“…Thus ethics are the standards of acceptable conduct by which individuals choose to live their lives, and are deeply interwoven in all cultures (Loe, Ferrell, & Mansfield, 2000). To the extent that there are deep cultural differences in ethical standards (Cullen et al, 2004;Robertson, 2002), differences in expected conduct can harm superiorsubordinate work relationships (Ferres et al, 2004). Despite growing concerns regarding business corruption and unethical business practices by managers operating in international environments (Jackson, 2001; Thorne & Saunders, 2002), global studies of unethical business practices and ethical sensitivity have been far less prevalent (Collins, 2000) than multi-country studies of cross-cultural differences in values (Hofstede, 2001;Inglehart, 1997;Kelley, MacNab, & Worthley, 2006;Ralston, Pounder, Lo, Wong, Egri, & Stauffer, 2006a;Schwartz, 1997;Smith, Dugan, & Trompenaars, 1996).…”