Ethical job

An ethical job is a broad term to describe a job which accords with a person's ethics or values.

Surveys

In 2005, The Guardian newspaper polled 2,000 undergraduates in the UK, and found that "over 70% of students said that a company's ethical track record is a crucial factor when choosing their employer".[1]

A 2005 poll by High Fliers Research of 6,227 final-year students at universities in Australia and New Zealand found that 40% said it was "very important" that their first employer be socially responsible, and 30% said it was "very important" that their first employer be environmentally responsible.[2]

In 2007, Harris Interactive published the results of an opinion poll of 1,741 workers in the United States. 73% of respondents said it was "important that [one's] employer be environmentally and socially responsible".

In a 2009 poll of employers at Australian non-profit organizations conducted by EthicalJobs.com.au, 87% said that job seekers were more likely to apply for a position seen to be ethical.[3]

gollark: You are not, actually.
gollark: Just don't do that.
gollark: Apparently failures follow a bathtub-curve-like thing.
gollark: Also, you could accidentally wipe it or something.
gollark: You SHOULD have backups, because there's a 2% or so probability (on average) that it might randomly implode. (per year)

See also

References

  1. Robinson, Oliver (2006-07-15) "Planning for a fairer future", The Guardian.
  2. Sainty, Rosemary Ethics and Graduate Recruitment Archived 2009-10-14 at the Wayback Machine, AAGE Conference Melbourne, November 2006
  3. "EthicalJobs.com.au Non-Profit Survey: "Work for Less: Most Say Yes"", EthicalJobs.com.au, 16 Jun, 2009.
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