“…Idealists often interpret questionable activities as ethically inappropriate , 21 of 26 vignettes considered; Barnett, Bass, Brown, and Hebert, 1998, three vignettes;Bass et al, 1999, two vignettes;Davis et al, 2001, 5 vignettes in Study 1 (three "moral judgments" items) but only one of three vignettes in Study 2 (MES items; idealism was associated with approval of the questionable activity in another vignette, p. 46; Kleiser, Sivadas, Kellaris, and Dahlstrom, 2003, two vignettes, somewhat weaker connections with Forsyth measure than with the self-created Marketing Ethical Ideologies scale; Mudrack, Bloodgood, and Turnley, 2012;Singh, Vitell, Al-Khatib, and Clark, 2007, four vignettes, strongest r = .23; Vitell and Patwardhan, 2008, two of four vignettes in European sample, behavioral intentions only; see also Dubinsky, Nataraajan, and Huang, 2004). Other studies using accounting vignettes and conducted outside of North America, however, were unable to detect significant associations between idealism and ethical judgments (Marques and Azvedo-Pereira, 2009, Portugal; Table 1, China).…”