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Ethics and Socially Responsible Investment: A Philosophical Approach Law, Ethics and Governance



The article discusses the ethical and social implications of investment and how it can be improved by incorporating ethical considerations into investment decisions. It argues that the investment industry should be restructured so that those who make investment decisions are also part of an ethical chain of decision makers. more details
Key Features:
  • The article discusses the ethical and social implications of investment and how it can be improved by incorporating ethical considerations into investment decisions.
  • It argues that the investment industry should be restructured so that those who make investment decisions are also part of an ethical chain of decision makers.


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Features
Author William Ransome,Charles Sampford
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780754675815
Publisher Ashgate Pub Co
Manufacturer Ashgate Pub Co
Description
The article discusses the ethical and social implications of investment and how it can be improved by incorporating ethical considerations into investment decisions. It argues that the investment industry should be restructured so that those who make investment decisions are also part of an ethical chain of decision makers.

This volume breaks new ground by approaching Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) as an explicitly ethical practice in financial markets. The work explains the philosophical and practical shortcomings of 'long term shareholder value' and the origins and conceptual structure of SRI, and links its pursuit to both its deeper philosophical foundations and the broader, multi-dimensional global movement towards greater social responsibility in global markets. Interviews with fund managers in the Australian SRI sector generate recommendations for better integrating ethics into SRI practice via ethically informed engagement with invested companies, and an in-depth discussion of the central practical SRI issue of fiduciary responsibility strengthens the case in favour of SRI. The practical and ethical theoretical perspectives are then brought together to sketch out an achievable ideal for SRI worldwide, in which those who are involved in investment and business decisions become part of an 'ethical chain' of decision makers linking the ultimate owners of capital with the business executives who frame, advocate and implement business strategies. In between there are investment advisors, fund managers, business analysts and boards. The problem lies in the fact that the ultimate owners are discouraged from considering their own values, or even their own long term interests, whilst the others often look only to short term interests. The solution lies in the latter recognising themselves as links in the ethical chain.
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