Josephson Institute Center for Business Ethics

Josephson Institute Center for Business Ethics http://josephsoninstitute.org/business The Institute also works collaboratively with influential organizations and individuals in a variety of fields.
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Josephson Institute develops and delivers services and materials to increase ethical commitment, competence, and practice in all segments of society. A nonpartisan and nonsectarian 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, the Institute is funded by individual donations, foundation and corporate grants, fees and contributions for services, and sales of educational resources. Since 1987, when Michael Josep

hson founded it in honor of his parents, Josephson Institute has conducted programs for over 100,000 influential leaders including public officials, school administrators, military and police officers, journalists, senior corporate and nonprofit executives, and judges and lawyers. It continues to offer a variety of consulting services and training courses in business ethics, public administration, policing, character education, and sportsmanship. Please visit http://josephsoninstitute.org/michael-josephson/ for Michael Josephson's complete bio

YOU CAN'T BE A TRULY GOOD LEADER IF YOU'RE NOT A GOOD PERSON. Some people think of ethics as a limitation or a burden to...
04/12/2026

YOU CAN'T BE A TRULY GOOD LEADER IF YOU'RE NOT A GOOD PERSON. Some people think of ethics as a limitation or a burden to be carried. In fact it is an energy source that powers our potential to see and pursue our moral potential. Being a good person and contributing to a good society is the only road to fulfillment and worthiness.

Calling life a “rat race” is an excuse to justify moral compromise. It replaces moral ambition and expectations with a d...
04/06/2026

Calling life a “rat race” is an excuse to justify moral compromise. It replaces moral ambition and expectations with a demeaning mindset: winning is everything and winning is just beating everyone else reducing you to what the metaphor implies: just another rat.

LYING IS A BIG DEAL AND SHOULD BE TREATED AS SUCH! What’s most troubling is that so many people treat lying as normal, u...
04/04/2026

LYING IS A BIG DEAL AND SHOULD BE TREATED AS SUCH! What’s most troubling is that so many people treat lying as normal, unavoidable and inconsequential. Truth should always matter but it will only if we expect and demand it.

TRUTH IS NOT PERSONAL. It’s about facts not feelings or opinions. The phrase "my truth" may make sense in describing one...
04/03/2026

TRUTH IS NOT PERSONAL. It’s about facts not feelings or opinions. The phrase "my truth" may make sense in describing one’s deeply held beliefs but real truth – though often elusive and contested – is about objective reality. And that depends on evidence not opinion.

ETHICS IS NOT THE ENEMY. It’s not a hurdle to overcome. It’s a standard to live by. People and companies of character ar...
04/02/2026

ETHICS IS NOT THE ENEMY. It’s not a hurdle to overcome. It’s a standard to live by. People and companies of character are as concerned with right and wrong as they are with legal- illegal. The don’t just ask, “can we?”. They ask, “should we?” Good ethics is good business.

The Normalization of Dishonesty. here we see the mother holds the line — cheating is wrong but her children push back. N...
03/31/2026

The Normalization of Dishonesty. here we see the mother holds the line — cheating is wrong but her children push back. Not with defiance but what they think is realism: the school doesn't care; I have to cheat just to keep up.
Our last permitted Josephson Institute survey of 23,000 high school students — conducted in 2012 — found over half admitted cheating on an exam in the past year, over one-fourth stole from a store, and nearly one in five stole something from a parent or relative! That should shock and disturb you. What's more the better perfroming students cheated at a higher rate.
That was thirteen years ago. Every indicator since suggests things are much worse.
For decades, schools have produced generations of moral illiterates, emerging adults not grounded in a commitment to ethical values, by systematically looking away from compelling evidence that most of their students enter the workforce as cheaters and many as theives.
The well-intentioned failure to enforce high standards of integrity trained their students to know "they can get away with it" and reinforce the cynical idea that selective dishonesty is necessary to success.
When wrongdoing carries no cost, it stops feeling wrong. Schools aren't just failing to stop cheating and discouraging stealing — they certify these behaviors as normal. Now generations of these students are electing our leaders and becoming leaders themselves.

This cartoon exposes one of the most common and dangerous ethical rationalizations in business: the belief that legality...
03/31/2026

This cartoon exposes one of the most common and dangerous ethical rationalizations in business: the belief that legality defines morality. The executive doesn’t deny the promise was broken—she simply reframes the issue. It’s no longer about keeping one’s word; it’s about managing risk. If the other party can sue, then the breach becomes just another cost of doing business.
That reasoning confuses rights with righteousness. The fact that you can break a contract and face legal consequences does not mean you should. Law sets minimum standards; ethics demands more. A promise is not merely a legal obligation—it is a moral commitment grounded in trustworthiness.
When organizations treat agreements as optional whenever it’s profitable to do so, they erode the very foundation that makes commerce possible: trust. Contracts exist because trust is fragile; violating them casually makes it rarer still.
The most revealing line is “this is a business decision.” That phrase is often used to silence ethical concerns, as if profit and principle occupy separate worlds. They don’t. In the long run, character is not a constraint on success—it is a condition of it.

This isn't about beliefs, it’s about the duty to live them. Often, values are treated as abstract preferences, things we...
03/30/2026

This isn't about beliefs, it’s about the duty to live them. Often, values are treated as abstract preferences, things we aspire to rather than practice. We say we believe in these ethical principles but belief without action is just moral decoration.

03/29/2026
We've normalized expediency over ethics, self-interest over service and lost our sense of moral indignation when elected...
03/29/2026

We've normalized expediency over ethics, self-interest over service and lost our sense of moral indignation when elected leaders shamelesslessly lie and shrug at being lied to. Hypocrisy is no longer a disqualification-it's just a survival strategy. Shame on us.

A common rationalization for compromising ethics is what I call "the doctrine of relative filth" -"I'm not bad because o...
10/26/2024

A common rationalization for compromising ethics is what I call "the doctrine of relative filth" -"I'm not bad because others are worse." Don't let the bad behavior of others to ignore the voice of your best self.

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8117 W. Manchester Avenue
Los Angeles, CA
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