Ethics in Higher Education: Values-driven Leaders for the Future

(Romina) #1
Universities, Cultural Diversity and Global Ethics 87


  • Top-down moralizing is fatal to an ethics project; instead it is
    essential to appeal to and involve the ethical strengths and
    experiences of the members of the university on a voluntary,
    respectful basis.

  • All parts of the organization must be involved, including the
    leadership.
    With these principles to guide the implementation of the ethics
    project envisaged in this chapter, here are practical steps that can be
    taken.



  1. Constitute and authorize a task group with ethical and related
    expertise

  2. to drive and manage the process under a respected leader.

  3. Invite and enable all members to participate in discussing and
    defining the core ethical values and ethical nature of their
    institution, e.g. by means of sending inputs to the task group in
    response to drafts created by the task group. The drafts are then
    revised and a second version is sent to members.

  4. Develop a careful, academically and ethically sound method of
    fostering moral motivation – i.e. the will to do the right thing at
    all times and communicate this to all members of the
    institution. A way to do this is summarized in the next
    paragraph.
    From human brain science we learn that there are powerful structures
    in the brain-stem, the limbic system and hippocampus which drive (but
    do not coerce) us to actions that keep us alive and help us thrive, such as
    our pleasure, memory and feeling centres (Ashbrook and Albright 1997:
    78-84). Uncontrolled by conscience, they easily lead to selfishness and
    even violence by those equipped to use it. A realistic institution must
    recognize this reality and curb its harmful potential by understanding the
    following. Policing, metaphorically understood as that which protects

Free download pdf