Current Issue: Volume 6 (2020)

Ethics and Governance Issues in Sustainability in Asia: Literature Review and Research Proposals

Aliza D. Racelis

In the last few years, the corporate world has come under increasing pressure to behave in an ethically responsible manner because of accountability failures that have caused much harm to countless shareholders, employees, pensioners, and other stakeholders. Bankruptcies and unscrupulous restatements of financial reports have created a crisis of investor confidence and caused the decline of stock markets around the world by billions of dollars (Racelis, 2010; Walker, 2005).

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Editorial Board 2009

Erlinda FL PaezEditor Associate EditorsJ. Enrico H. LazaroCelerino C. Tiongco Board of EditorsPaul A. DumolJerome G. KliatchkoJose Maria G. MarianoEditorial StaffDivine Angeli P. EndrigaDominic John D. GaleonLeon Arthur P. PecksonEmmanuel M. Rentoy Download...

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A Note on the “Suma de una junta,” the Second Draft of the Handbook for Confessors of the Synod of Manila of 1582

The “Suma de una junta” (henceforth “Suma”) is the second draft of a handbook that the Synod of Manila of 1582 had wanted to produce for the guidance of confessors. As far as is known, the handbook was never published; however, two drafts of it, of which “Suma” is the second, survive. The first draft (“Junta y congregacion,” henceforth “Junta”) survives in a single manuscript in the Jesuit archives in Rome.

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The Role and Impact of Network Governance in the Philippine Political Economy

Teodoro Lloydon C. Bautista

The rise of network governance in the Philippines has reshaped the way power is brokered and resources are allocated to different sectors of society. Networks are open structures, capable of expanding without limits and integrating new nodes as long as they share the same communication codes, such as values or performance goals (Castells, 1996, p. 2). Governance is broadly defined as the sound exercise of political, economic, and administrative authority to manage a country’s resources for development. It involves the institutionalization of a system through which citizens, institutions, organizations, and groups in a society articulate their interests, exercise their rights, and mediate their differences in the pursuit of the collective good (Asian Development Bank [ADB], 2005).

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Consumerism and Responsible Consumption: A Philosophical Approach

Tani Mae Z. Junin

This paper explores the phenomenon of consumerism, taking it as a dominant characteristic of contemporary culture and examining its threatening impact on one’s personhood. It shows how consumerism can betray us in a very deep way, for it injuriously strikes at our very reality as persons. It lures us into a web of deceptive and superficial self-fulfillment. It makes consumption the end-all and be-all of human life, equating human self-realization with having rather than being. When the logic of the consumer culture becomes the overarching framework with which human beings view themselves and the world, the person’s ontological worth is subverted, thereby “thingifying” or “dehumanizing” the human person. If left unchecked, consumerism ultimately reduces persons to depthless entities, commodities, or images and denies them their humanity.

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Why Ethics Should Matter in Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC)

Marina
Caterina Lorenzo-Molo

It is regrettable that despite widespread acceptance of relational models, much focus on building and maintaining relationships, high visibility of marketing activities, and global
integration of markets and marketing, comprehensive theorizing on marketing ethics has been conspicuously lacking in the literature.

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ISSN: 1908-0506 (Print)
ISSN:
 2719-1877 (Online)