81.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
John Stack
Jacques Maritain's America
|
|
|
82.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Gary D. Glenn
Intersections of Catholic and American Political Thought: A Symposium:
Introduction
|
|
|
83.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Gary D. Glenn
Comments on Stack on Maritain
|
|
|
84.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Robert J. Phillips
In Sincerity We Trust?:
The Supreme Court on Freedom of Conscience
|
|
|
85.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Gary D. Glenn
Comments on Phillips on Conscientious Objection
|
|
|
86.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Andrew W. Foshee,
William F. Campbell
Catholic Social Encyclicals and Wilhelm Roepke's Political Economy of the "Third Way"
|
|
|
87.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Carmine Gorga,
Stuart B. Weeks
Fisheries Renewal:
A Renewal of the Soul of Business
|
|
|
88.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Thomas V. Svogun
Law's Virtue and the Formal Structure of an Integrative Jurisprudence
|
|
|
89.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Joseph M. de Torre
Human Transcendence:
The Principle of Subsidiarity and the Role of Authority
|
|
|
90.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Eileen R. Kelly
Social and Public Policy Implications of Corporate Downsizing:
A Catholic Perspective
|
|
|
91.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
V. Bradley Lewis
Natural Law in Irish Constitutional Jurisprudence
|
|
|
92.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Thomas E. Schaefer,
Walter L. Berthelsen
One More Time—Is Affirmative Action Moral?
|
|
|
93.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Philip T. Crotty
The Core-Contingent Work Force:
Some Further Considerations of Corporate Employment Practices in the Light of the Social Encyclicals
|
|
|
94.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Guillermo Monies
The Scope Of Economics And Related Questions:
The Peschian View
|
|
|
95.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Jean-Francois Orsini
The Cardinal Virtues and Management
|
|
|
96.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
John J. Schrems
Note on Political Science and the Abortion Issue
|
|
|
97.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Stephen M. Krason
"A Civilization of Love" Beginning with and Including Catholic Institutions and Organizations
|
|
|
98.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Patrick Foley
The Documentation Section
|
|
|
99.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
2
Robert Johnson-Lally
Diocesan Archives:
A View of the Archives of the Archdiocese of Boston
|
|
|
100.
|
Catholic Social Science Review:
Volume >
20
Elmar Nass
A Christian Theory of Leadership Ethics
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
There are libraries full of narrative guides based on practical experience and tips for good leadership. The mere recognition of man as the center of personnel management is insufficient to arrange and evaluate a theory’s ethical content. The first concern of this article will be the disclosure of the fundamental values currently underlying contemporary management models and the assessment of their ethical quality. The second concern of the article will be to show a coherent deductive approach from a Catholic point of view. A Christian theory of leadership ethics is developed starting from its source of values up to strategic entrepreneur decisions. Its merit is to suggest a conclusive Christian orientation for the assessment of codes of ethics and leadership cultures in enterprises, that, as an end in itself, clearly and plausibly places man at its center.
|
|
|