Ethics and Morality in Sport Management, 2nd Ed. (Book)
Ethics and Morality in Sport Management represents a landmark effort to bring into focus the moral and ethical issues associated with the management of sport and sport organizations. Within a sport context Joy DeSensi and Danny Rosenberg have critically examined a view shared by virtually all business managers and scholars -- that ethics and morality in management is not only good for all concerned but a necessity in terms of the bottom line. -- Packianathan Chelladurai, Ohio State University Author/Editor: Joy T. DeSensi, Danny Rosenberg Copyright: 2003 Binding: Hard Pages: 299 pp. Chapters include: Social Responsibility in Intercollegiate Athletic Programs National Athletic Trainer's Code of Professional Practice Considerations for a Moral Future in Sport Management Definitions and Clarity in Language Usage The Concept of Rights Moral Reasoning Ethical Decision Making in Marketing Ethical and Moral Concerns in Sport Management Ethical Considerations and Functions of Sport Managers At-Will Hiring and Affirmative Action The American With Disabilities Act Pluralism and Selecting a Theory Human Resource Management Rules in Sport Competition Decision-Making Styles The Spectator/Fan International Sport Theories of Justice Utilitarianism The Media Tort Law Governance Misconduct Joy T. DeSensi, Ed.D. earned her doctoral degree at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She is currently Professor and Department Head in the Sport and Leisure Studies Department at The University of Tennessee. Her research interests include the areas of gender, race, and ethnicity in sport, women in sport, multiculturalism and ethics in sport management. She has made numerous state, district, national and international presentations and is the author and coauthor of book chapters and articles that appear in Quest , the Journal of Sport Management and the Journal of Physical Education, Recreation and Dance . She has served on the editorial boards of scholarly journals, as the editor of the Journal of Sport Management , and is the current editor of Quest . She is a founding member of the North American Society for Sport Management and has served as the President of the Southern Academy of Women in Physical Activity, Sport and Health, the Philosophic Society for the Study of Sport, and the National Association for Physical Education in Higher Education. Her professional recognitions include distinguished alumna awards from the University of Memphis and The University


