Responsibility and Accountability: Thomas Bivins
Responsibility and Accountability: Thomas Bivins
Responsibility and Accountability: Thomas Bivins
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Responsibility and Accountability
Thomas Bivins
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Bivins——21
It is [also] a readiness to have one’s actions judged by others and, where appro-
priate, accept responsibility for errors, misjudgments and negligence and
recognition for competence, conscientiousness, excellence and wisdom. It is a
preparedness to change in the light of improved understanding gained from
others.4
The simplest formula is that a person can be held accountable if (1) the
person is functionally and/or morally responsible for an action, (2) some
harm occurred due to that action, and (3) the responsible person had no
legitimate excuse for the action. Ideally, the assumption would then be to
hold a person who is responsible for an action also accountable for the
results of that action. That, however, may not always be the case.
This position assumes that the responsible person is relatively autono-
mous, or free to make decisions associated with his or her job without
outside pressure or influence. And, under normal circumstances, one would
hope that public relations practitioners would have that autonomy. However,
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accountable for his or her actions. “A responsible being is a being who can
make choices according to his or her own insights. He or she is not under
the control of others.”9
On the other hand, the accountable actor is “held to external oversight,
regulation, and mechanisms of punishment aimed to externally motivate
responsive adjustment in order to maintain adherence with appropriate
moral standards of action.”10 This responsible-/accountable-actor model
assumes a dichotomy in which responsible actors, because of moral matu-
rity, are capable of self-motivation in their responsive adjustments for
actions they have performed, while accountable actors must rely on external
pressure (blame or credit) for this adjustment. This is similar to the “conse-
quentialist” versus “merit” positions on moral responsibility. The conse-
quentialist view holds that the actions of moral agents can be influenced by
outward expressions of praise or blame in order to affect certain behaviors
(accountable actors), while the merit view assumes moral agents can and do
recognize their choices and make their own decisions (responsible actors).11
The theory of the accountable actor uses what might be termed a behav-
iorist approach, which seems to suggest that people are motivated and
shaped by forces external to themselves. Certainly people are motivated, at
least in part, by rewards and punishments; however, even those considered
accountable rather than responsible actors generally have a developed moral
sense and a fair idea of social conventions and moral principles. The prob-
lem arises when people are affected by forces beyond their control, forces
that may even affect the level at which they reason. As philosopher and ethi-
cist Kevin Gibson points out, “Indeed, in the presence of some external
factors, individuals may not actively reason at all, but work according to
habit or obedience without a thought.”12
So, in addition to responsible actors being imbued with the ability and
the freedom to make self-regulating decisions, they are also able to motivate
(free of outside pressure) their own responsive adjustments to situations in
which their decisions have had an impact. This is what separates them from
accountable actors, who must rely on external oversight for motivation to
respond and adjust. However, while this scenario may be appealing in
theory, the ability to respond based entirely on self-motivation (or auto-
nomy) is also limited by role and environment.
Bivins——25
Bivins——27
During this stage, the public relations professional may apply any of
several applicable ethical theories to the proposed act in order to determine
if the act itself (means) and the outcome (ends) are morally responsible.
Deontologically (dealing with the means), several standards may be applied,
including a determination of the legality of the act (whether it violates
existing laws or applicable regulations), company procedures and policies
or organizational codes, and any codes or standards existing for the
profession—in this case, the Public Relations Society of America’s Code of
Ethics. Although this procedure will merely provide professionals with
guidelines, assuming that all that is legally or professionally permissible may
not be ethically permissible, these will at least allow them to advance to
succeeding evaluative stages.
Teleologically (dealing with the consequences, or ends), public relations
professionals may apply standard cost-benefit analysis to the issue, deter-
mining the potential financial consequences of the act to the client and
the affected third parties. Beyond these monetary considerations, they may
attempt to determine societal effects. If, after such applications, profession-
als determine that the act itself, the intent of the act, and the potential
consequences of the act are morally acceptable, then they may proceed with
a clear conscience to the succeeding “subjective” stages of advocacy. From
this point on, the objective, professional public relations counselor may
become the subjective, professional public relations advocate.
Thus, the requirements of subjective advocacy may be honorably met
only after the ethical requirements of objective counseling are met. To insin-
uate that advocacy may take place without a predetermination of the moral-
ity of the issue being decided upon is to subscribe to the ideology of advocacy
that W.H. Simon denounces. For the truly professional public relations prac-
titioner, the order of decision making is all-important, because responsibi-
lities differ as roles shift from counseling to advocacy, as does attendant
accountability.
Public relations professionals must first work from the framework of a
fiduciary model of the client-professional relationship in which autonomy is,
more or less, equally divided between the contracted parties (responsibility
and accountability are shared). They must then undertake to determine
objectively the ethicality of the action being proposed, considering both
means and ends. Only when the morality of the action has been determined
should the advisor become the advocate, acting subjectively in the client’s
exclusive interest, but with responsibility and accountability shifting to weigh
more heavily on the professional. Even then, considerable attention needs to
be given to the morality of the message itself and to the techniques by which
it is to be disseminated. This ordering of stages from the objective to the
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excuse—one can say that the person deserves blame.”33 In fact, it’s only
when a person has a good excuse that we tend not to hold him accountable,
and Stern suggests that a recognition of the moral excuses common in every-
day life tends to minimize the overall harm of the act itself.34 Of course, there
are good excuses and there are bad excuses. Among the excuses people tend
to identify as not legitimate are those most often associated with external
factors and the dilution of responsibility, frequently a result of organiza-
tional hierarchy. As Gibson points out,
[I]t is important to consider the types of external factors that may influence our
individual choices when we are faced with ethical dilemmas. Simple awareness
of their existence and the ways in which they exert influence on our behaviors
may be enough to lessen their power.35
Bivins——33
that “military members can be held accountable for crimes committed under
the guise of ‘obeying orders,’ and there is no requirement to obey orders
which are unlawful.”37
In other words, claiming ignorance of the immorality of the order doesn’t
excuse us from moral accountability. People are individually responsible
regardless of orders. As Gibson notes, “Ultimately we must take personal
responsibility for our acts, and cannot shrug them off as inevitable or by
saying that we are mere instruments of others’ will.” The scholars Deni Elliot
and Paul Lester agree, pointing out that “as long as you are free to act in a
voluntary or autonomous way, moral responsibility for your actions are not
transferable to someone else. Your boss can take away your job, but not
your moral agency.”38
It was my job. Professionals commonly justify their actions by appeal
to the requirements of their professional roles. In his book Ethics for
Adversaries, Harvard professor Arthur Applbaum describes an official who
was an executioner for the French government. He accepted without ques-
tion the functional responsibility of his role, and discharged it with great
alacrity. However, he never once questioned the moral legitimacy of his role
nor the propriety of the executions themselves.39
It is not unusual for public relations professionals, for example, to claim
that they are acting within legal bounds on behalf of clients on whom they
refuse to pass moral judgment (the “ideology of advocacy”). It is, after all,
their job to serve the client’s wishes competently with all their professional
expertise being brought to bear on the issue. As noted earlier, however, blind
obedience to another’s wishes is not an excuse for unethical action, especially
by professionals who have a responsibility to more than just a client. This is
also why most professions have a code of ethics: to ensure that members are
clear on what the profession expects of them outside client interests.
When less-than-ethical tactics are used to serve a client’s purpose, the
excuse is often that it is the job of the public relations professional to serve
that interest “zealously.” The public relations firm of Hill and Knowlton
used questionable tactics on behalf of Kuwait during the first Gulf War, a
clear example of this category.
Everybody’s doing it. This is a formulation of what is called “ethical
relativism,” which states, among other things, that whatever the group you
belong to says is right is probably right. Human beings possess a natural
tendency to conform to the group. Just look around and observe what others
are wearing. How close in style is it to what you are wearing? At its worst,
this tendency to conform can lead to a shirking of individual moral respon-
sibility, or even a lack of recognition that such a thing exists. A poor record
on protecting whistle-blowers doesn’t help in this area either.
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It’s not my problem. The poet John Dunne once famously observed
that “no man is an island.” Individuals are responsible for their actions, or
inactions, and their effect on others. Each hand that contributes to a chain
of corruption within an organization helps forge a link of that chain. Even
if we are not directly in the line of responsibility, there may be times when
an issue is important enough to act on a broader moral obligation.
Public relations professionals are also bound by an obligation to third
parties, their profession as a whole, and to themselves to preserve their own
integrity. Remember, you may be painted with the same broad brush of
dishonor as those you work for, even if you weren’t directly responsible.
No one else knew. As ethicist Deni Elliot says, “Ethics is a first person
activity.” You know when you’ve done something wrong. You know if the
people you work for are doing something wrong or are hiding a misdeed. As
least you ought to know, especially if you are working in public relations.
No matter what your standing within the hierarchy, you have a responsibil-
ity to your own integrity, regardless of who else knows.
Bivins——37
needed to comply hasn’t been fully developed yet. The company cannot be
held accountable for noncompliance until the technology is ready to go on
line (as long as the company is attempting to comply in a timely fashion).
Uncontrollable circumstances or, as we usually say, “circumstances beyond
our control,” is the third area of constraint-as-excuse. For example, if a
person fails to make an important meeting because her flight was canceled,
others can excuse her—even though they might be put out by the delay.
Remember, however, that causal theory holds people blameless only if
their actions were truly beyond their control. If you miss a meeting because
you were involved in an accident (your car was hit by someone running a
stop sign), you can be held blameless. However, if you are the person who
ran the stop sign, you are to blame—both for the accident and for missing
the meeting.
Internal compulsion. The law holds, and most people agree, that some
actions are caused by inner compulsion. This is actually another version of
constraint, except that is not caused externally. For example, the law recog-
nizes as legitimate such excuses as kleptomania (a compulsion to steal),
pyromania (a compulsion to set fires), and some types of addictions (gam-
bling, eating, etc.) not caused physically as are drug or tobacco addiction.
While this particular category of excuses may not totally satisfy, people do
tend to accept them as valid.
The point is that excuses are defenses against either having to take res-
ponsibility for an action or being blamed unjustly for an action. The former
defenses are typically referred to as bad excuses, the latter as good excuses.
Ultimately, excuses are reasons and are based on the rational ability of those
in a position to judge to decide on the level of accountability. Excuses miti-
gate harm, but they do not erase it.
Personal Accountability
Although the various roles of public relations carry with them distinctly
different sets of obligations, they have in common the overriding obligation
to perform within an accepted moral framework. That framework may be
provided by the profession (as a code of professional standards), by the orga-
nization for which a practitioner works (as a corporate code or simply by the
corporate culture itself), or by personal ethical standards. Each of these plays
a part in creating the moral ground from which a true professional makes
decisions.
The degree of autonomy changes with the various roles and the environ-
ment in which public relations is practiced, greatly affecting accountability.
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Chapter 2
1. Vincent E. Barry, Moral Issues in Business (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1979).
2. Will Barrett, “Responsibility, Accountability and Corporate Activity,” Online
Opinion: Australia’s E-journal of Social and Political Debate, August 25, 2004,
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/print.asp?article=2480#.
3. Bernard Gert, Morality: A New Justification of the Moral Rules (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1988), 214–15. Gert prefers to use credit instead of praise, as
some others hold, since it is the proper opposite of blame as a “responsibility standard”;
whereas praise and its opposite, condemnation, are considered to be moral standards.
4. Geoff Hunt, “Accountability,” http://www.freedomtocare.org/.
5. John Christman, “Autonomy in Moral and Political Philosophy,” in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ed. Edward N. Zalta (Fall 2003), http://plato
.stanford.edu/entries/autonomy-moral/.
6. Mitchell R. Haney, “Corporate Loss of Innocence for the Sake of
Accountability,” Journal of Social Philosophy, 35, no. 3 (Fall 2004): 406.
7. Haney, “Corporate Loss of Innoncence,” 407.
8. Christman, Autonomy.
9. Norman Bowie, Business Ethics (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1982),
95–96.
10. Bowie, Business Ethics.
11. Gary Watson, “Two Faces of Responsibility,” Philosophical Topics 24
(1996): 227–48.
12. Kevin Gibson, “Excuses, Excuses: Moral Slippage in the Workplace,”
Business Horizons 43, no. 6 (2000): 65–72.
13. Much of this part of the discussion is based on Thomas H. Bivins, “Ethical
Implications of the Relationship of Purpose to Role and Function in Public
Relations,” Journal of Business Ethics, Spring 1989; and “Professional Advocacy in
Public Relations: Ethical Considerations,” Business and Professional Ethics Journal,
Summer 1989.
14. Hunt, “Accountability.”
15. Michael D. Bayles, Professional Ethics, 2nd ed. (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth,
1989).
16. William H. Simon, “The Ideology of Advocacy: Procedural Justice and
Professional Ethics,” Wisconsin Law Review, 1978:29–144. For a discussion of
Simon’s argument, see Bayles, Professional Ethics, 62–63.
17. Simon, “Ideology of Advocacy,” 131.
18. Bayles, Professional Ethics, 72.
19. Dorothy Emmet, Rules, Roles, and Relations (Boston: Beacon Press, 1996), 15.
20. Bivins, “Professional Advocacy.”
21. Bayles, Professional Ethics, 68–70.
22. Bayles, Professional Ethics, 69.
23. Barrett, “Responsibility, Accountability and Corporate Activity.”
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