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Ethics of Social Innovation

    Knut J. Ims, & Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Ethics of Social Innovation.’ Society and Business Review , 2014, vol.9, no. 2, pp. 186-194 The purpose of this paper is to investigate the main reasons for social innovations to be successful in developing countries.Four famous cases of social innovation are studied and contrasted in the following dimensions: goals, means and skills/resources needed by the user. The authors argue that exemplary social innovations do not have profit as their primary objective but emphasize… Read More »Ethics of Social Innovation

    Responsible Social Science in the Age of Economic Crisis

      Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Responsible Social Science in the Age of Economic Crisis.’ Human Systems Management , 2014, vol.33, no. 1, pp. 1-5 The current economic crisis calls for a radical rethinking of the role of economics and other social sciences. It is a serious failure of social scientists when they solve the wrong problem precisely. This means that the problem formulation is inadequate, which may lead to disastrous consequences for the fate and well-being of the stakeholders. To avoid substantive… Read More »Responsible Social Science in the Age of Economic Crisis

      The Importance of Meta-economics

        Laszlo Zsolnai ‘The Importance of Meta-economics.’ , in Responsible Economics. E.F. Schumacher and His Legacy for the 21st Century, ed. Hendrik Opdebeeck, Peter Lang Academic Publishers, Oxford, 2013. Meta-economics is the basic assumptions about the subject-matter, value-orientation and methodology of economics. The paper attempts to reconstruct the meta-economic foundation of mainstream economics and that of alternative economics initiated by Schumacher. It shows how the emerging alternative economics transcends the erroneous meta-economic assumptions of mainstream economics by considering the… Read More »The Importance of Meta-economics

        Collaborative Enterprise and Sustainability: The Case of Slow Food

          Antonio Tencati, & Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Collaborative Enterprise and Sustainability: The Case of Slow Food.’ Journal of Business Ethics, 2012, vol.110, no. 3, pp. 345-354 The current and prevailing paradigm of intensive agricultural production is a straightforward example of the mainstream way of doing business. Mainstream enterprises are based on a negativistic view of human nature that leads to counter-productive and unsustainable behaviours producing negative impact for society and the natural environment. If we want to change the course,… Read More »Collaborative Enterprise and Sustainability: The Case of Slow Food

          Spirituality and Business: An Interdisciplinary Overview

            Luk Bouckaert, & Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Spirituality and Business: An Interdisciplinary Overview.’ Society and Economy, 2012, vol.34, no. 3, pp. 489-514 We believe that business ethics needs a more spiritual foundation to solve the business ethics failure. Why? Because spirituality – as an inner experience of deep interconnectedness with all living beings – opens a space of distance from the pressures of the market and the routines of business as usual. This distance is a necessary condition for developing… Read More »Spirituality and Business: An Interdisciplinary Overview

            Environmental Ethics for Business Sustainability

              Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Environmental Ethics for Business Sustainability.’ International Journal of Social Economics, 2011, vol.38, no. 11, pp. 892-899 The purpose of this paper is to derive operational principles from environmental ethics for business organizations to achieve sustainability. The paper analyses different levels on which business affects the natural environment. It argues that business has a natural, non-reciprocal responsibility toward natural beings affected by its functioning. The paper uses principles of environmental ethics to redefine business sustainability in an… Read More »Environmental Ethics for Business Sustainability

              Spirituality and Business

                Luk Bouckaert, & Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Spirituality and Business.’ , in The Palgrave Handbook of Spirituality and Business, eds. Luk Bouckaert, and Laszlo Zsolnai, Palgrave-Macmillan, London, 2011. The paper summarizes the long path from business ethics to business spirituality. Analyzing the contrast between a materialistic and a non materialistic drive in economics, the authors define the new values of the post-capitalist economy: frugality, deep ecology, trust, reciprocity, responsibility for future generations, and authenticity. Within this values-driven economy, profit and… Read More »Spirituality and Business

                Moral Agency and Spiritual Intelligence

                  Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Moral Agency and Spiritual Intelligence.’ , in The Palgrave Handbook of Spirituality and Business, eds. Luk Bouckaert, and Laszlo Zsolnai, Palgrave-Macmillan, London, 2011. The paper argues that the self of decision-makers plays an important role in determining the ethicality of their decisions. Decisions might be understood as self-expressions of the decision-makers. Spiritual experiences have a vital role in developing the self of managers and therefore in improving the ethicality of their decisions. Moral Agency and Spiritual… Read More »Moral Agency and Spiritual Intelligence

                  Buddhist Economics

                    Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Buddhist Economics.’ , in The Palgrave Handbook of Spirituality and Business, eds. Luk Bouckaert, and Laszlo Zsolnai, Palgrave-Macmillan, London, 2011. The paper presents Buddhist economics as a major alternative to the Western economic mindset. It challenges the basic principles of modern Western economics, namely profit-maximization, cultivating desires, introducing markets, instrumental use of the world, and self-interest-based ethics. Buddhist economics proposes alternative principles such as minimizing suffering, simplifying desires, non-violence, genuine care, and generosity. Buddhist economics is… Read More »Buddhist Economics

                    Responsibility for Future Generations

                      Laszlo Zsolnai ‘Responsibility for Future Generations.’ , in The Palgrave Handbook of Spirituality and Business, eds. Luk Bouckaert, and Laszlo Zsolnai, Palgrave-Macmillan, London, 2011. The paper uses the argument by Hans Jonas that the ethics of responsibility involves not only the existence of future human beings but also the way they exist. The conditions of the existence of future generations should not cause their capacity of freedom and humanness to disappear. In the model developed by the author… Read More »Responsibility for Future Generations