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  2. The Economics of Innocent Fraud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../The_Economics_of_Innocent_Fraud

    The Economics of Innocent Fraud: Truth for Our Time was Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith's final book, published by Houghton Mifflin in 2004. [1] It is a 62-page essay that recapitulates themes—such as the dominance of corporate power in the public sector and the role of advertising in shaping consumer demand—found in earlier works.

  3. Economic ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_ethics

    Economic ethics attempts to incorporate morality and cultural value qualities to account for the limitation of economics, which is that human decision making is not restricted to rationality. [31] This understanding of culture unites economics and ethics as a complete theory of human action. [23]

  4. R. Edward Freeman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._Edward_Freeman

    Stakeholder theory is a theory of organizational management and business ethics that addresses morals and values in managing an organization. It was originally detailed by Freeman in the book Strategic Management: a Stakeholder Approach, and identifies and models the groups which are stakeholders of a corporation, and both describes and recommends methods by which management can give due ...

  5. Murray Rothbard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray_Rothbard

    Although Rothbard adopted Ludwig von Mises' deductive methodology for his social theory and economics, [113] he parted with Mises on the question of ethics. Specifically, he rejected Mises' conviction that ethical values remain subjective and opposed utilitarianism in favor of principle-based, natural law reasoning.

  6. Basic Inc. v. Levinson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Inc._v._Levinson

    The fraud-on-the-market theory is the idea that stock prices are a function of all material information about the company and its business. It applies in open and developed securities markets, where it can be assumed that all material information is available to investors.

  7. Financial crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_crime

    Fraud and financial crime patterns have become more digital and faster changing, leveraging the underlying characteristics of the underlying digital payments infrastructures. This caused traditional rule based systems to be ineffective and led the way to machine learning and AI-based fraud detection techniques.

  8. Development ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_ethics

    Development ethics is a field of enquiry that reflects on both the ends and the means of economic development.It typically takes a normative stance, asking and answering questions about the nature of ethically desirable development and what ethics means for achieving development, and discusses various ethical dilemmas that the practice of development has led to.

  9. Macroethics and microethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroethics_and_microethics

    Macroethics (from the Greek prefix "makros-" meaning "large" and "ethos" meaning character) is a term coined in the late 20th century [1] to distinguish large-scale ethics from individual ethics, or microethics. It is a type of applied ethics. Macroethics deals with large-scale issues, often in relation to ethical principles or normative rules ...