It was in the interest and happiness of the customers who needed enough supply of ice cream, the owner who needed to maximise profits and the employees who needed to be paid out of the firm’s profits, that my decision was made. 2.2 Literature Review: Whistleblowing The fall of Enron in 2002 among other cases stimulated public interest and support for whistleblowing. Enron’s questionable business activities were front-page news and so were the reports of public cynicism and disillusionment about corporate conduct.
Enron vice president Sherron S. Watkins was the whistleblower (Johnson 2010, p.18). Her testimony was the centrepiece of well-publicised congressional hearings. It was the public constituent anger and outrage over Enron that motivated scores of Congress members to start considering the whistleblower protection legislation for workers of publicly traded firms. The Enron case among other cases such as the Worldcom demonstrates the importance of whistleblowing and whistleblower protection. 2.2.
1 Special Features of Whistleblowing Whistleblowing is an incalculable tool in any firm’s corporate governance strategy. It empowers workers to act on occurrences of misconduct besides aiding in maintaining a safe workplace while protecting reputation and profits. Arszulowicz and Gasparski (2010) assert that whisteblowing occur when a worker or former work conveys information regarding a crucial moral problem to someone in a position to take action on the issue, and does so outside accepted organisational channels.
Whistleblowing hold several special characteristics and it can be anonymous or open. Anonymous whisteblowing takes place when someone takes whistleblowing action devoid of disclosing his/her identity. Firstly, the whistleblower is usually a former employee or current employee of an organisation. Being familiar with the organisation gives whistleblowers greater prospects to share pertinent information. Andrade (2015, p.321) supports this assertion and claim that the whistleblower is strongly part of the firm.
A whistleblower should be viewed as someone whose conducts constitute the very boundary of the firm, the ethical margin. Secondly, when an individual encounters serious ethical problems in which she/he believes are unjust, unethical or criminal conduct or issues threatening the public or individual safety, wellbeing, she/he will embark on an act of whistleblowing. Thirdly, there are two means for whistleblower to chose from one being that the whistleblower can transmit the pertinent information to a person outside or inside his/her organisation.
The whistleblower is confronted with great pressures and dangers, for instance, being transferred to another post, dismissed from the organisation or receive salary cut. Therefore, there enormous costs that come with whistleblowing. According to Andrade (2012, p.321), a whistleblower risks reprisals and retaliation by the organisation whose wrongdoing the whistleblower seeks to expose. Typically, the whistleblower has either been praised or scorned. The final characteristic involves that the recipient of whistleblowing is a group or person in a place to take action on the issues (MacGregor & Jason 2014, p.322). The whistleblower expects the recipient to resolve or affect the serious moral issues put forward.
According to Andrade (2015, p.322), one of the major aspects of whisteblowing process is to specify the person eligible as a recipient of a wrongdoing disclosure. Disclosure to an internal recipient is not usually perceived as being disloyal to the organisation. Apparently, internal disclosure allows the organisation to rectify its harmful deeds, policies or procedures before being charged in public. Nevertheless, if a firm does nothing to rectify the harms emanating from its actions, the whistleblower may feel the need to disclose the wrongdoings to a recipient outside the firm because of public interest.
Archambeault and Webber (2015, p.61) assert that there are programs aimed at encouraging external whistleblowing.
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