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Published in: Journal of Business Ethics 4/2015

01-06-2015

Cogs in the Wheel or Spanners in the Works? A Phenomenological Approach to the Difficulty and Meaning of Ethical Work for Financial Controllers

Published in: Journal of Business Ethics | Issue 4/2015

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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to propose a new perspective on the difficulty and meaning of ethical work for financial controllers. This is achieved by drawing on concepts from Michel Henry’s phenomenology of life in the field of business ethics. The French philosopher Michel Henry (1922–2002) is distinguished by his identifying two modes of appearing: ‘intentionality’ (appearing of the world through representations) and ‘affectivity’ (appearing of life). Henry suggests that relying only on abstract representations constitutes a specific ideology that causes individuals at work to ignore the actual experience of being affected, and hinders the appearance of life to guide their actions, in turn hindering ethics. Empirical illustrations are provided by a case study that explores the practices of management accountants in a travel retail corporation. By observing the empirical practices of management accountants, a body of professionals whose role is largely dependent on information technology, abstraction and technical expertise to trace organisational flows and transactions, we shed light on the difficult ethical issues associated with their role of surveillance and control of other managers’ work. The case study illustrates a wide range of everyday working practices among management accountants. Some convey the impression that they lack empathy and consideration for other individuals, while others engage in close cooperation and ethical practices despite the constraining configuration of their role. A significant result of this research is that it illustrates and interprets, based on Henry’s phenomenology, a wide range of working practices. Consistent with Henry, we argue that the source of business ethics lies beyond professional standards, codes and values.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Airshop is a fictitious name of a company where one of the authors conducted a three-month field study of the role of management accountants in the governance of subsidiaries.
 
2
In this article, ‘management accountant’ (MA) and ‘financial controller’ are used interchangeably. Both refer to a job position primarily concerned with the production of financial information for managerial purposes (e.g. budgets, forecasts, reporting). ‘Management accountant’ and ‘financial controller’ are the two usual translations of the French term ‘contrôleur de gestion’.
 
3
We are grateful to the anonymous reviewer who pointed out the subtlety of Henry’s attitude regarding ideology to us.
 
4
Acknowledging that affectivity illuminates the reality of the phenomenon and that affectivity is intimately related to the manifestation, in one’s life of ethics, presupposes an education that allows for discernment of various affects: affects of a self-centred ego or affects of an open ego may be distinguished according to real effects in life with and for others. One is thus able to experience affectively whether the exercise of one’s powers, gifts and abilities is good or bad for life according to some experienced laws of life: i.e. there is more joy in giving than receiving. Such a law is consistent with the acknowledgment of living a given life.
 
5
The spanner trope reputedly derives from the industrial revolution-era practice of workers sabotaging machines in an attempt to improve working conditions.
 
6
There are different ways to account for the links between absolute Life and everybody’s life, depending on cultures and religious traditions: see Yoneyama with Zen Buddhism (2007) and Letiche (2009) with non-transcendent humanism.
 
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Metadata
Title
Cogs in the Wheel or Spanners in the Works? A Phenomenological Approach to the Difficulty and Meaning of Ethical Work for Financial Controllers
Publication date
01-06-2015
Published in
Journal of Business Ethics / Issue 4/2015
Print ISSN: 0167-4544
Electronic ISSN: 1573-0697
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-013-1986-6

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