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11.27.2007 - 11:59pm ET
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Ethisphere Magazine Names 100 Most Influential People In Business Ethics For 2007
Elite List Recognizes Ethical Leadership Practices
(CSRwire) NEW YORK, NY - November 28, 2007 - Ethisphere Magazine, a global
print publication dedicated to illuminating the important correlation
between ethics and profit, will release its annual 100 Most Influential
People in Business Ethics. The list will be published in the Q4 issue,
available in December.
A panelist of ethics experts from major universities including New York
University, Pennsylvania State University, University of Delaware, and
Arizona State University, among others, submitted nominations and ranked
individuals who influenced ethical behavior in global business. Research
was conducted in cooperation with analysts from the Ethisphere Institute.
While hundreds of individuals were considered, ultimately only 100 made
the list and are ranked in order from 1 to 100 based upon relative
weightings provided by the panelists and analysts.
Some of the 100 most influential people include:
Gerald Grinstein, Retired CEO of Delta Airlines
Greg Farrell, USA Today Journalist and respected business author
Sir Terry Leahy, Chief Executive of Tesco
Al Gore, Nobel Laureate and Former Vice President of the United
States
H. Lee Scott Jr., President and CEO of Wal-Mart
"When examining individuals for their contributions in 2007, it was
important to us that we measured each person against the paradigm of
impacting profitable ethical leadership. For example, some influencers
made the list due to thought leadership and new ideas which contributed to
helping business understand opportunities or risks associated with ethical
business practices," said Ethisphere Editor Stefan Linssen.
"Others made the list because they changed corporate behavior through
regulatory enforcement, investment practices or as a result of
collaborative efforts to positively impact change," added Linssen, who
oversaw the project.
The 100 Most Influential individuals were indexed against the following
nine categories:
Government and Regulatory - Did the individual impact government
rules or enforcement trends?
Business Leadership - Did the individual substantially transform a
specific business’ operational practices consistent with profitable
ethical leadership, forcing competitors to follow suit or fall behind?
Non-Government Organization (NGO) - Did the individual impact a
company's (or industry's) practices through external, non-regulatory
leadership either through positive collaboration or negative publicity for
a positive end?
Design and Sustainability - Did the individual substantially
contribute to or lead a product or service redesign, which resulted in
less natural resource use, or increased consumer acceptance of
sustainability without diminishing the quality of the original product or
service?
Media and Whistleblowers - Did the individual raise awareness on a
critical issue or expose corruption?
Thought Leadership - Did the individual conceive of new approaches or
otherwise materially contribute to the field of business ethics theory in a
way that could be easily applied by corporate leaders?
Corporate Culture - Did the individual show success to transforming
the ethical culture and behavior of a corporation or institution,
particularly if such corporation or institution previously had less than
ethical culture and values system?
Investment and Research - Did the individual impact corporate
behavior through influencing investor decisions and the deployment of
investment capital due to this individual's research or institutional fund
management practices?
Legal and Governance - Did the individual impact any legal cases
which set the precedents in corporate compliance, or influence trends or
structure in effective corporate governance for public and/or private
companies?
The complete list of the 100 Most Influential People in Business Ethics
will be available online at http://ethisphere.com/influential/.
The Q4 issue will also feature "Amnesty - The Rush to Self Report," which
will detail the Department of Justice's apparent leniency towards
companies that admit guilt in price fixing scandals, as well as the
magazine's regular 'Global Compliance' section, which will focus on
conducting business in Israel.
Thought-provoking, informative, and at times irreverent, Ethisphere
Magazine offers insight to readers on gaining market share and creating
sustainable competitive advantage through ethical business practices and
corporate citizenship. With a circulation of 65,000 Board members, CEOs,
General Counsel, Chief Ethics and Compliance Officers and senior
executives, Ethisphere Magazine is the largest print publication in
compliance, ethics and corporate social responsibility.
About The Publisher
The research-based Ethisphere Institute and associated membership group,
the Ethisphere Council, are supported by more than 100 institutions and
corporations, including LexisNexis, the Practising Law Institute, the
National Association of Corporate Directors, the Global Reporting
Initiative, Corpedia, Deutsche Telekom, Time Warner, Avaya and Kraft. The
Institute is dedicated to the research, creation, and sharing of best
practices in ethics, compliance, and corporate governance among its
membership companies. It also focuses on the development and advancement
of individuals on its membership council through increased efficiency,
innovation, tools, mentoring, advice, and unique career opportunities.
Ethisphere
Magazine is the quarterly publication of the Institute. More
information on membership can be found at http://www.ethisphere.com.
**Note to editors: Full listing of 100 Most Influential People in Business
Ethics is available upon request.
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