2003
DOI: 10.5465/ame.2003.11851888
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Former Enron vice president Sherron Watkins on the Enron collapse

Abstract: It is my pleasure to introduce Sherron Watkins, the Academy of Management's 2003 Distinguished Executive Speaker. By now, her story as the former vice president of Enron Corporation who tried to bring what she called "an elaborate accounting hoax" to the attention of Enron's chief executive officer is well known. In August 2001, responding to his invitation to employees to put any concerns in a comment box, she did so. When he did not address her explosive charges at a subsequent company-wide meeting, she soug… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Where this learning could not be left to the corporation, but needed to be enforced, it often fell in the domain of regulation to guarantee alterations of business conduct. In some cases, therefore, illegitimate corporate conduct led to new regulations such as in the case of Enron which caused the U.S. government to enact the SarbanesOxley Act (Currall and Epstein, 2003;Watkins, 2003).…”
Section: An Integrated Model Of Humanistic Managementmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Where this learning could not be left to the corporation, but needed to be enforced, it often fell in the domain of regulation to guarantee alterations of business conduct. In some cases, therefore, illegitimate corporate conduct led to new regulations such as in the case of Enron which caused the U.S. government to enact the SarbanesOxley Act (Currall and Epstein, 2003;Watkins, 2003).…”
Section: An Integrated Model Of Humanistic Managementmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…There were certainly pockets of corruption within Enron, and ethical rule bending was a part of the midlevel management corporate culture. Even the ''so-called'' whistleblower Sherron Watkins claims that Ken Lay was some distance from the fraud and was not in any way involved in creating it (Watkins and Pierce, 2003). Ken Lay was convicted for allegedly not telling the truth about what was happening at Enron.…”
Section: Enron and Ken Laymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This results into a misalignment of organizational goals and stakeholder demands (Mackenzie, 2007). Some authors attribute scandals such as those of Enron and WorldCom to the failure to consider stakeholder concerns in decision making (Currall & Epstein, 2003;Turnbull, 2002;Watkins, 2003;Zandstra, 2002). Following these scandals, some governments set up new regulations to align the interests of stakeholders with corporate conduct.…”
Section: Stewardship Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%