In this volume three of the leading scholars in business ethics have arranged a selection of articles examining the intersection of psychology and ethics in relation to organizational concerns. In searching for appropriate business ethics for the 21st century, it is imperative that we continue to embrace a range of inter-related disciplines such as psychology and ethics, but also areas including philosophy, politics, religion, organizational studies, financial and managerial accounting, and many others. This volume serves as an example of interdisciplinary scholarship. In addition, this volume includes articles on religion in business, academic ethics (as an emerging field within organizational ethics), and corporate values in practice.
Moses Pava is the Alvin Einbender Professor of Business Ethics and Professor of Accounting at the Sy Syms School of Business, Yeshiva University. He serves as the chair of the Accounting Department and has been teaching at Yeshiva for the past 22 years.
A 1990 PhD graduate from NYU's Stern School of Business and a 1981 graduate from Brandeis University, Dr. Pava has written and/or edited 15 books including: Business Ethics: A Jewish Perspective, Leading With Meaning, The Jewish Ethics Workbook, The Search for Meaning in Organizations, and Jewish Ethics as Dialogue. He has authored scores of academic articles including "Corporate Social Responsibility and Financial Performance," one of the most cited articles in the field of corporate social responsibility.
He serves on the Editorial Board of Journal of Business Ethics and is a past member of the Editorial Board of Business Ethics Quarterly. Dr. Pava is a board member of the Jewish Ethics Association and on the Steering Committee of the Ethics Center at Yeshiva University.
He lectures across the country and the world on Jewish business ethics and leadership, spirituality in business, and corporate accountability. His next book, Jewish Ethics in a Post-Madoff-World, will be published by Palgrave this year.
