Bandura (1986) developed the concept of moral disengagement to explain how individuals can engage in detrimental behavior while experiencing low levels of negative feelings such as guilt-feelings. Most of the research conducted on moral disengagement investigated this concept as a global concept (e.g., Bandura, Barbaranelli, Caprara, & Pastorelli, 1996; Moore, Detert, Klebe Treviño, Baker, & Mayer, 2012) while Bandura (1986, 1990) initially developed eight distinct mechanisms of moral disengagement grouped into four categories representing the various means through which moral disengagement can operate. In our work, we propose to develop measures of this concept based on its categories, namely rightness of actions, rejection of pers...
The present study investigated the extent to which moral disengagement and the tendency to consider ...
Purpose. Bandura's theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave i...
Can the three concepts of Neutralization Techniques, Moral Disengagement, and Secondary Self-Serving...
Unethical behavior in business is a serious and prevailing phenomenon. Much of this conduct is chara...
This paper takes us beyond the unethical act and explores the use of moral disengagement as a multi-...
Moral disengagement refers to a set of eight cognitive mechanisms that decouple one's internal moral...
This research examined the role of mechanisms of moral disengagement in the exercise of moral agency...
In this study, a new measure of moral disengagement tailored to physical punishment was developed. M...
Can the three concepts of Neutralization Techniques, Moral Disengagement, and Secondary Self-Serving...
Moral disengagement was initially conceptualized as a process through which people reconstrue unethi...
ABSTRACT Ponders on the concept of moral disengagement. A search is carried out in databases, using...
Although Bandura conceptualized moral disengagement as a global dimension encompassing a set of mech...
Moral disengagement has been introduced by Bandura to address psychosocial mechanisms by which indiv...
Moral disengagement theory (Bandura, 1999) is a popular theory widely used to explain how people are...
AbstractMoral disengagement is known as a set of social-cognitive mechanisms that allow individuals ...
The present study investigated the extent to which moral disengagement and the tendency to consider ...
Purpose. Bandura's theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave i...
Can the three concepts of Neutralization Techniques, Moral Disengagement, and Secondary Self-Serving...
Unethical behavior in business is a serious and prevailing phenomenon. Much of this conduct is chara...
This paper takes us beyond the unethical act and explores the use of moral disengagement as a multi-...
Moral disengagement refers to a set of eight cognitive mechanisms that decouple one's internal moral...
This research examined the role of mechanisms of moral disengagement in the exercise of moral agency...
In this study, a new measure of moral disengagement tailored to physical punishment was developed. M...
Can the three concepts of Neutralization Techniques, Moral Disengagement, and Secondary Self-Serving...
Moral disengagement was initially conceptualized as a process through which people reconstrue unethi...
ABSTRACT Ponders on the concept of moral disengagement. A search is carried out in databases, using...
Although Bandura conceptualized moral disengagement as a global dimension encompassing a set of mech...
Moral disengagement has been introduced by Bandura to address psychosocial mechanisms by which indiv...
Moral disengagement theory (Bandura, 1999) is a popular theory widely used to explain how people are...
AbstractMoral disengagement is known as a set of social-cognitive mechanisms that allow individuals ...
The present study investigated the extent to which moral disengagement and the tendency to consider ...
Purpose. Bandura's theory of moral disengagement explains how otherwise ethical persons can behave i...
Can the three concepts of Neutralization Techniques, Moral Disengagement, and Secondary Self-Serving...