This essay explains how intangible asset management oriented toward enhancing corporate performance increasingly embeds ethical concerns, primarily to address stakeholder expectations. We discuss how ethical dimensions in intangible asset management may be co-constructed and intertwined in organization-stakeholder interactions to generate collaborative meaning making according to a stakeholder-centric view of the fi rm. In so doing, this article adopts an ethical view that acknowledges that stakeholders beyond the fi rm have equal status and agency to engage in a social construction process of intangible assets nurtured by ongoing dialogue and reciprocal understanding between organization and stakeholders. The essay concludes by en...
The article analyses the dynamics of the interaction between events and business ethics within organ...
International audienceThis article answers several calls—coming as well from corporate governance pr...
The development of ethics in business and the importance of human and intellectual capita
Editorial on the Research Topic Management of Intangible Assets Among Non-profit Organizations: Cha...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
As businesses emerge as some of the most powerful institutions in the world, business ethics have ne...
Investors traditionally prioritised tangible outcomes (money, land, machinery) in order to protect t...
Heeding the call for new sources of competitiveness, our article bridges corporate sustainability (C...
Chapter 1 Pages 1 - 11The aim of this chapter is to describe the basic theoretical aspects of ethica...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
Entrepreneurship is being touted as the way forward for arts organisations unsure of the level of co...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
The article analyses the dynamics of the interaction between events and business ethics within organ...
Purpose: The value creation is not done by or within the organization alone. It is influenced by ext...
In this article the author attempts to show that in contemporary business ethics discourse the indiv...
The article analyses the dynamics of the interaction between events and business ethics within organ...
International audienceThis article answers several calls—coming as well from corporate governance pr...
The development of ethics in business and the importance of human and intellectual capita
Editorial on the Research Topic Management of Intangible Assets Among Non-profit Organizations: Cha...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
As businesses emerge as some of the most powerful institutions in the world, business ethics have ne...
Investors traditionally prioritised tangible outcomes (money, land, machinery) in order to protect t...
Heeding the call for new sources of competitiveness, our article bridges corporate sustainability (C...
Chapter 1 Pages 1 - 11The aim of this chapter is to describe the basic theoretical aspects of ethica...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
Entrepreneurship is being touted as the way forward for arts organisations unsure of the level of co...
In today's business environment, the knowledge-based society, globalisation, and information and com...
The article analyses the dynamics of the interaction between events and business ethics within organ...
Purpose: The value creation is not done by or within the organization alone. It is influenced by ext...
In this article the author attempts to show that in contemporary business ethics discourse the indiv...
The article analyses the dynamics of the interaction between events and business ethics within organ...
International audienceThis article answers several calls—coming as well from corporate governance pr...
The development of ethics in business and the importance of human and intellectual capita