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Codes of conduct: managing the contradictions between local and corporate norms

Gregor Halff (Lee Kong Chian School of Business, Singapore Management University, Singapore)

Journal of Communication Management

ISSN: 1363-254X

Article publication date: 16 November 2010

1286

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to find out whether, which and how international corporations use their codes of conduct to guide employees double‐bound by contradicting cultural norms.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper draws on integrative social contracts theory to content‐analyse the codes of conduct of the “Fortune Global 500” and the “UNCTAD 100”.

Findings

The vast majority of international corporations' codes either does not acknowledge contradictions between equally binding norms, or lacks priority rules for employees to resolve them. Nonetheless, several codes of conduct describe how norms might contradict, give clear priority to one set of norms (local or corporate) and provide specific examples to employees of when and how to apply a priority rule.

Practical implications

The paper identifies the 33 codes of conduct which can serve as best practices for international corporations' employee and corporate communication.

Originality/value

Contradictions between cultural norms are unacknowledged or unresolved in communication practice and little explored in corporate communication research. This paper assesses the scope of this caveat in communication practice and offers solutions in the form of an existing normative theory and of newly identified best practices.

Keywords

Citation

Halff, G. (2010), "Codes of conduct: managing the contradictions between local and corporate norms", Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 14 No. 4, pp. 356-367. https://doi.org/10.1108/13632541011090455

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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