DCSIMG

Symposium, Ethics Across the Professions: Professional Ethics and Corporate Conduct

September 20, 2007

The second annual Ethics Across the Professions symposium united scholars and practitioners across the professions to discuss Professional Ethics and Corporate Conduct. Held at Pacific McGeorge, the day-long event included a number of panel discussions and concluded with a keynote address by Ralph Nader. Papers produced for the Professional Ethics and Corporate Conduct Symposium appear in Volume 39, Issue 3 of the McGeorge Law Review. Its table of contents appears below.

Professor George C. Harris, University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law
Introduction

Professor Roberta Springer Loewy, University of California, Davis
The "Ethics" of Organizational/Institutional Ethics in a Pluralistic Setting: Conflicts of Interests, Values, and Goals

Professors Donna T. Chen and Ann E. Mills, University of Virginia
Addressing Ethical Commitments When Professionals Partner with Organizations

Professor Eugene Schlossberger, Purdue University
For You Alone? Dual-Investor Theory and Fiduciary Relationships

Professor Elletta Sangrey Callahan, Syracuse University
Beyond the Ethics Course: Making Conduct Count

Professor Tim Hatcher, North Carolina State University
Shanghaiing America's Best Thinking: Musings on University Corporatization, Chinese Partnerships, and Embracing Critical Theory

Professor Bruce Peltier, University of the Pacific and Arthur A. Dugoni, University of the Pacific School of Dentistry
Commerce and Care: The Irreconcilable Tension Between Selling and Caring Professor

Molly Dugan, California State University, Sacramento
Journalism Ethics and the Independent Journalist

Professor Newman Peery, University of the Pacific, Eberhardt School of Business
Corporate Social Performance: Ethics and Corporate Culture

Professor Peter Madsen, Carnegie Mellon University
Professionals, Business Practitioners, and Prudential Justice

Professor Richard S. Marens, California State University, Sacramento
The Hollowing Out of Corporate Social Responsibility: Abandoning a Tradition in an Age of Declining Hegemony