Adapted from and used with permission
of the Ethics Resource Center, 1747 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Suite 400, Washington, DC, 20006 (www.ethics.org)
October 2006
Accountable
Taking responsibility for one's actions
Bribe
Something that is given or offered to a person or organization
to encourage that person/organization to take an action
of benefit to the giver
Code of Conduct or Code of Ethics
A central guide and reference for users in support
of day-to-day decision making. It is meant to clarify
an organization's mission, values and principles, linking
them with standards of professional conduct. As a reference,
it can be used to locate relevant documents, services
and other resources related to ethics within the organization.
Code of Conduct
A listing of required behaviors that if violated might
result in disciplinary action. In practice, used interchangeably
with Code of Ethics.
Code of Ethics
A document that conveys organizational values, a commitment
to standards, and a set of ideals. In practice, used
interchangeably with Code of Conduct.
In Section 406(c), the Sarbanes-Oxley Act defines "code
of ethics" as such standards as are reasonably
necessary to promote (1) honest and ethical conduct,
including the ethical handling of actual or apparent
conflicts of interest between personal and professional
relationships; (2) full, fair, accurate, timely, and
understandable disclosure in the periodic reports required
to be filed by the issuer; and (3) compliance with applicable
governmental rules and regulations.
Community Property
Everything that a husband and wife or registered domestic
partners own together. In most cases this includes 1)
money or benefits like pensions and stock options that
you now have which either of you earned during the time
you were living together as husband and wife or a registered
domestic partners; and 2) anything either of you bought
with money earned during that period.
Compliance
Conforming or adapting one's actions to rules.
Conflict of Commitment
A situation in which an employee's outside interests
interfere with his or her duties to the University
Conflict of Interest
A conflict between the private interests and the official
responsibilities of a person in a position of trust
(Merriam-Webster Dictionary)
Conflict of Time
A situation in which an employee does not devote the
amount of time to his or her job as is required by the
job duties
Ethical Dilemmas
Situations that require ethical judgment calls. Often,
there is more than one right answer and no win-win solution
in which we get everything we want.
Ethics
1. The decisions, choices, and actions (behaviors)
we make that reflect and enact our values.
2. The study of what we understand to be good and right
behavior and how people make those judgments. (From
"What is the Difference Between Ethics, Morals
and Values?", Frank Navran)
3. A set of standards of conduct that guide decisions
and actions based on duties derived from core values.
(From "The
Ethics of Non-profit Management," Stephen D.
Potts)
Ethical Decision-making
Altruistic considerations: What impact will this action
or decision have on others or my relationship with them?
Idealistic considerations: What is the right thing to
do - as defined by the values and principles, which
apply to this situation?
Individualistic considerations: What will happen to
me as a consequence of this action or decision?
Pragmatic considerations: What are the business consequences
of this action or decision?
Fraud
To intentionally lie or cheat to get something you
aren't entitled to
Governance
The act, process or power of exercising authority or
control in an organizational setting.
Gray Areas
Situations in which it is not clear to an individual
how to respond to an ethical dilemma. Sometimes, the
individual may not be familiar with a guideline, or
the guidelines may be vague and subject to interpretation.
Guidelines are often written to provide managers with
as much latitude as appropriate, and this may create
gray areas.
Independence
In the most general usage, freedom to act without control
or influence from others, to be free to make decisions
and act without external constraint. In the business
world, independence has come to have a specialized meaning.
It is most commonly understood to mean freedom from
conflicting interests - the specialized case of having
the ability to make a decision or act in ways which
are free from conflict between one's personal interests
and the interests of the party on whose behalf we are
making the decision. (From "No
Virginia, There Is No Such Thing as Independence",
Frank Navran)
Integrity
Making choices that are consistent with each other
and with the stated and operative values one espouses.
Striving for ethical congruence in one's decisions.
Morals
Values that we attribute to a system of beliefs that
help the individual define right versus wrong, good
versus bad. These typically get their authority from
something outside the individual -- a higher being or
higher authority (e.g. government, society). Moral concepts,
judgments and practices may vary from one society to
another.
Transparency
1. Sharing information and acting in an open manner.
2. A principle that allows those affected by administrative
decisions, business transactions or charitable work
to know not only the basic facts and figures but also
the mechanisms and processes. It is the duty of civil
servants, managers and trustees to act visibly, predictably
and understandably. (From the Transparency
International website)
Values
The core beliefs we hold regarding what is right and
fair in terms of our actions and our interactions with
others. Another way to characterize values is that they
are what an individual believes to be of worth and importance
to their life (valuable). (From "What is the Difference
Between Ethics, Morals and Values?", Frank Navran)
Values-centered Code of Ethics
Offers a set of ethical ideals, such as integrity,
trust-worthiness and responsibility, which companies
want employees to adopt in their work practices.
Whistleblower
A person or entity making a protected disclosure is
commonly referred to as a whistleblower. Whistleblowers
may be University employees (academic or staff), applicants
for employment, students, patients, vendors, contractors
or the general public. The whistleblowers role
is as a reporting party. They are not investigators
or finders of fact, nor do they determine the appropriate
corrective or remedial action that may be warranted.