Author/Authors :
Enderle, George University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana
Abstract :
As it is seen, this work is actually an unpublished materials regarding a book
project .In this book I attempt to argue for a radically new understanding of
the ethics of business enterprises or “corporate responsibility” in the global
context. It is new in three respects. First, the purpose of the economy is
defined as creating wealth in a comprehensive sense. As a consequence,
business enterprises as primarily economic entities are called to pursue this
purpose that lies beyond maximizing profit or adding value. Second, business
enterprises operate in an increasingly interconnected world. They consist of
human beings and affect human beings from the local to the global level. To
evaluate their impact, we have worldwide standards stipulated in international
agreements: the human rights including civil, political, economic, social and
cultural rights and the right to development. With the United Nations
Framework (2008) and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and
Human Rights (UN 2011) business enterprises have become accountable in a
new way – in addition to States – for their impact on human rights. Third, not
only individual business people but also business enterprises as organizations
– independent of the duties of nation-states – carry moral obligations
regarding human rights. This means that moral (and not only legal) obligations
are attributed to organizations understood as moral actors (but not as moral
persons). Without such theoretical underpinning, it would not make sense to
talk of environmental, social or economic responsibilities of corporations.