be contacted. Doctors find that if she continues with the pregnancy, she will soon die. If she does not continue, the baby will die. • What does the doctor do?
  • 7. Sample Dilemma • An employer suspects his wife who works with him is being unfaithful. The employer asks an IT technician to install a secret keylogger on his wife’s computer to get evidence of her infidelity. • The technician disagrees with this action, but fears being fired if he refuses. • What does he do?
  • 8. Ethical dilemma • During World War 2, Nazi doctors performed horrific medical experiments on prisoners to find how hypothermia killed people. Most of the test subjects died in agony, but the tests uncovered useful medical information. • Should this unethical research be used to treat people suffering hypothermia today?
  • 9. Setting codes of ethics • Common in professions – Medicine (Hippocratic oath), nursing – Law – Teaching – Journalism – IT workers – Investigators
  • 10. Why have a code of ethics? • to define acceptable professional behaviours and responsibilities • to promote high standards of practice • to provide a benchmark for members to use for self evaluation • a vehicle for occupational identity • to weed out undesirable members
  • 11. Why have a code of ethics? • To enhance the sense of community among members • To form a group with common values and a common mission • To reassure the public that the group is trustworthy and reliable • To gain and maintain a good reputation for the profession
  • 12. Why have a code of ethics? • Just developing a code forces a group to define what is important about their profession • Also identifies known ways the profession can go ‘bad’ and acts against those ways • To inspire members of the group to be good
  • 13. Why have a code of ethics? • To set down aspirations that outline what ideals the organisation aspires to • To list some rules or principles, which members of the organisation will be expected to adhere to. • To get agreement amongst members on how they should behave.
  • 14. Aust Computer Society’s Code • As an ACS member you must uphold and advance the honour, dignity and effectiveness of being a professional. This entails, in addition to being a good citizen and acting within the law, your adherence to the following Society values: • 1. The Primacy of the Public Interest You will place the interests of the public above those of personal, business or sectional interests.
  • 15. Aust Computer Society’s Code • 2. The Enhancement of Quality of Life You will strive to enhance the quality of life of those affected by your work. • 3. Honesty You will be honest in your representation of skills, knowledge, services and products. • 4. Competence You will work competently and diligently for your stakeholders.
  • 16. Aust Computer Society’s Code • 5. Professional Development You will enhance your own professional development, and that of your colleagues and staff. • 6. Professionalism You will enhance the integrity of the Society and the respect of its members for each other. These are detailed in their Code of Professional Conduct and Professional Practice.
  • 17. e.g. Competence • Accept only such work as you believe you are competent to perform and do not hesitate to obtain additional expertise from appropriately qualified individuals where advisable. • You should always be aware of your own limitations and not knowingly imply that you have competence you do not possess. • Etc.
  • 18. Imposing sanctions • Sanction = A mechanism of social control for enforcing a society's standards • Punishments • Oddly, sanction also means “to give permission or approval”
  • 19. Imposing sanctions • Sanctions deter group members from acting unethically. • Public sanctions remind other group members of the rules and the consequences of breaking the rules • Establishes that the group takes its code of ethics seriously
  • 20. Imposing sanctions Types of sanctions: • Official warning • Admonition • Supervised practice • Enforced public apology (e.g. in newspapers) • Expulsion from the group (e.g. deregistration of doctors, defrocking of priests) • Suspension of privileges or right to practice • Others?
  • 21. Education programs • “Ignorance of the law is no excuse” • Group members need to be educated about what rules they must follow • It’s better to educate people and prevent misbehaviour than it is to punish people who are ignorant of the rules
  • 22. Education programs • Some groups formally test newcomers on their knowledge of the society’s ethics • Codes of ethics are usually publicly posted • Rule-breakers may be sentenced to a reeducation program
  • 23. Decision-support frameworks • Decision-support frameworks guide people who have to make difficult decisions • Difficult decisions can be made easier by having an agreed system to handle them • e.g. If this situation arises, you should… • Reduces the chance of individuals making inappropriate or inconsistent decisions
  • 24. Decision-support frameworks • E.g. If you break this rule, the punishment is… • E.g. For a second offence the consequence is… • E.g. Under these circumstances the penalty should be increased/decreased…
  • 25. Decision-support frameworks • A formulated framework reduces favouritism and unfairness in dealing with issues • All people are treated equally, based on established procedures. • It gives the decision-maker more confidence since the decision is not just his or her opinion.
  • 26. Decision-support frameworks • Commonly used when working in complex systems like river management or feral camels. • May include a knowledge base and modelling tools • Complex investigations within large Government agencies use intelligence analysis and decision support tools
  • 28. For the following dilemmas • • • • What is the dilemma? What options are there to choose from? Why is each option bad? How could the dilemma have been either prevented or dealt with once it did happen? • What role could an investigator play in each scenario?
  • 29. How to handle these dilemmas? An IT technician was undertaking a major upgrade to all the laptops within her company. While working on the laptop of the Finance Director, she noticed that this laptop contained thousands of pornographic pictures. •What is the dilemma? •What options are there to choose from? •Why is each option bad? •How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
  • 30. How to handle these dilemmas? A trainee at a design company is learning to use an expensive CAD program. Each day she borrows the program’s CD-ROM and practises using the software. Notices in company say that copying software is forbidden. One day, she copies the CD so she can work on her training at home and become a moreskilled worker. •What is the dilemma? •What options are there to choose from? •Why is each option bad? •How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
  • 31. How to handle these dilemmas? A project manager suspects a team member of using his company email account to send offensive messages to other employees of the company. She asks the company's network manager to give her copies of the team member's emails. •What is the dilemma? •What options are there to choose from? •Why is each option bad? •How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?
  • 32. How to handle these dilemmas? An IT manager is choosing a supplier of a large fleet of computers. One supplier’s product is slightly inferior to the other, but the supplier offers the manager a free computer for home use if the manager chooses the supplier. •What is the dilemma? •What options are there to choose from? •Why is each option bad? •How could the dilemma have been prevented or dealt with?

Editor's Notes