Richard P. Nielsen (academic)

Richard P. Nielsen is the Professor of Management and Organization at Boston College's Carroll School of Management and a past President of the Society for Business Ethics.[1]

Biography

Nielsen was born in 1946 in New York City. He has bachelor's and master's degrees from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and a Ph.D. from Syracuse University.[2]

He has served as President, Program Chair, and Executive Board Member of the Society for Business Ethics.[1] He has also served as Senior Editor for Organization Studies (journal), and is currently serving on the Editorial Boards of Business Ethics Quarterly, Business and Professional Ethics Journal, Journal of Academic Ethics, and Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal.

Selected publications

  • Nielsen, Richard P. The politics of ethics: Methods for acting, learning, and sometimes fighting with others in addressing ethics problems in organizational life. Oxford University Press, (1996).[3]
  • Nielsen, Richard P. "Cooperative strategy." Strategic Management Journal, (1988): 475-492.
  • Nielsen, Richard P. "Changing unethical organizational behavior." Academy of Management Perspectives, (1989): 123-130.
  • Nielsen, Richard P. and Jean M. Bartunek. "Opening narrow, routinized schemata to ethical stakeholder consciousness and action." Business & Society, (1996): 483-519.
  • Nielsen, Richard P. "Corruption networks and implications for ethical corruption reform." Journal of Business Ethics, (2003): 125-149.
  • Nielsen, Richard P. and Christi Lockwood. "Varieties of transformational solutions to institutional ethics logic conflicts." Journal of Business Ethics, (2018): 45-55.
  • Nielsen, Richard P. and Simona Giorgi. "Social situational business ethics framing for engaging with ethics issues." Business and Professional Ethics Journal, (2020): 1-42.
gollark: This produces lemon juice, somehow.
gollark: Lemons are fired into a lemonosphere volume, and then heated rapidly with pulsed lasers.
gollark: We use inertial confinement distillation.
gollark: What is the johnvertisement?
gollark: It has HYPERCAL™!

References

  1. "Former Officers". Society for Business Ethics. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  2. Nielsen's vita
  3. The Politics of Ethics: Methods for Acting, Learning, and Sometimes Fighting with Others in Addressing Ethics Problems in Organizational Life (Oxford University Press, 1996).
    Reviews:
    • Frederick, William C. (April 1998), "Mr. Penn, Meet Mr. Argyris", Business Ethics Quarterly, 8 (2): 355–358, doi:10.2307/3857334, JSTOR 3857334
    • Koehn, Daryl (December 1998), The Journal of Value Inquiry, 32 (4): 565–570, doi:10.1023/a:1004351610793CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
    • GR (September 1999), Journal of Peace Research, 36 (5): 614–615, JSTOR 424553CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
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