Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/4608
Title: In the Name of Merit: Ethical Violence and Inequality at a Business School
Authors: Vijay, Devi
Nair, Vivek G.
Keywords: Merit
Inequality
Ethical violence
Caste
Business schools
Issue Date: May-2021
Publisher: Journal of Business Ethics
Series/Report no.: Vol. 179;
Abstract: This study examines how meritocracy as a collective social imaginary promoting social justice and fairness reproduces class and caste inequalities and fosters ethical violence. We interrogate discourse of merit in the narratives of the professional–managerial class-in-making at an Indian business school. Empirically, we draw on interviews, full-text responses to a qualitative questionnaire, and a student’s poem. We describe how business school students articulate merit as a neoliberal ethic, emphasizing prudential, enterprising attitudes, and responsibility. However, this positive, aspirational façade of merit masks practices of ethical violence, wherein individuals invoke an ethical principle as grounds for moral condemnation and linguistic injuries. These practices of ethical violence desubjectify disadvantaged students and result in silence as a form of inequality. We contribute to organizational research on inequalities by foregrounding ethical violence and desubjectifcation. We detail the possibilities of discursive agency in contesting and interrupting ethical violence.
Description: Biosketch: Devi Vijay, Organizational Behavior, Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, K-408, New Academic Block, D.H. Road, Joka, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700104, India; Vivek G. Nair, Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, D.H. Road, Joka, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700104, India.
P. 315–337
URI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-021-04824-1
https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/4608
ISSN: 1573-0697 (Online)
Appears in Collections:Organizational Behavior

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