Flowchart

U. S. Department of Defense, "Ethical Decision-making Plan"

award Notable for emerging from a source not famous for its ethics, and for eliminating solutions with short-term advantages but long-term problems

SOURCE FOR THE PROCEDURE

indentUnited States Department of Defense. "Joint Ethics Regulation DoD 5500.7-R." 1999. http://www.defenselink.mil/dodgc/defense_ethics/ethics_regulation/jer1-4.doc (10 Jun. 1999).

THE PROCEDURE ITSELF

Disclaimer
  1. Define the problem.
    1. State the problem in general terms.
    2. State the decisions to be made.
  2. Identify the goals.
    1. State short-term goals.
    2. State long-term goals.
  3. List appropriate laws or regulations.
  4. List the ethical values at stake.
  5. Name all the stakeholders.
    1. Identify persons who are likely to be affected by a decision.
    2. List what is at stake for each stakeholder.
  6. Gather additional information.
    1. Take time to gather all necessary information.
    2. Ask questions.
    3. Demand proof when appropriate.
    4. Check your assumptions.
  7. State all feasible solutions.
    1. List solutions that have already surfaced.
    2. Produce additional solutions by brainstorming with associates.
    3. Note how stakeholders can be affected (loss or gain) by each solution.
  8. Eliminate unethical options.
    1. Eliminate solutions that are clearly unethical.
    2. Eliminate solutions with short-term advantages but long-term problems.
  9. Rank the remaining options according to how close they bring you to your goal, and solve the problem.
  10. Commit to and implement the best ethical solution.

WALT'S CHECKLIST

The same checklist was applied to all procedures.
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