Reference no: EM132307262
James O'Toole
A team of researchers recently published findings from a series of studies designed to shed light on the moral psychology of whistle-blowing and to discover ways to encourage or discourage the practice. They found that would be whistle-blowers faced a moral quandary: Is reporting misdeeds an act of heroism or betrayal?
When a group of people were asked to think about an occasion when they witnessed unethical behavior--and either reported, or did not report it-researchers found that the whistle blowers used ten times as many terms relating to fairness and justice (for example, "Someone was denied his or her right.") whereas the non-blowers used twice as many terms related to loyalty (for example, "Someone betrayed his or her group"). The researchers claim that, although fairness and loyalty are both basic moral values, some of us focus more on the former and others more on the latter. This is particularly true when research participants were faced with making tradeoffs between the two values. In sum, people who valued fairness more express greater willingness to blow the whistle when faced with ethical misbehavior than those who placed a higher value on loyalty.
The researchers conclude: "Our studies suggest that if you want to encourage whistle-blowing you might emphasize fairness in mission statements, codes of ethics, honor codes and ad campaigns. And to sway those who prize loyalty at all costs, you could reframe whistle-blowing as an act of 'larger loyalty' to the greater good. That way our moral values need not conflict."
Questions:
In your experience, does the valuing of loyalty over fairness discourage employees from reporting unethical behavior? If not, what is the motivation for not reporting illegal or unethical actions, or what are other explanatory causes?