TY - JOUR
T1 - The Business School’s Right to Operate
T2 - Responsibilization and Resistance
AU - Murillo, D.
AU - Vallentin, Steen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
PY - 2016/7/1
Y1 - 2016/7/1
N2 - The current crisis has come at a cost not only for big business but also for business schools. Business schools have been deemed largely responsible for developing and teaching socially dysfunctional curricula that, if anything, has served to promote and accelerate the kind of ruthless behavior and lack of self-restraint and social irresponsibility among top executives that have been seen as causing the crisis. As a result, many calls have been made for business schools to accept their responsibilities as social institutions and to work toward becoming more socially embedded and better attuned to public interests. In this paper, however, we point to some of the barriers there may be in the way of business schools developing into responsible organizational citizens proper. We argue that there are lines of resistance against responsibilization operating at epistemological, institutional, and organization levels and that we need to take account of barriers on all these levels in order to properly capture the challenges that are involved in making the modern business school amenable to demands for more social responsibility. In terms of working toward overcoming such barriers, we discuss how business education can become more socially embedded via the inclusion of ethical reflection and critical thinking.
AB - The current crisis has come at a cost not only for big business but also for business schools. Business schools have been deemed largely responsible for developing and teaching socially dysfunctional curricula that, if anything, has served to promote and accelerate the kind of ruthless behavior and lack of self-restraint and social irresponsibility among top executives that have been seen as causing the crisis. As a result, many calls have been made for business schools to accept their responsibilities as social institutions and to work toward becoming more socially embedded and better attuned to public interests. In this paper, however, we point to some of the barriers there may be in the way of business schools developing into responsible organizational citizens proper. We argue that there are lines of resistance against responsibilization operating at epistemological, institutional, and organization levels and that we need to take account of barriers on all these levels in order to properly capture the challenges that are involved in making the modern business school amenable to demands for more social responsibility. In terms of working toward overcoming such barriers, we discuss how business education can become more socially embedded via the inclusion of ethical reflection and critical thinking.
KW - Business ethics
KW - Business schools
KW - Corporate social responsibility
KW - Critical management education
KW - Management education
KW - Management paradigms
KW - Right to operate
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84944627083&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10551-015-2872-1
DO - 10.1007/s10551-015-2872-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84944627083
SN - 0167-4544
VL - 136
SP - 743
EP - 757
JO - Journal of Business Ethics
JF - Journal of Business Ethics
IS - 4
ER -