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Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

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Page 1: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations

“Normal”?

Donald PalmerGraduate School of ManagementUniversity of California, DavisSeptember 11, 2015

Page 2: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Until recently, the dominant approach implicitly viewed wrongdoing in and by organizations as an abnormal phenomenon.– In this view, wrongdoing is relatively rare.

• It is perpetrated by a small deviant cross-section of the population (“bad apples”) and fostered by a narrow range of aberrant organizational structures & processes (“bad barrels”).

– It can be suppressed by employing a few simple tactics.

Page 3: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• An emerging approach views wrongdoing in and by organizations as a normal phenomenon.– In this view wrongdoing is relatively common.

• It is perpetrated by a wide swath of the population and fostered by a broad range of structures & processes essential to organizations.

– It will persist despite our best efforts to suppress it.

» We should devote attention to helping managers and employees avoid being caught up in it.

Page 4: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• An emerging approach views wrongdoing in and by organizations as a normal phenomenon.– In this view wrongdoing is relatively common.

• It is perpetrated by a wide swath of the population, fostered by a broad range of structures & processes essential to organizations.

– It will persist despite our best efforts to suppress it.

» We should devote attention to helping managers and employees avoid being caught up in it.

This alternative approach is the focus of my talk.

Page 5: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015
Page 6: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

What Is Organizational Wrongdoing?

Page 7: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Unethical Behavior• Socially Irresponsible Behavior• Illegal Behavior

–Civil Law–Criminal Law My primary focus is on

wrongdoing that involves multiple interacting individuals.

Page 8: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

What Is Common?

Page 9: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Statistical evidence.• Between 2000 and 2004, 40% of the largest 100 US

firms engaged in wrongdoing reported in the national media (Clement 2006).

• Anecdotal evidence.• Fall of 2013 JP Morgan agreed to pay $13B for its role

in the mortgage meltdown.– At the same time, JPM was fighting claims related to:

» The London Whale trades, bribery in China, numerous other actions under investigation by 8 federal agencies, 1 state regulator, and 2 foreign nations.

Page 10: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Why is Organizational Wrongdoing Pervasive?

Page 11: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Most Organizations Are Competitive

Systems

Page 12: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• People situated in a competitive systems are forced to operate close to the line separating right from wrong.– To do otherwise sacrifices competitive

advantage to one’s adversaries.

• Thus, people in competitive systems do not have to depart much from accepted behavior to find themselves on the wrong side of the line separating right from wrong.

Page 13: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Most Organizations Are “Strong Situations”

Page 14: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Social psychologists use the phrase “strong situations” to refer to situations in which people are exposed to multiple potent social forces.

• Organizations are strong situations in that their members are exposed to multiple structures and processes that shape the way they act, think, and even feel.– Each of these structures and processes can cause

people to engage in wrongdoing.

I will illustrate my review with anecdotal evidence from few high profile instances of organizational wrongdoing and, time permitting, more systematic evidence from a recent study that I conducted on the use of PEDs in professional cycling.

I will elaborate the most important structures and processes over the next several slides, distinguishing between often recognized and less recognized structures/processes.

Page 15: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Often Recognized Organizational

Structures

Page 16: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Incentive Systems– The matrix of costs and benefits

associated with alternative behaviors in the organizational environment.• Provide motivations for engaging in misconduct.

– Performance strain

• Provide opportunities to engage in misconduct.– Weak governance.

Page 17: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Cultures– The assumptions, values and beliefs,

and norms current in the organizational environment.• Directly endorse misconduct by framing

misconduct as appropriate.• Indirectly endorse misconduct by specifying

extenuating circumstances under which misconduct can be considered acceptable.

– Rationalizations also know as “techniques of neutralization.”

Page 18: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Together These Factors Constitute the Fraud

Triangle

Page 19: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Less Often Recognized Organizational

Structures

Page 20: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Power Structures

Page 21: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• The Chain of Command- The norm of obedience to authority.

- Reinforced by the allocation of rewards and punishments.

• Resource Dependence Relations- The distribution of resources that are

perceived to by others to be important and scarce.

Jordan Mintz and Enron

Page 22: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Administrative Systems

Page 23: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• The Division of Labor- Differentiation and sometimes incomplete

integration of roles.

• Administrative Controls- Obtrusive Devices

• Rules & standard operating procedures.

- Unobtrusive Devices• Scripts & schemas.

Pinto and the Ford Motor Company

Page 24: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Situational Social Influence Processes

Page 25: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Social information processing• Organizational participants learn from others in

their immediate environment about the costs and benefits associated with alternative behaviors.

Robert Wilkis and David Levine

Page 26: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Social Comparison Processes– People look to others in their environment to

obtain guidance on how to act, think, and even feel.

Betty Vinson and WorldCom

Page 27: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Small group pressures.• Organizational participants feel compelled to meet

the expectations of the others in their immediate environment.

Illan Reich and David Levine

Page 28: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• Commitment pressures.• Organizational participants who engage in

incremental behaviors that are of their own volition, visible, and difficult to reverse get locked into their behavior ... when they can develop post-hoc rationalizations for the behavior.

– This is the case, even when that behavior might be counter to cost/benefit and normative rationality.

John Mulheren and Ivan Boesky

Page 29: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

All Organizational Participants Are

Susceptible

Page 30: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

• If people are operating close to the line separating right from wrong and thus do not have to go far to cross the line...

• And people are subject to multiple strong social forces that influence their emotions, attitudes, and behaviors...

• Then people do not have to be extraordinary (in a malevolent way) in order to cross the line separating right from wrong.

Page 31: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Practical Implications

Page 32: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Ethics courses and training programs are not enough

– Ethics courses and training programs for the most part instruct students on where the line separating right from wrong is located. • We also need to sensitize students and managers

to the reasons why otherwise ethical, socially responsible, law-abiding people cross the line between right and wrong, even when they know where it is located.

Page 33: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Ethics courses and training programs are not enough

– Ethics courses and training programs for the most part instruct students on where the line separating right from wrong is located. • We also need to sensitize students and managers

to the reasons why otherwise ethical, socially responsible, law-abiding people cross the line between right and wrong, even when they know where it is located.

In fact, I suspect that ethics courses and training programs have the opposite of their intended effect!

Page 34: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Appendix

Page 35: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

Protected Role Protector Role0.00%

100.00%

200.00%

300.00%

400.00%

500.00%

600.00%

700.00%

Percent change in the odds of a rider having a higher suspicion score

Significant at the .05 level

Significant at the .10 level

Page 36: Is Wrongdoing in and by Organizations “Normal”? Donald Palmer Graduate School of Management University of California, Davis September 11, 2015

-100.00%

-80.00%

-60.00%

-40.00%

-20.00%

0.00%

20.00%

40.00%

Increasing number of teammates known to have doped and been severely sanctioned.

Current teammates' prior involvement in doping Current teammates' past teammates' prior involvement in doping

Increasing number of teammates known to have doped and NOT been severely sanctioned.

Percent change in the odds of a rider using PEDs

Significant at the .05 level