
Business Ethics Now 3rd Edition by Andrew Ghillyer
Edition 3ISBN: 978-0073524696
Business Ethics Now 3rd Edition by Andrew Ghillyer
Edition 3ISBN: 978-0073524696 Exercise 50
Renting adress
Divide into two groups, and prepare arguments for and against the following behavior: My friend works for acompany that manages fund-raising events for nonprofit organizations-mostly galabenefits and auctions. Since these events all take place in the same city, she often crosses paths with the same people from one event to the other. The jobdoesn't pay alot, but the dress code is usually very formal. To stretch her budget and ensure that she's not wearing the same dress at every event, she buys dresses, wears them once, has them professionally dry-cleaned, reattaches the label using her own label gun, and returns them to the store, claiming that they were the wrong color or not agood fit. She argues that the dry-cleaning bill is just like arental charge, and she always returns them for store credit, not cash. The dress shop may have made asale, but is this fair
Source: Exercises 1 and 2 adapted from Randy Cohen, The Good, the Bad, and the Difference: How to Tell Right from Wrong in Everyday Situations (New York: Doubleday, 2002), pp. 194-20.
Divide into two groups, and prepare arguments for and against the following behavior: My friend works for acompany that manages fund-raising events for nonprofit organizations-mostly galabenefits and auctions. Since these events all take place in the same city, she often crosses paths with the same people from one event to the other. The jobdoesn't pay alot, but the dress code is usually very formal. To stretch her budget and ensure that she's not wearing the same dress at every event, she buys dresses, wears them once, has them professionally dry-cleaned, reattaches the label using her own label gun, and returns them to the store, claiming that they were the wrong color or not agood fit. She argues that the dry-cleaning bill is just like arental charge, and she always returns them for store credit, not cash. The dress shop may have made asale, but is this fair
Source: Exercises 1 and 2 adapted from Randy Cohen, The Good, the Bad, and the Difference: How to Tell Right from Wrong in Everyday Situations (New York: Doubleday, 2002), pp. 194-20.
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Business Ethics Now 3rd Edition by Andrew Ghillyer
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