Description

Book Synopsis

In 2006, Babiak and Hare alerted the public to the danger of “corporate psychopaths,” psychopathic individuals occupying positions of power in business organizations. Since then, academicians and the public media have advertised their presence, documented the harm they can cause, and issued a call to arms to identify corporate psychopaths and eliminate their presence in the workplace. Very little attention has been paid, however, to the ethics of such a “seek and destroy” mission. The Ethics of Employment Screening for Psychopathy argues that employment screening for psychopathy would be illegal and unethical. On legal grounds, Brian K Steverson argues that psychopathy would qualify as a protected disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and, hence, medical screening to identify potential corporate psychopaths would be in violation of the ADA. On ethical grounds, the case is made that such screening would violate a social commitment to equal opportunity, would constitute a morally unjustified violation of personal privacy, and would, in practice, not produce the intended benefits, while at the same time inflicting harm on the subjects of the screening.



Trade Review

In this interesting and eloquent book on the ethics of screening for psychopathic employees, Brian Stevenson provides a comprehensive and very useful examination of the complex, and sometimes conflicting, moral and legal issues involved.

-- Clive Boddy, author of Corporate Psychopath: Organizational Destroyers and A Climate of Fear: Stone Cold Psychopaths at Work

Professor Steverson not only offers one of the first genuinely philosophical treatments of psychopathy in the workplace. He strikes a bold blow for disability rights by arguing that employment screening for psychopathy is unethical. This book certainly made me think, and it should give human resources professionals serious pause.

-- Daryl Koehn, DePaul University

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter One: Psychopathy Defined

Chapter Two: Corporate Psychopaths: Seek and Destroy

Chapter Three: Psychopathy and the Americans with Disabilities Act

Chapter Four: The Ethical Issues

Conclusion

Bibliography

About the Author

The Ethics of Employment Screening for

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    A Hardback by Brian K. Steverson

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      View other formats and editions of The Ethics of Employment Screening for by Brian K. Steverson

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 14/10/2020
      ISBN13: 9781793616821, 978-1793616821
      ISBN10: 1793616825

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In 2006, Babiak and Hare alerted the public to the danger of “corporate psychopaths,” psychopathic individuals occupying positions of power in business organizations. Since then, academicians and the public media have advertised their presence, documented the harm they can cause, and issued a call to arms to identify corporate psychopaths and eliminate their presence in the workplace. Very little attention has been paid, however, to the ethics of such a “seek and destroy” mission. The Ethics of Employment Screening for Psychopathy argues that employment screening for psychopathy would be illegal and unethical. On legal grounds, Brian K Steverson argues that psychopathy would qualify as a protected disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act, and, hence, medical screening to identify potential corporate psychopaths would be in violation of the ADA. On ethical grounds, the case is made that such screening would violate a social commitment to equal opportunity, would constitute a morally unjustified violation of personal privacy, and would, in practice, not produce the intended benefits, while at the same time inflicting harm on the subjects of the screening.



      Trade Review

      In this interesting and eloquent book on the ethics of screening for psychopathic employees, Brian Stevenson provides a comprehensive and very useful examination of the complex, and sometimes conflicting, moral and legal issues involved.

      -- Clive Boddy, author of Corporate Psychopath: Organizational Destroyers and A Climate of Fear: Stone Cold Psychopaths at Work

      Professor Steverson not only offers one of the first genuinely philosophical treatments of psychopathy in the workplace. He strikes a bold blow for disability rights by arguing that employment screening for psychopathy is unethical. This book certainly made me think, and it should give human resources professionals serious pause.

      -- Daryl Koehn, DePaul University

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      Chapter One: Psychopathy Defined

      Chapter Two: Corporate Psychopaths: Seek and Destroy

      Chapter Three: Psychopathy and the Americans with Disabilities Act

      Chapter Four: The Ethical Issues

      Conclusion

      Bibliography

      About the Author

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