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The whistleblowers’ charter

Gerald Vinten (Author of Whistleblowing – Subversion or Corporate Citizenship? (published by Paul Chapman, London, 1994. He is Deputy President of the Institute of Internal Auditors – UK and Eire, and Professor of Business Policy at the University of Luton.)

Executive Development

ISSN: 0953-3230

Article publication date: 1 April 1995

1461

Abstract

Whistleblowing – the unauthorized disclosure of illegal or unethical conduct within an organization – has an ancient lineage, although the first known use of the term rather than the concept was in 1963. Far from being subversion, it is a vital, almost indispensable control device. This is seen in case study examples of the Challenger disaster, the North Sea oil rigs and international banking. Despite this, whistleblowers experience discrimination and retaliation. One way forward is to set up codes of practice that will distinguish valid from invalid forms of whistleblowing, and ensure that the contribution of whistleblowers to the organization is maximized and public interest is not sacrificed.

Keywords

Citation

Vinten, G. (1995), "The whistleblowers’ charter", Executive Development, Vol. 8 No. 2, pp. 25-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/09533239510086376

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1995, MCB UP Limited

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