• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 3 comments on MBA Ethics Oath Draws Handful of GSM Signers

  1. re:

    The MBA council hekd a meeting, and …

    Facing “tepid student interest,” he says, the council settled for publicizing the oath and letting students sign individually if they wished.

    – – –

    Douglas T. Hal. doesn’t seem to think it is a major issue

    – – –

    BU Today doesn’t seem to think it is a major issue, reporting the news a month after commencement.

    – – –

    The school has a mandatory course that “focuses more on laws than on ethical dilemmas.”

    This fits in well with the Securities Industry and Banking Industry workplaces, where employees spent 1 hour a year in a mandated review of the corporate ethics policy.

    – – – Bottom Line – – –

    Sounds like noone really is prepared to work had for change – most people are content with the status quo.

    Prepare to see the same problems again in 2015, and 2019, and 2025. But maybe not in America, this country is rapidly becoming irrelevant due to corporate ‘ethics’

  2. I would like to respectfully disagree that the low number of BU MBA students who chose to sign the pledge is an indication of no one being prepared to work for change and being content with the status quo. To paraphrase Prof. Hall, “Actions are louder than words.” As a very recent grad of the BU MBA program, I can speak first hand about the integrity, honor, and determination of my classmates. Many of my classmates came to BU’s MBA program because they wanted to initiate change – whether on a small or large scale. They will be able to affect positive change on the world whether or not they choose to press “Like” on the Facebook page of the MBA Oath.

  3. I don’t doubt your personal Integrity, Honor and Determination. I agree that “Actions speak louder than words.” I also believe “No one gets rewarded for good intentions.” Until an action is actually taken, all you have is good intentions. Medical Doctors often don’t feel the need to take the Hypocratic Oath, as they have every intention of helping people, yet … the oath matters. It is a concrete reminder to Doctors of their commitment, and an industry-wide standard that people believe they can hold Doctors accoutable to uphold. … The oath matters…. I am old enough to have been directly cheated by public accountants and suffered from the bad advice of public accountants… I am old enough to have heard, again and again, ‘our industry doesn’t need regulation, we can regulate ourselves’ and a few years later a preventable abuse was not prevented by regulation. I have heard the false promises of politicians, but the WORST politicians are the ones not even willing to make the promises they don’t intend to keep… The biggest social lesson from the unrest of the late 60s and 70s is that public words and determined actions make a lot more of a difference than quiet, honorable behaviour.

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