“…From the daily public health briefings of pandemic illness tolls and vaccination rates, the measurement and reporting of climate emissions and biodiversity impacts, the inflation and bursting of economic bubbles in the financialized marketplace or the quantified selves made possible by digital technologies, social media and connected surveillance, technologies of measurement are increasingly woven into the fabric of social life. As these diverse social phenomena increasingly demand measurement (Islam, 2021), Business Ethics as a field is challenged to develop metrics that can adequately measure ethics, and to think through the ethics of how, when and with whom to construct such metrics. Conversely, business ethics scholarship, as much of social scientific scholarship generally, has been slow to pick up on the implications of metrics as themselves sources of ethical and social value, and as measurement as an ethically laden activity (cf., Järvinen et al, 2020, for a recent example).…”