Spinello, "Steps for Ethical Analysis"
Notable for giving a role to moral intuition, and for considering policy implications
SOURCE FOR THE PROCEDURE
Spinello, Richard A. "Frameworks for Ethical Analysis." Case Studies in Information and Computer Ethics. Upper Saddle River: Prentice-Hall, 1997: 22-50.
THE PROCEDURE ITSELF
- Identify and formulate the basic ethical issues in each case.
- Are there also legal issues?
- Is there a conflict between law and morality?
- What does your moral intuition say about the action or policy under consideration?
- What are your first impressions or reactions to these issues?
- Is it right or wrong?
- Consult the appropriate formal guidelines.
- Consider corporate codes of conduct.
- Consider professional codes of conduct.
- Analyze the issues from the viewpoint of one or more of the ethical theories (consequentialism, pluralism, contractarianism).
- Do these ethical theories point to one decision or course of action?
- If yes, continue with next step.
- If no, which principle or avenue of reasoning should take precedence?
- What is your normative conclusion about the case?
- What should be the organization's course of action?
- What should be the individual's course of action?
- What are the public policy implications of this case and your normative conclusion?
- Should the recommended behavior be required by law?
- Should the recommended behavior be enforced by policy or regulations?
WALT'S CHECKLIST
The same checklist was applied to all procedures.
- This method is most useful when the DECISION-MAKER ...
- has a working knowledge of several ethical theories [step 4]
- has high initial sensitivity to relevant ethical "features" [step 2]
- has plenty of time for investigation and analysis [steps 4 and 5]
- is skilled in causal or consequential reasoning [step 4]
- is skilled in conflict- or dilemma-resolution methods [step 5b]
- is skilled in the application of general ethical principles to specific cases [step 4]
- This method is most useful in a SITUATION ...
- that will change little over time
- This method is most useful when STAKEHOLDERS ...
- share ethical codes or policies [step 3]
- share ethical principles [step 4]