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Guest Editors’ Introduction: Redefining Organizational Ethics Through the Lens of Life-and-Death

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2025

Mar Pérezts
Affiliation:
Emlyon Business School, France
Marianna Fotaki
Affiliation:
Warwick Business School, UK
Yuliya Shymko
Affiliation:
Audencia, France
Gazi Islam
Affiliation:
Grenoble Ecole de Management, France

Abstract

We share the world we live and die in with others, in ways that are organized and disorganized. The authors of this special issue address life-and-death as a compound term, foregrounding the vital and deadly outcomes of (dis)organization and their (business) ethics implications as they play out in the context of growing inequalities and ongoing health, geopolitical, environmental, refugee crises and egregious war crimes. Organizations and organizing can shape such contexts by engaging in the ethics of care and politics of inclusivity, redefining “essential” or “front line” work, managing relationships between bodily health and work, or ethically relating to non-human forms of life. Considering the roles of organizations in terms of life-and-death can help scholars redefine organizations and/in/for/with the world by stressing the ethical dimensions of organizing for life which involves human and other-than-human relatedness and the obligation of care for all forms of life.

Information

Type
Special Section
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for Business Ethics

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