Thursday, February 7, 12-1 p.m.
Wasserstein 1015
Professor Max Bazerman (HBS)
“Bounded Ethicality”
Sponsor: Student Association for Law & Mind Sciences
Professor Bazerman will present his recent research on ethical behavior. He argues that, in contrast to the search for the few “bad apples,” the majority of unethical events occur as the result of ordinary and predictable psychological processes. As a result, even good people engage in unethical behavior, without their own awareness, on a regular basis.
Free Thai food!
Learn more about Professor Bazerman’s work here.
Related Situationist posts:
- The Situation of “29″ & the Downside of Goal-Setting
- Why Do Lawyers Acquiesce In Their Clients’ Misconduct? – Part III
- The Banality of Fraud: Re-Situating the Inside Counsel as Gatekeeper
- Gatekeepers Inside Out
- Susan Fiske — on Teaching Situationism
- Virtue Ethics and the Situationist Challenge
- Jon Hanson on Situationism and Dispositionism
- The Science of Morality
- ‘Situation’ Trumps ‘Disposition’ – Part I
- “Situation” Trumps “Disposition”- Part II
- The Situation of Legal Ethics
- The Situation of Lawyers’ Complicity
- Gatekeepers Inside Out – Abstract
- The Situation of Lawyers and Practicing Law
- Law, Chicken Sexing, Torture Memo, and Situation Sense
- The Situation of John Yoo and the Torture Memos
- “Why Do Lawyers Acquiesce In Their Clients’ Misconduct?,” Part I, Part II, and Part III
- The Illusion of Wall Street Reform
- On the Ethical Obligations of Lawyers: Are We Snakes? Are We Supposed to Be?