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  4. Guiding unphilosophical employees: organizational autonomy and work design theory in light of virtue ethics
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Guiding unphilosophical employees: organizational autonomy and work design theory in light of virtue ethics

Journal
International Journal of Ethics and Systems
Publisher
Emerald
Date Issued
2026-02-19
Author(s)
Scalzo, Germán  
Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Empresariales - CampCM  
Espejo, Álvaro
Scalzo, Germán R.
Type
text::journal::journal article
DOI
10.1108/IJOES-04-2025-0184
URL
https://scripta.up.edu.mx/handle/20.500.12552/12913
Abstract
Purpose


This paper aims to address how to foster ethical decision-making in autonomous organizational contexts without undermining employee autonomy. It aims to provide a neo-Aristotelian response to this issue by exploring how MacIntyre’s virtue ethics – particularly his idea of the “unphilosophical” or “plain person” – can guide ethical decision-making in organizations without limiting autonomy.





Design/methodology/approach


This is a conceptual paper that, building on the problem addressed in work design theory regarding autonomy and ethical decision making, applies a MacIntyrean virtue ethics approach to explore practical considerations for employees to guide their non-expert ethical decision-making. Accordingly, the paper offers a complementary framework rooted in virtue ethics that emphasizes excellence, shared deliberation, fellowship and care as paths for a practical roadmap aimed toward ethical decision-making.





Findings


The paper suggests that MacIntyre’s virtue ethics provides a robust framework for addressing the paradox of autonomy and unethical behavior in organizations presented by work design theory. It shows that fostering shared deliberation, fellowship, and care can help employees identify and pursue workplace excellence while maintaining personal integrity and organizational effectiveness.





Originality/value


This study reframes the relationship between autonomy and ethics in the workplace, providing a philosophically grounded – yet accessible framework for plain, nonphilosophical employees – to address the paradox of autonomy and unethical behavior in organizations. It shows that fostering shared deliberation, fellowship and care can help employees identify and pursue workplace excellence while maintaining personal integrity and organizational effectiveness.

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