2 or more paragraphs Discussion
Mental Models, Moral Imagination and System Thinking in the Age of Globalization Patricia H. Werhane
ABSTRACT. After experiments with various economic
systems, we appear to have conceded, to misquote
Winston Churchill that free enterprise is the worst
economic system, except all the others that have been
tried. Affirming that conclusion, I shall argue that in
today?s expanding global economy, we need to revisit our mind-sets about corporate governance and leadership to
fit what will be new kinds of free enterprise. The aim is to
develop a values-based model for corporate governance in
this age of globalization that will be appropriate in a
variety of challenging cultural and economic settings. I
shall present an analysis of mental models from a social
constructivist perspective. I shall then develop the notion
of moral imagination as one way to revisit traditional
mind-sets about values-based corporate governance and
outline what I mean by systems thinking. I shall conclude
with examples for modeling corporate governance in
multi-cultural settings and draw tentative conclusions
about globalization.
KEY WORDS: corporate governance, free enterprise,
globalization, mental models, moral imagination
Introduction1
After experiments with various economic systems,
we appear to have conceded, to misquote Winston
Churchill that free enterprise is the worst eco-
nomic system, except all the others that have been
tried.2 Affirming that conclusion, I shall argue
that in today?s expanding global economy, we need to revisit our mind-sets about corporate
governance and leadership to fit what will be new
kinds of free enterprise. The aim is to develop a
values-based model for corporate governance in
this age of globalization that will be appropriate in
a variety of challenging cultural and economic
settings.
In what follows I shall begin with an analysis of
mental models from a social constructivist perspec-
tive. I shall then develop the notion of moral
imagination as one way to revisit traditional mind-
sets about values-based corporate governance and
outline what I mean by systems thinking. I shall
conclude with examples for modeling corporate
governance in multi-cultural settings and draw ten-
tative conclusions about globalization.
Mental models, mind-sets, and social
constructivism
Although the term is not always clearly defined, the
term, mental model? or mind-set? connotes the idea that human beings have mental representations,
cognitive frames, or mental pictures of their expe-
riences, representations that model the stimuli or
data with which they are interacting, and these
are frameworks that set up parameters though
which experience or a certain set of experiences, is
Patricia H. Werhane is the Wicklander Chair of Business Ethics
and Director of the Institute for Business and Professional
Ethics at DePaul University with a joint appointment as the
Peter and Adeline Ruffin Professor of Business Ethics in the
Darden School at the University of Virginia. Professor
Werhane has published numerous articles and is the author or
editor of twenty books including Persons, Rights and Cor-
porations, Adam Smith and His Legacy for Modern Capi-
talism, Moral Imagination and Managerial Decision-Making
with Oxford University Press and Employment and Em-
ployee Rights (with Tara J. Radin and Norman Bowie) with
Blackwell?s. She is the founder and former Editor-in-Chief of Business Ethics Quarterly, the journal of the Society for
Business Ethics.
Journal of Business Ethics (2008) 78:463474 ? Springer 2007 DOI 10.1007/s10551-006-9338-4
organized or filtered (Gentner and Whitley, 1997,
pp. 210211; Gorman, 1992; Senge, 1990, Chapter
10; Werhane, 1999).
Mental models might be hypothetical constructs
of the experience in question or scientific theories,
they might be schema that frame the experience,
through which individuals process information,
conduct experiments, and formulate theories.
Mental models function as selective mechanisms and
filters for dealing with experience. In focussing,
framing, organizing, and ordering what we experi-
ence, mental models bracket and leave out data, and
emotional and motivational foci taint or color
experience. Nevertheless, because schema we em-
ploy are socially learned and altered through reli-
gion, socialization, culture, educational upbringing,
and other experiences, they are shared ways of
perceiving, organizing, and learning.
Due to of the variety and diversity of mental
models, none is complete, and there are multiple
possible framings of any given situation (Johnson,
1993; Werhane, 1999). By that we mean that each of
us can frame any situation, event, or phenomenon in
more than one way, and that same phenomenon can
also be socially constructed in a variety of ways. It
will turn out that the way one frames a situation is
critical to its outcome, because [t]here are…differ-
ent moral consequences depending on the way we
frame the situation, (Johnson, 1993).
Our views of the world, of ourselves, of our
culture and traditions and even our values orienta-
tion are constructions all experiences are framed
ordered and organized from particular points of
view. These points of view or mental models are
socially learned, they are incomplete, sometimes
distorted, narrow, single-framed. Since they are
learned they are changeable, revisable, etc. But all
experience is modeled whatever our experiences
are about their content cannot be separated from
the ways we frame that content.
Mental models, as Peter Senge carefully reminds
us, (Senge, 1990) function on the organizational and
systemic levels as well as in individual cognition.
Sometimes, then, we are trapped within an organi-
zational culture that creates mental habits that pre-
clude creative thinking. Similarly a political
economy can be trapped in its vision of itself and the
world in ways that preclude change on this more
systemic level.3 Let me illustrate.
Mental models in the age of Wal-Mart: The
Wal-Mart Paradox (Waddock, 2006)
Wal-Mart is the largest retailer in the world. Last
year its revenues were 2.13 billion dollars, and it
employs 1.8 million people. Its stores are located
across the United States and now in many parts of
the world. Its mission is Always low prices AL-
WAYS. It has enormous stores many of which now
include food supermarkets, it has extremely low
prices, often forcing competition out of business, it
has good quality merchandise and of course, there is
the unparalleled customer convenience of finding
almost everything at one location (Fishman, 2006).
The company is a publicly traded corporation. It
has been very successful and almost every pension
fund in America includes in its portfolio Wal-Mart
stock. It is the darling? of Wall Street and conser- vatives, according to a recent article in Business Week
(2004). Wal-Mart provides much-needed local jobs.
In a recent store opening on the South side of
Chicago, for example, 25,000 applications vied for
325 positions (Smith, 2006). It has recently instituted
health care coverage for long-term part-time
employees who can afford the $11/month. Unfor-
tunately, however, most part-time employees cannot
afford the health care, and many Wal-Mart
employees, paid under the poverty level, are also on
Medicaid. The new CEO, Lee Scott, has developed
environmentally sustainable initiatives aimed at sell-
ing food that is organically grown, fish that are
reproducible, and the company is focussing on sell-
ing a variety of products that are in various ways
green?. Wal-Mart is well-known in other respects. Where
there are Wal-Mart stores, often small shops, who
ordinarily cannot compete with its low prices, are
forced out of business. Moreover, none of Wal-
Mart?s stores are unionized; Wal-Mart forbids unions in its stores, and works to prevent them in its sup-
plier organizations. In the recent past it has had
problems with the treatment of some of its
employees, and in some locations employees have
been denied bathroom and lunch breaks and worked
over 80 hours per week. Most interesting, despite its
new focus on environmental sustainability, much of
Wal-Mart?s merchandise, and almost all its apparel, is manufactured off-shore, by companies under con-
tract with but not owned by Wal-Mart, often under
464 Patricia H. Werhane
extremely horrifying sweatshop conditions. (By the
term sweatshop? I meant a factory that does not meet minimum working standards in the country in
which it is operating, e.g., by working employees
long hours without overtime pay, paying under
minimum wage, not following minimum standards
for ventilation, lunch rooms, restrooms, maternity
leave, days off, etc. as mandated in the country in
which the factory operates (Arnold and Hartman,
2005).4 Of course, Wal-Mart does not own any of
these operations (Fishman, 2006; Waddock, 2006).
Linking this description back to the analysis of
mental models, the way one approaches Wal-Mart
and measures it successes and/or failures frames one?s conclusions about its moral successes and failures.
For example, if one concludes that customer satis-
faction and shareholder value are primary then Wal-
Mart is a great success. If one approaches Wal-Mart
from an environmental point of view, its new push
to become green? is clearly a very admirable initia- tive. Examining Wal-Mart using a standard stake-
holder map (Figure 1) one concludes that this
company creates value-added for a number of its
stakeholders, in fact, the majority: its executives,
customers, shareholders, and those in the commu-
nity worried about the environment. Figure 1, as a
model for dealing with ethical issues, places the
corporation, in the middle of the graphic. Our
mental model is partly constructed by the graphic, so
that our focus is first on the company, only sec-
ondarily on its stakeholders, despite, from a stake-
holder theory perspective, the claim that all
stakeholders, those who affect or are affected by the
company, have, or should have, equal claims on
value-added (Freeman, 2002).
On the other hand, if one is interested in
employees and the employees of Wal-Mart?s sup- pliers, who after all are people as well, one becomes
much more critical of Wal-Mart. If Wal-Mart is
contributing to a culture of welfare, and/or if its
goods are made under less that minimum working
conditions, then moral questions arise. Is this com-
pany creating harms that are not counterbalanced by
its value added in price, convenience, and share-
holder returns? Is the preoccupation with always
low prices…ALWAYS framing the company?s decision-making in such as way that employment
issues do not surface or surface sufficiently to be
adequately addressed in all instances? And what
happens to our mental models if we redraw the
stakeholder map with employees in the middle, or,
say, sweatshop workers in the middle? (Figure 2)
Now one cannot ignore the existence of these
workers, they are no longer on the periphery of
one?s focus, even if there is still a preoccupation with low prices. Moreover, while it is hard to wrap
one?s mental images around 1.8 million workers, if I tweak the graphic further and place the picture of a
Bangladeshi sweatshop worker in the middle, her
concrete presence begins to affect our thinking
about Wal-Mart?s anti-union global practices. In the Wal-Mart case, how we look at this situ-
ation, how we draw the maps, where we focus our
attention and preoccupations, our tradition and our
assumptions frame these scenarios. If I tweak the
maps, if I merely shift around the focus of the
stakeholder map and add a picture of a real person,
my frame is altered. Thus I have introduced
an element of moral imagination looking at a
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traM-laW
sremotsuC )em dna uoy(
traM-laW seitinummoC
sredloherahS gnidulcni( )su fo lla
traM-laW
Figure 1. Standard stakeholder map (Freeman, 2002).
traM-laW
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seeyolpmE
pohstaewS srekroW
sremotsuC )em dna uoy(
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Figure 2. Revised stakeholder map.
Mental Models, Moral Imagination and System Thinking 465
situation from a different and even more challenging
perspective.
Moral imagination and mental models
Moral imagination can be defined as …the ability to
discover, evaluate and act upon possibilities not
merely determined by a particular circumstance, or
limited by a set of operating mental models, or
merely framed by a set of rules (Werhane, 1999,
p. 93).
Thus moral imagination entails the ability to get
out of a particular mind-set or mental trap, and to
evaluate both that mind set or mental model and, in
some cases, its traps.
What, in detail does moral imagination include?
On the individual level, being morally imaginative
includes:
Self-reflection about oneself and one?s situa- tion.
Disengaging from and becoming aware of one?s situation, understanding the mental model or script dominating that situation, and envisioning possible moral conflicts or dilemmas that might arise in that con- text or as outcomes of the dominating scheme. Second,
Moral imagination entails the ability to imag- ine new possibilities. These possibilities incl-
ude those that are not context-dependent and
that might involve another mental model.
Third, moral imagination requires that one evaluate from a moral point of view both
the original context and its dominating men-
tal models, and the new possibilities one has
envisioned (Werhane, 1999, 2002a).
But how do we engage in this analysis while at the
same time taking into account situational peculiari-
ties, social context, and the system in which we are
embedded? How do we act in a morally reasonable
manner and trigger moral imagination? I think it is
possible to get at, understand, revise, and critique
our operative mental models, but only from another
perspective which itself is a set of mental models.
This shortcoming should not deter us, however,
since a critical perspective is essential if we are to get
out of our mental traps, in Wal-Mart?s case, the driving force of its cost-driven mission.
Looking at Wal-Mart, one begins with that mis-
sion. Then one tries to disengage from that mission
and ask, What?s going on here?? How does that mission affect all that we do and blind us to become
aware of other possibilities?
What mental models are at play?
What moral conflicts are operative?
What is left out or ignored, e.g., employees and
the workers in their supplier factories?
What are other, new possibilities?
Then one engages the productive imagination: What
are some alternatives that fit societal norms, corpo-
rate values, and personal ethics? Why do employees
matter? What is wrong with sweatshops in devel-
oping countries particularly in areas where there is
massive unemployment? Moreover, Wal-Mart does
not own any of these factories. So how could we
place responsibility for working conditions on
them? What are some alternatives that challenge the
status quo? Here again, redrawing one?s stakeholder map is invaluable. What happens to one?s thinking when I give a sweatshop worker a name and
face?? (Benhabib, 1992; McVea and Freeman, 2005). Figure 3 illustrates this kind of graphic. In the
center is a picture of a 14-year old Bangladeshi
sweatshop worker, whose average workweek is
80100 hours, under sub-human working conditions
traM-laW
traM-laW seitinummoC
dna sreilppuS sesihcnarFseeyolpmE
sremotsuC )em dna uoy(
sredloherahS )su fo lla gnidulcni(
Figure 3. Names and faces (McVea and Freeman,
2005).
466 Patricia H. Werhane
by Bangladesh legally mandated standards (National
Labor Committee, 2000, 2005).
Continuing the process of moral imagination, one
then engages in creative reflection and evaluation.
What are some other possibilities? What are other
values at stake besides low prices? How can we
change the operative mental models without losing
our focus on customer pricing and shareholder value?
Before we can use this model to present an
alternative to Wal-Mart thinking, we have to re-
mind ourselves that all of these individuals and
organizations engaged in the Wal-Mart phenome-
non are in interlocking networked relationships.
While it is true that moral imagination often
facilitates, rather than corrupts, moral judgment, the
temptation is to focus primarily on individuals and
individual moral judgments. But, I shall now sug-
gest, this is an oversight. Taking the lead from Susan
Wolf?s (1999) and Linda Emanuel?s (2000) work on systems thinking, and developing ideas from work
on mental models and moral imagination, I shall
argue that what is often missing in organizational
decision-making is a morally imaginative systemic
approach. Moral imagination is not merely a func-
tion of the individual imagination. Rather, moral
imagination operates on organizational and systemic
levels as well, again as a facilitative mechanism that
may encourage sounder moral thinking and moral
judgment.
Moral imagination and systems thinking5
A system is a complex of interacting components
together with the networks of relationships among
them that identify an entity and/or a set of processes
(Laszlo and Krippner, 1998, p. 51).
A truly systemic view considers how a set of
individuals, institutions, and processes operates in a
system involving a complex network of interrela-
tionships, an array of individual and institutional
actors with conflicting interests and goals, and a
number of feedback loops (Wolf, 1999).
A systems approach presupposes that most of our
thinking, experiencing, practices and institutions are
interrelated and interconnected. Almost everything
we can experience or think about is in a network of
interrelationships such that each element of a par-
ticular set of interrelationships affects some other
components of that set and the system itself, and
almost no phenomenon can be studied in isolation
from other relationships with at least some other
phenomenon.
Systems are connected in ways that may or may
not enhance the fulfillment of one or more goals or
purposes: they may be micro (small, self-contained
with few interconnections), mezzo (within health-
care organizations and corporations), or macro (large,
complex, consisting of a large number of intercon-
nections). Corporations and healthcare organizations
are mezzo-systems embedded in larger political,
economic, legal, and cultural systems. Global cor-
porations are embedded in many such systems. These
are all examples of complex adaptive systems?, a term used to describe open interactive systems that are able
to change themselves and affect change in their
interactions with other systems, and as a result are
sometimes unpredictable (Plsek, 2001). What is
characteristic of all types of systems is that any
phenomenon or set of phenomena that are defined as
part of a system has properties or characteristics
that are, altered, lost or at best, obscured, when the
system is broken down into components. For
example, in studying corporations, if one focusses
simply on its organizational structure, or merely on
its mission statement, or only on its employees or
customers, one obscures if not distorts the intercon-
nections and interrelationships that characterize and
affect that organization in its internal and external
relationships.
Since a system consists of networks of relation-
ships between individuals, groups, and institutions,
how any system is construed and, how it operates,
affects and is affected by individuals. The character
and operations of a particular system or set of systems
affects those of us who come in contact with the
system, whether we are individuals, the community,
professionals, managers, companies, religious com-
munities, or government agencies. An alteration of a
particular system or corporate operations within a
system (or globally, across systems) will often pro-
duce different kinds of outcomes. Thus part of moral
responsibility is incurred by the nature and charac-
teristics of the system in which a company operates
(Emanuel, 2000). For example, how Wal-Mart
contracts with its suppliers affects those suppliers and
their employees, as well as Wal-Mart?s customers and shareholders.
Mental Models, Moral Imagination and System Thinking 467
What companies and individuals functioning
within these systems focus on, their power and
influence, and the ways values and stakeholders are
prioritized affect their goals, procedures, and out-
comes as well as affecting the system in question. On
every level, the way individuals and corporations
frame the goals, the procedures and what networks
they take into account makes a difference in what is
discovered or neglected. These framing mechanisms
will turn out to be important normative influences
of systems and systems thinking (Werhane, 2002a).
Adopting a systems approach Mitroff and Lin-
stone in their book, The Unbounded Mind, argue that
any organizational action needs to be analyzed from
what they call a Multiple Perspective method. Such
a method postulates that any phenomenon, organi-
zation, or system or problems arising for or within
that phenomenon of system should be dealt with
from a variety of disparate perspectives, each of
which involves different world views where each
challenges the others in dynamic exchanges of
questions and ideas (Mitroff and Linstone, 1993,
Chapter 6). A multiple perspectives approach takes
into account the fact that each of us individually, or
as groups, organizations, or systems creates and
frames the world through a series of mental models,
each of which, by itself, is incomplete. While it is
probably never possible to take account all the net-
works of relationships involved in a particular sys-
tem, and surely never so given these systems interact
over time, a multiple perspectives approach forces us
to think more broadly, and to look at particular
systems or problems from different points of view.
This is crucial in trying to address the Wal-Mart
paradox. Since each perspective usually reveals in-
sights…that are not obtainable in principle from
others (Mitroff and Linstone, 1993, p. 98). It is also
invaluable in trying to understand other points of
view, even if, eventually one disagrees or takes an-
other tactic (Werhane, 2002a). So a multiple per-
spectives approach is, in part, a multiple stakeholder
approach, but with many configurations and
accountability lines. It is also an attempt to shake up
our traditional mind-sets without at the same time
ascribing too much in the way of obligation to a
particular individual or organization.
A multiple perspectives approach also takes into
account the fact that each of us individually, or as
groups, organizations, or systems creates and frames
the world through a series of mental models, each of
which, by itself, is incomplete. While it is probably
never possible to take account all the networks of
relationships involved in a particular system, and
surely never so given these systems interact over
time, a multiple perspectives approach forces us to
think more broadly, and to look at particular systems
or problems from different points of view. This is
crucial in trying to avoid problems such as Bangla-
desh?s, because each perspective usually reveals insights…that are not obtainable in principle from
others (Mitroff and Linstone, 1993, p. 98). It is also
invaluable in trying to understand other points of
view, even if, eventually one disagrees or agrees to
disagree. A Multiple Perspectives approach is
essential if, for example, as Wal-Mart thinks about
itself as a global company that affects and is affected
by its suppliers and their employees and the various
communities in which it contracts or operates. It is,
then, part of a network as depicted in Figure 4.
There is one more element to this approach. In
every stakeholder map we draw, we prioritize our
stakeholders, that is, we give them value. When
Wal-Mart prioritizes low prices it is prioritizing its
customers, particularly those who cannot afford
fancy stores and high-priced goods. This is terrific.
But these set of values, important as it is, needs to be
put in a matrix with basic minimum moral standards
for the treatment of every human being. If you sell
goods that have been produced at under basic
minimum human working conditions in the country
where these goods are produced, by underpaid workers
who at best, have 2 days leave a month (National
seitinummoC
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laicoS dna smroN
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Figure 4. Stakeholder network.
468 Patricia H. Werhane
Labor Committee, 2005), one needs to rethink
whether the positive value of low prices in devel-
oped countries preempts this value degradation
where workers are frankly worse off than if they
were unemployed.
There is one more consideration, that of indi-
vidual responsibility, the responsibilities of the pol-
iticians, professionals, managers, and of individual
citizens. A systems approach should not be confused
with some form of abdication of individual respon-
sibility. As individuals we are not merely the sum of,
or identified with, these relationships and roles, we
can evaluate and change our relationships, roles, and
role obligations, and we are thus responsible for
them. That is, each of us is at once byproducts of,
characters in, and authors of, our own experiences.
We can comprehend, evaluate, and change our
mental models. Not to do so, is to misunderstand
how important human choice and responsibility is to
our lives (Werhane, 1999).
Globalization and other models
It would be unconscionable to criticize Wal-Mart
without presenting a viable model for corporate
governance that does not merely recommend closing
this company. Its focus on low prices and the job
opportunities if offers cannot be ignored. So let us
take the case of Nike. Nike makes nothing it sells,
nothing. All of its goods are produced by indepen-
dent suppliers, most of whom are in developing
countries. Recently Nike made headlines by being
accused of buying goods from plans producing its
products under sweatshop conditions where alleg-
edly at least in Indonesia, women workers were
beaten if they did not keep up their productivity.
(Hartman et al., 2003)
Nike, as Hartman, Arnold and Wokutch write
(2003) has had a similar sweatshop problem. Nike
owns almost no factories; rather it buys its goods
from numerous manufacturers around the world. So
it would appear that what these manufacturers do to
get Nike goods to market has nothing to do with
Nike. Often Nike had little knowledge of what
went on in the plants that produced its shoes and
other products. This changed, of course, when the
media began to focus on the working conditions,
pay, and safety in plants producing Nike products.
Still, why is Nike, rather than these plants respon-
sible, and what is the extent of that? As a result of
public pressure Nike began to look in the mirror? at its mission, corporate image, and challenged itself to
think about extending the scope of its responsibili-
ties, engaging in what has become a consorted effort
to improve sweatshop conditions not merely in the
factories from which it buys but also with the sup-
pliers to those factories. But Nike did not see this
problem as merely its problem; rather it has taken
what I called a systems perspective. That is, it sees its
responsibilities as extending beyond its own
employees to the system in which its products are
produced. It not merely developed a strong Code of
Conduct. It has expanded its influence, its employee
standards, and monitoring system to its franchises
and gradually, to their suppliers as well (Hartman
et al., 2003). In this sort of case one might think of
Nike?s scope of responsibility in terms of gradually widening concentric circles. Its first responsibility is
to its employees, customers, and shareholders; its
next circle is to its contracted suppliers, the third to
the suppliers of materials for those suppliers. Figure 5
depicts those relationships. Notice that this is a
model of relationships between stakeholders in a
global economy where the company, Nike, is not
the only focus, thus not in the center of the graphic.
It is a modification of the confusing global stake-
holder networks map, that obviously has more
practical applications.
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