Organizational Culture, Professional Ethics and Guantanamo. Organizational Culture, Professional Ethics and Guantanamo.

Organizational Culture, Professional Ethics and Guantanamo‪.‬

Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 2009, Winter, 42, 1-2

    • 79,00 Kč
    • 79,00 Kč

Publisher Description

In this essay I draw attention to the intersection between the social scientific literature on organizational culture and the legal ethics literature. Drawing from the organizational theory literature I detail a framework for assessing organizational culture and explain how organizational culture reflects more than rules and structure within an organization, but rather represents deeper values, practices, and ways of thinking. While organizational culture is difficult to change, it can be modified or sustained through power, status, rewards, and other mechanisms. After establishing a baseline for assessing organizational culture I highlight efforts by the Bush administration to exercise control over a military culture which was resistant to the administration's legal policy initiatives. This effort at control manifested itself in the creation of the military commissions in 2001, an attempt to minimize the influence of military attorneys in 2003, and efforts to exercise political control over military commissions in 2006; each effort was successfully resisted by members of the military. I conclude by observing that the literature on organizational culture can provide insights into the literature on legal ethics and political control of the military specifically and political control of bureaucracies more generally. I. INTRODUCTION

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2009
22 December
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
45
Pages
PUBLISHER
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
SIZE
311.4
KB

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