Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China

This thesis aims to test generalizability of how top managers in a cross-cultural context understand business ethics and business ethics education. Around 200 managers from two very different countries, namely Iceland and China, were approached and asked about their opinion on the current state of b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988-
Other Authors: Háskólinn í Reykjavík
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/33462
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spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/33462 2023-05-15T16:46:57+02:00 Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988- Háskólinn í Reykjavík 2019-05 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/33462 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/33462 Viðskiptafræði Meistaraprófsritgerðir Viðskiptasiðferði Menning Ísland Kína Business management Business ethics Culture Thesis Master's 2019 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:53:06Z This thesis aims to test generalizability of how top managers in a cross-cultural context understand business ethics and business ethics education. Around 200 managers from two very different countries, namely Iceland and China, were approached and asked about their opinion on the current state of business ethics and how well business schools succeed in providing a solid education in ethics to their graduates, who will ultimately become the next generation of leaders and managers. The choice of countries has been made due to their strong dichotomy in terms of economic, cultural, geographical, demographical, and historical parameters. Both countries experienced the financial crash in 2008, but very differently. While Iceland belonged to the countries which were hit hardest by the crisis, China enjoyed an economic booming period at the same time. Despite great differences, similarities between the two countries are found, for instance in the development from poor, tight-knitted farming societies towards modern, developed economies and in a substantive liberation process over the last decades. However, whereas Iceland is today seen as a highly developed, modern western economy, China is still considered as a transition economy. Due to their disparate characteristics, both countries provide an interesting foundation for an empirical study on how managers with different cultural and economic backgrounds reflect on business ethics and business ethics education. The survey’s results developed three main themes. First, it appears that business ethics is more critically seen among Chinese respondents than among their Icelandic counterparts. Nevertheless, both groups perceive an improvement of business ethics and business ethics education in their country since 2008. Second, Icelandic and Chinese managers attribute business schools a central role to mandatory provide students with solid ethics education. However, this role and the effectiveness of current business ethics teaching are called into question. Even though ... Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Viðskiptafræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Viðskiptasiðferði
Menning
Ísland
Kína
Business management
Business ethics
Culture
spellingShingle Viðskiptafræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Viðskiptasiðferði
Menning
Ísland
Kína
Business management
Business ethics
Culture
Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988-
Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
topic_facet Viðskiptafræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Viðskiptasiðferði
Menning
Ísland
Kína
Business management
Business ethics
Culture
description This thesis aims to test generalizability of how top managers in a cross-cultural context understand business ethics and business ethics education. Around 200 managers from two very different countries, namely Iceland and China, were approached and asked about their opinion on the current state of business ethics and how well business schools succeed in providing a solid education in ethics to their graduates, who will ultimately become the next generation of leaders and managers. The choice of countries has been made due to their strong dichotomy in terms of economic, cultural, geographical, demographical, and historical parameters. Both countries experienced the financial crash in 2008, but very differently. While Iceland belonged to the countries which were hit hardest by the crisis, China enjoyed an economic booming period at the same time. Despite great differences, similarities between the two countries are found, for instance in the development from poor, tight-knitted farming societies towards modern, developed economies and in a substantive liberation process over the last decades. However, whereas Iceland is today seen as a highly developed, modern western economy, China is still considered as a transition economy. Due to their disparate characteristics, both countries provide an interesting foundation for an empirical study on how managers with different cultural and economic backgrounds reflect on business ethics and business ethics education. The survey’s results developed three main themes. First, it appears that business ethics is more critically seen among Chinese respondents than among their Icelandic counterparts. Nevertheless, both groups perceive an improvement of business ethics and business ethics education in their country since 2008. Second, Icelandic and Chinese managers attribute business schools a central role to mandatory provide students with solid ethics education. However, this role and the effectiveness of current business ethics teaching are called into question. Even though ...
author2 Háskólinn í Reykjavík
format Thesis
author Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988-
author_facet Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988-
author_sort Marion Christiane Ziessler 1988-
title Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
title_short Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
title_full Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
title_fullStr Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
title_full_unstemmed Cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of Iceland and China
title_sort cultural and economic influences on managers’ views towards business ethics education : a comparative study of iceland and china
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/33462
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/33462
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