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      • Japanese business ethics, culture, and practice are unique to Japan, and there is limited academic literature in the West (Fukukawa, & Teramoto, 2009; Iwao,1997; Mizuo, 1998; Oh, & Koh, 2016; Todeschini, 2012; Tsalikis, & Seaton, 2008; von Staden, 2016; Wagner-Tsukamoto, 2008; Wang, 2010).
      www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Ethical-Considerations-of-Japanese-Business-Culture-Yamamoto-Lloyd/faa2b51e2a369b7e77a12b5cdb9531d1b243a3db
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  2. Jan 1, 2019 · The objective of this literature review is to research 1) traditional business ethics concepts and its development in Japan, 2) Japanese corporate citizenship behavior, and 3) Japanese managerial...

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    • Kyosei
    • Sanpoyoshi
    • Mottainai

    The Caux Round Table Principles incorporate kyosei, symbolized by the Kanji characters for “working together” and “life,” which can mean “living and working together for the common good.” Proposed by a founding member of the Caux Round Table, Ryuzaburo Kaku, a former chairman of Canon, Inc., a multinational corporation specializing in imaging and o...

    Sanpoyoshican be roughly translated as “tri-directional good,” “tripartite satisfaction,” or the idea that economic transactions inherently involve and must acknowledge impact on the buyer, the seller, and the society. The two primary actors in an economic transaction, the buyer and the seller, should consider both the other party in the transactio...

    In the West, an early catchphrase of the sustainability movement, for individuals and corporations alike, was “reduce, reuse, and recycle.” Mottainai—described variously in translation as “grateful consumption” and “too precious to waste,” can be considered to capture sustainability goals more comprehensively, adding the fourth “r” of “respect.” Co...

    • Jessica McManus Warnell, Toru Umeda
    • 2019
  3. Business Ethics in Japan Iwao Taka ABSTPj\CT. Business ethics in Japan has developed in five stages. Especially in the last stage (in the 1990s), there have appeared two clear-cut trends in business ethics activities: positive and passive. For the rise of business ethics, the passive trend is much more impor tant. Once entered the 1990s, an ...

  4. Japanese academics have largely concentrated their teaching and research on western traditions of business ethics. However, the study of traditional Japanese thought on business ethics and philosophy is finding a revival within the context of CSR within Japan.

    • sdavis@rikkyo.ac.jp
  5. Japanese business ethics, culture, and practice are unique to Japan, and there is limited academic literature in the West (Fukukawa, & Teramoto, 2009; Iwao,1997; Mizuo, 1998; Oh, & Koh, 2016; Todeschini, 2012; Tsalikis, & Seaton, 2008; von Staden, 2016; Wagner-Tsukamoto, 2008; Wang, 2010).

  6. The objective of this literature review is to research 1) traditional business ethics concepts and its development in Japan, 2) Japanese corporate citizenship behavior, and 3) Japanese managerial and employee business ethics to help American business leaders better understand Japanese business ethics culture.

  7. study can contribute to the ethical leadership literature in several ways. First, in Japan, the construct of business ethics has recently been diffused in an institution-related manner. For the past several decades, Japan has introduced Western values of business ethics in response to global-ization. Thus, the potential influence of the ...

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