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Die menslike hulpbronpraktisyn as fasiliteerder van etiese gedrag in organisasies

D.Comm. / South African organisations seem to do very little to enhance business ethics, nor do they seem to promote employees' ethical behaviour. The possibility that the human resource management (HRM) practitioner may act as facilitator of organisational ethical behaviour was proposed as a possible solution to the aforementioned problem. This possibili~y was formulated in the form of a research question. An interdisciplinary approach which consisted of the fields of business ethics and industrial psychology, with the latter being operationalised as human resource management (HRM), was applied as theoretical foundation. It was also decided to utilise a literature study as research method. The analysis was conducted at the micro level, i.e. the intra-organisational level of business ethics analysis. The type of ethical analysis chosen for this purpose was descriptive ethics. An exploration of the importance of business ethics, and the necessity to do something about it, yielded, the following findings amongst others: empirical proof that ethics is also good business exists, it is a cost-effective option to invest in morality, and the cost of immorality is frighteningly high. It was also found that it is indeed possible to learn ethical behaviour in an organisational setting. This may be accomplished as a result of the reciprocity of social interaction which presupposes moral learning. The aspects that determine ethical behaviour in organisations were categorised as individual, external environmental and organisational determinants. Managerial interventions which can be applied at the strategic and systems levels to facilitate ethical behaviour and to create an ethical organisational culture, were identified and described. An analysis of the nature and role of the HRM function in organisations, as well as a critical exploration of the question relating to the possible role of the HRM practitioner being the most suitable candidate to assume responsibility for managing ethics in organisations, revealed that the practitioner does indeed have such a role. HRM practitioners have a responsibility for human ethical behaviour, by virtue of their knowledge of and functional involvement with human behaviour in the organisational setting. It was further determined that the HRM practitioner features as the most prominent contender to facilitate ethical behaviour in the organisation. HRM practitioners may use the principle of stewardship as the main source of energy in the establishment of an ethical orientation to enable them to facilitate ethical organisational behaviour at the strategic, systems and operational levels. Should the HRM practitioner assume such a role, a number of attitudinal, competence and accountability implications may apply. In addition to this, several factors that may inhibit the optimal fulfillment of this "new" role were identified, e.g. generic factors, factors specific to the HRM profession as well as factors unique to the South African situation. The most significant finding of this research endeavour was that despite their existing high workload, HRM practitioners are the suitable candidates to act as business ethics functionaries, e.g. as organisational ethics officers. This finding remains valid irrespective of the possibilities that this may only be a temporary• role and that practitioners may not necessarily embrace this role without reservation. The role was explained by means of a descriptive model. It is shown in the model how certain determinants (as inputs), can be transformed by practitioners possessing a specific orientation and attributes, to produce certain outcomes, which may be typified as characteristics of an ethical organisation. This transformation is executed despite the presence of some inhibiting factors.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:9945
Date11 September 2012
CreatorsVan Vuuren, Leon J.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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