1. The Perceptions of Ethical and Sustainable Leadership. McCann & Sweet
    1. First introduction of sustainable leadership
    2. Sustainable leadership definition McCann & Holt
    3. Brundtland commission definition
    4. The triple bottom line
    5. Ethical leadership definitions
  2. The sweatshop issue (Rana Plasa)
    1. Ultimately driven by the consumer, or the retailers' pandering attitude to the consumer.
    2. 'Give the customers what they want' is preposterous, and not sustainable.
    3. What about 'give the customers what they NEED?'
    4. We exploit countries that are in earlier stages of development than ourselves.
    5. How do you bring home the responsibility?
  3. The relevance of Thomas Aquinas’ moral philosophy for business management. Maciej Bazela, Ph.D.
    1. 'government regulation and self-regulating market mechanisms cannot prevent ethical wrongdoing'
    2. 'On the other hand, companies which care about ethically good management tend to enjoy higher profits, better productivity, lower employee turnover and other benefits'
    3. Money itself is a means that man has invented ‘for the convenience of exchange, and as a measure of things salable’ (ST, I-II, 2.1). Man seeks material possessions and money to procure for himself ‘the necessaries of life’.
    4. Money is an economic means, and not an end in itself. The purpose of money is to facilitate market exchange.
  4. Ethics
    1. Deontological
    2. Consequentialist
    3. Virtue ethics
    4. Aquinas bridges these
  5. Economics
    1. Friedman