Sports Administration Midterm

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ch6-sportadmin.pptx

Chapter 6

Ethical Principles Applied to Sport Management

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Introduction: Ethics

Ethics: The systematic study of the values guiding our decision making

Reflect how we believe people should behave and how we want the world to operate

Ethical reasoning

The process of making a correct and fair decision

Depends on our values or the values of the organizations for which we work

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Ethical Dilemma vs. Decision Making

Ethical dilemma

Practical conflict involving equally compelling values or social obligations

Solved when we articulate which commonly held values we admire most

Ethical decision making

Requires consideration of how actions will affect other groups and individuals

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Morality vs. Morals

Morality

Concerned with values that guide behavior

The list of those actions people ought to do or refrain from doing

Morals

Fundamental baseline values that dictate appropriate behavior within a society

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Ethical Considerations

Decisions that affect diverse groups of people with conflicting interests (e.g., athletes, fans, media, community, businesses)

Sport managers face ethical dilemmas on daily basis

Sport managers’ decisions about ethical dilemmas tend to fall under greater public scrutiny than managers in other industries

Ethical analysis involves a systematic process of reasoning

Weighing pros/cons of two or more seemingly valid choices that reflect equally cherished values

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Ethical Decision-Making Process (Hums and MacLean, 2013) (1 of 2)

Identify the correct problem to be solved

Gather all the pertinent information

Explore codes of conduct relevant to your profession or to this particular dilemma

Examine your own personal values and beliefs

Consult with your peers or other individuals in the industry who may have experience in similar situations

Ethical Decision-Making Process (Hums and MacLean, 2013) (2 of 2)

List your options

Look for a “win-win” situation if at all possible

Ask yourself: “How would my family feel if my decision and how I arrived at my decision appeared on the Internet tomorrow?”

Sleep on it; do not rush to a decision

Make your best decision, knowing it may not be perfect

Evaluate your decision

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Ethical Considerations: Codes of Conduct (1 of 3)

Code of Conduct:

Most visible statement of ethical philosophy and beliefs of an organization

Need exists for establishing solid ethical climates in corporations

Outlines and explains the principles under which an organization or profession operates

Should be clear and straightforward and encourage employees to understand the goals they are trying to accomplish

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Ethical Considerations: Codes of Conduct (2 of 3)

How do you create an effective code of conduct?

Codes need to avoid being too vague (DeSensi & Rosenberg, 1996)

Codes should be based on a few overriding principles that can be used to deal with a variety of ethical dilemmas faced by members of the organization (Fraliegh, 1993)

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Ethical Considerations: Codes of Conduct (3 of 3)

Codes should clearly state to whom they apply; if codes are to be influential, leadership and membership within the organization must accept and be willing to adhere to the prescribed standards

Codes should contain consequences for violations (DeSensi & Rosenberg, 1996)

Figure 6-1 International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association Code of Conduct.

Courtesy of International Health, Racquet and Sportsclub Association, 2010.

Ethical Considerations: Morality

Some ethical dilemmas are about choosing between right and wrong or two opposing choices

Social practices depend on people upholding certain baseline values

Morals are seen as coming from higher order or common sense

Many moral values in society are codified in laws, but moral behavior cannot always be legislated and people cannot be forced to act morally

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Ethical Considerations: Morality in the Workplace

Absolutism: Moral precepts are universal; applicable to all circumstances

Relativism: What is moral depends on the situation

Commercial moral rules: Rules of the marketplace guide activities such as sales and marketing

Noncommercial moral rules: Occupations demand loyalty to an oath of office or professional standards to guard against selling out

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Ethical Considerations: Morality and Multiple Roles

Specific jobs in sports do not reside completely in either the commercial or the noncommercial sphere

Process of making a moral choice, of deciding what is right and wrong, involves understanding the parameters of acceptable behavior in the context of one’s multiple roles in society

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Ethical Considerations: Morality and Corruption

Immoral behavior violates our basic assumptions and corrupts our social institutions

An immoral decision can lead to systemic corruption that can destroy a sport enterprise

Corruption usually occurs when people hop from one set of moral precepts to another

One feature of corruption is that it is systemic

Examples: PED use in cycling and MLB

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Ethical Considerations: Moral Reasoning and Work

Contemporary society is characterized by innovation, which continually presents new ethical dilemmas

We periodically need to assess whether our current practices are in keeping with values that underlie a just society

Moral and ethical principles evolve over time

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Key Skills: Ensuring Morality in the Workplace

Rules designed to protect integrity of sports operate uncomfortably alongside business structure underwriting sports

Organizations can help individuals make moral choices by establishing standards, encouraging self-examinations, providing support structures, and enforcing codes

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Key Skills: Self-Examination

An effective tool to remind people of ethical actions and express institutional concern for ethical issues

Ask employees to think about hypothetical ethical dilemmas

Accreditation programs (NCAA)

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Key Skills: Forum for Moral Discourse

Communication is critical to decreasing corruption and resolving ethical dilemmas

Employees should be encouraged to get together to discuss where and how they face specific problems

The process takes pressure off individuals and clarifies issues at stake

Decisions should be reviewed only after they have been made

© Yuri Arcurs/Dreamstime.com

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Key Skills: Consequences

Employees need to know there are consequences for immoral behavior

If people understand that corruption comes with certain risks, they are less likely to engage in immoral acts

Discipline must be:

Meaningful

Enforceable

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Summary

Sport managers need to be aware of the importance of morality and ethics in the sport workplace

Their daily decisions affect many people, ranging from athletes to team owners to fans

Incorporating codes of ethics, self-examinations, forums for moral disclosure, and statements of consequences for ethical violations helps ensure that sport managers and employees make the “right” decisions

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