专业详情
Concentration Overview
The Legal Studies & Business Ethics Concentration focuses on the social values, moral concerns, and legal considerations that are essential aspects of business decision making in our global market system. The courses students take in this program help them explore how responsible business leaders can engage ethically and effectively with diverse cultures, corporate stakeholders, government regulators, and legal systems.
Of special value to students seeking to broaden their business education, this concentration also helps them acquire essential, non-quantitative reasoning skills that are required when leaders face difficult choices under conditions of empirical uncertainty and/or moral ambiguity – a frequent occurrence in fast-moving market economies. Students pursuing this concentration will gain a number of analytic skills, including: identifying moral and legal issues hidden within complex, culturally rich fact patterns; reasoning from moral principles (including both utilitarian, efficiency-based norms and imperatives such as freedom and equality) to specific ethical and legal conclusions; reasoning by analogy between like cases and situations; and arguing from authoritative rules and precedents to specific, logically consistent recommendations for action.
Thus, the Legal Studies & Business Ethics Concentration not only fully satisfies the need for a primary undergraduate concentration, but also complements (for students with the capacity to double concentrate) other, more quantitatively oriented concentrations to be found at the Wharton School in such areas as finance, accounting, statistics, marketing, business analytics, insurance and risk management, operations, and information systems.
Specific Requirements for the Concentration
Four-course units are required for the concentration, in addition to one of the department’s two core classes in the “Social Environment” bracket, LGST 1000 and LGST 1010. Any four, duly approved departmental electives may be taken to satisfy the concentration requirement. See the course list of permanent electives below. Note that LGST 1000 and LGST 1010 do not count as electives within the concentration, though students are encouraged to take both courses to broaden their understanding of socially and ethically responsible decision-making.
Concentration Courses – link here to see the list of courses.