Contract Theory and Business Ethics A Re
Contract Theory and Business Ethics A Re
Contract Theory and Business Ethics A Re
T
o the familiar jibe that business ethics is an oxymoron
might be added another incongruous juxtaposition, that of
business ethics theory. The contradictory flavor of this
phrase is not due to a low estimate of the moral tone of business
but to skepticism about the practicality of ethical theory. How can
any theory of ethics that is rigorous enough to pass muster with
picky philosophers possibly give guidance to busy, hardheaded
business managers?
This challenge is faced squarely by Thomas Donaldson and
Thomas W. Dunfee in their book, Ties That Bind: A Social Contracts
Approach to Business Ethics.1 For moral philosophers, Donaldson
and Dunfee offer a grand theory, called Integrative Social Contracts
Theory, or ISCT for short, which follows in the contract tradition of
Hobbes, Locke, and, more recently, John Rawls. However, ISCT
does not consist solely of general, ideal principles that result from
most contract approaches, but includes specific agreements made
in actual communities. The concreteness of their theory enables the
two authors to provide managers with useful tools for ethical deci-
sion making in cases of conflicting standards.
Ties That Bind is an important contribution to both moral phi-
losophy and the field of management that amply illustrates how
ethical theory can yield practical business results. The theory is
also intended to guide business ethics research, and the authors
themselves apply ISCT to the problem of providing a normative
John R. Boatright is the Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J. Professor of Business Ethics at Loyola
University Chicago.
© 2000 Center for Business Ethics at Bentley College. Published by Blackwell Publishers,
350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA, and 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK.
JOHN R. BOATRIGHT 453
fail. They could also serve as general principles or ideals that we can
strive to achieve and that can be realized more or less completely.
Donaldson and Dunfee might well reply that hypernorms consti-
tute a minimal morality or a thin theory in Walzer’s sense, which
does constitute merely a constraint. If so, then they cannot be
agnostic about the justification of hypernorms, and ISCT is not
“independent of the truth of any particular traditional ethical the-
ory.” The reason for this is that we need some ethical theory in order
to know specifically what hypernorms entail. Depending on how
hypernorms are ultimately justified, they are merely minimal
contraints or more substantial ideals. The point is that we cannot
know which is the case without having some ethical theory that jus-
tifies hypernorms.
Hypernorms, unlike microsocial contractual norms, are not
wholly empirical; their existence does not depend merely on observ-
ing people’s attitudes and behaviors. Hypernorms must have some
justifying ground if they are to legitimize microsocial contractual
norms and make them obligatory. Consequently, Donaldson and
Dunfee must assume that hypernorms have some supporting ethi-
cal theory. About this they cannot be agnostic. The key point is
that different justifying theories profoundly affect the content of
hypernorms. Thus, their situation is not like that of a mathemati-
cian who uses an unproven but true theorem in a proof, because in
this case we need the proof of the theorem in order to know exactly
what it means.
First, they surely mean “legitimate norms” and not merely “authen-
tic norms.” Otherwise the norms of a slaveholding community
would be morally binding on all its members.14 That aside, the bind-
ing force of community norms is merely assumed in the book; one
looks in vain for any discernible argument. Perhaps the authors
think the point too obvious to need support, but some justification
is surely in order.
For starters, people are members of many different communities,
each with its own norms, and so one could have conflicting ethical
obligations. Consider, for example, the situation of a Catholic who
works with Planned Parenthood. Would she be obligated to both
oppose and support a right to abortion? Could she be so obligated?
More to the point, is it necessary for a Catholic to acknowledge the
morally binding force of the church’s prohibition of abortion, along
with all other teachings, as long as one is a member of that commu-
nity?15 The stipulation in ISCT that authentic norms need only the
approval of a “clear” or “substantial” majority ensures that some
community members do not agree with any given norm. Why is any-
one obligated to observe norms of which they disapprove?
Donaldson and Dunfee appear to locate the source of obligation
in the hypothetical macrosocial contract rather than in actual
microsocial contracts. The latter could not provide a basis for the
binding force of its own norms for the simple reason that not every-
one consents to the terms of each microsocial contract. An argu-
ment is suggested in the authors’ discussion of moral free space,
where they again assert an obligation to obey community norms.
JOHN R. BOATRIGHT 461
CONCLUSION
NOTES