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Moral Entrepreneurship: Resource Based Ethics

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TLDR
In this paper, the role of entrepreneurship in business ethics and promoting a resource-based ethics is studied, where the authors show how moral entrepreneurship can bring about moral change by combining effectively social, policy, norm, and economic related values.
Abstract
This article studies the role of entrepreneurship in business ethics and promotes a resource-based ethics. The need for and usefulness of this form of ethics emerge from an analysis of contemporary business ethics that appears to be inefficacious and from a moral business practice formed out of the relationship between the veal calf industry of the VanDrie Group and the Dutch Society for the Protection of Animals (DSPA) in their development and implementation of a Welfare Hallmark for calves. Both organizations created jointly a new meat segment in the market by trust-building and partnership. The relationship shows a remodeling of capabilities of both organizations in the light of co-creation of values. The VanDrie Group established an effectuation of moral goals by being socially sensitive and resource-minded. The DSPA created openings for dialogue by being pragmatic in its ideals. Philosophically, this article sketches a resource-based ethics with Deweyan concepts as end-in-view and transactionality of means and ends. Both organizations show in their entrepreneurship the ability to create, what is called “Room for Maneuver” by exploring, socializing, individualizing, and growing. By maneuvering they set off a form of co-evolution between business and ethics. This article demonstrates what actual moral entrepreneurship can do in bringing about moral change by combining effectively social, policy, norm, and economic related values.

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The dark side of the rural idyll: Stories of illegal/illicit economic activity in the UK countryside

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Healthy, Happy and Humane: Evidence in Farm Animal Welfare Policy

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Agricultural Entrepreneurship in the European Union: Contributions for a Sustainable Development

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Social enterprise in Antebellum America: the case of Nashoba (1824-1829)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the case of Nashoba, a Tennessee-based social enterprise founded in 1824 by Scottish immigrant Frances Wright, and examined these data using social enterprise theory with a focus on personal identity and time-laden empirical aspects not captured by traditional methodologies.
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Materialism, social stratification, and ethics: evidence from SME owners in China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined both structural and motivational sources of personal strains on the ethical attitude of SME owners, while the characteristics of these strains could be explored in the future studies.
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