2017
DOI: 10.1504/ijebr.2017.10002648
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Student perceptions of codes of ethics: a three-country comparison

Abstract: This three-country empirical study examined the attitudes of business students in China, Denmark, and the US to determine if they shared similar beliefs with regard to the perceived consequences of the use of codes of ethics. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) as well the Kruskal-Wallis test were used to determine that there were significant differences in the attitudes of the three groups. The findings provide useful information about three culturally distant nations and should prove especially useful to those conc… Show more

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“…Unfortunately, empirical support for such an investigation is lacking. The most recent investigations on business students' attitudes towards the concept of codes of ethics were conducted by Peppas, Yu, Zhang & Peppas (2017), Peppas & Yu (2009), and Peppas (2003). However, none of these studies specifically tapped possible roles of the students' religiosity and social cynicism play in developing the attitudes.…”
Section: Attitudes Towards Codes Of Ethics Among First-year Business mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unfortunately, empirical support for such an investigation is lacking. The most recent investigations on business students' attitudes towards the concept of codes of ethics were conducted by Peppas, Yu, Zhang & Peppas (2017), Peppas & Yu (2009), and Peppas (2003). However, none of these studies specifically tapped possible roles of the students' religiosity and social cynicism play in developing the attitudes.…”
Section: Attitudes Towards Codes Of Ethics Among First-year Business mentioning
confidence: 99%