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How misconduct in business contributes to understanding the supply side of corruption in international business

Myriam Ertz (Department of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi, Chicoutimi, Canada)
Fahri Karakas (Norwich Business School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK)
Frederick Stapenhurst (School of Continuing Studies, McGill University, Montreal, Canada)
Rasheed Draman (African Centre for Parliamentary Affairs, Accra, Ghana)
Emine Sarigöllü (Desaultels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Canada)
Myung-Soo Jo (Desaultels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Canada)

Critical Perspectives on International Business

ISSN: 1742-2043

Article publication date: 25 October 2019

Issue publication date: 22 May 2020

653

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to offer a better understanding of supply side of bribery and corruption in an international business perspective by conceptualizing it in the narrower concept of misconduct in business (MIB) derived from the deontological perspective to business ethics.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use a case study methodology of professionals working within Canadian mining multinational corporations operating in Africa. The authors conducted 2 focus groups, 25 in-depth interviews, document search and an open-ended questionnaire to 15 professionals. Further, they drew on a combination of the classic relationalist sociological framework and its recent revision, that they named the relationalism-substantialism framework to analyze the data.

Findings

The triangulated empirical data show that the reason why MIB in the form of bribery supply occurs is not exclusively tied to any given perspective, whether the individual, the organization or the wider societal context. Rather, these different layers are tightly intertwined and interact with each other for the supply of bribery to occur.

Originality/value

Although the three siloed perspectives of MIB have been studied in the literature, they have not been addressed in relation to one another, and even less with a relationalism-substantialism framework. Yet, this perspective contributes compellingly to the understanding of the supply side in bribery. The authors propose a net of conceptually related constructs that intervene in the process of bribery supply occurrence, namely relationality influenced by institutional dysfunctionality and conflation and substantiality through agency and culture.

Keywords

Citation

Ertz, M., Karakas, F., Stapenhurst, F., Draman, R., Sarigöllü, E. and Jo, M.-S. (2020), "How misconduct in business contributes to understanding the supply side of corruption in international business", Critical Perspectives on International Business, Vol. 16 No. 3, pp. 209-231. https://doi.org/10.1108/cpoib-09-2019-0067

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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