Unethical 20th century business leaders: were some of them corporate psychopaths? The case of Robert Maxwell

Article


Boddy, C. 2016. Unethical 20th century business leaders: were some of them corporate psychopaths? The case of Robert Maxwell. International Journal of Public Leadership. 12 (2), pp. 76-93. https://doi.org/10.1108/ijpl-12-2015-0032
TypeArticle
TitleUnethical 20th century business leaders: were some of them corporate psychopaths? The case of Robert Maxwell
AuthorsBoddy, C.
Abstract

Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to present evidence to examine the possible psychopathy of Robert Maxwell, a notorious figure in UK business history.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper presents research which retrospectively applied a tool to measure whether leading figures in twentieth century business history could be classified as being corporate psychopaths. As background to this idea, psychopaths and corporate psychopaths are defined. A measure of corporate psychopathy is explored as an aid to identifying corporate psychopaths in business history. This measure is then used in relation to senior corporate executives who have been nominated as potential corporate psychopaths and to Robert Maxwell in particular.
Findings
The paper concludes that at least some ethical scandals and failures such as those at The Daily Mirror have been characterized by the presence of CEOs who scored highly on a measure of corporate psychopathy. Maxwell’s fraudulent raiding of corporate pension funds crossed ethical and legal borders. Furthermore, Maxwell’s fraudulent looting of those pension funds crossed generational boundaries; stealing from older people’s pension funds and thereby leaving younger people/investors with less to inherit. Maxwell also had an international business empire and so his fraud had effects which crossed geographic borders. The paper concludes that using an historical approach to the study of potential corporate psychopaths illuminates what types of organizational outcomes corporate psychopaths may eventuate.
Originality/value
The paper is the first to use an historical approach to the study of potential corporate psychopaths.

PublisherEmerald
JournalInternational Journal of Public Leadership
ISSN2056-4929
Publication dates
Print09 May 2016
Publication process dates
Deposited11 Sep 2018
Accepted14 Mar 2016
Output statusPublished
Additional information

** From Crossref via Jisc Publications Router.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1108/ijpl-12-2015-0032
LanguageEnglish
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