664 Jon M. Huntsman Hall
3730 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Research Interests: business ethics, corporate and individual obligations of justice, moral demandingness, climate change ethics, exploitation, effective altruism, animal ethics, ideal and non-ideal theory, collective obligations, methodology in ethics
Links: CV, Personal Website
Brian Berkey works in moral and political philosophy (including business ethics and environmental ethics). He has written on issues such as the demandingness of morality, individual and corporate obligations of justice, ethical issues arising with regard to climate change, exploitation, effective altruism, animal ethics, collective obligations, ethical consumerism, and the relationship between ideal and non-ideal theory. He is also interested in methodological issues in ethics and political philosophy, including the appropriate role of appeals to intuitions. His work has appeared in journals such as Philosophy & Public Affairs, Ethics, Mind, Philosophical Studies, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Utilitas, Business Ethics Quarterly, Journal of Business Ethics, and Journal of Applied Philosophy.
Ph.D in Philosophy, University of California-Berkeley
M.A. in Humanities and Social Thought, New York University
B.A. in Philosophy (with honors) and Politics, New York University, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa
Visiting Associate Professor, Georgetown University, Institute for the Study of Markets and Ethics (2022-23)
Berggruen Fellow, Harvard University, Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics (2018-19)
Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University, Center for Ethics in Society (2013-15)
Lecturer, University of California-Berkeley, Department of Philosophy (2013)
Research Fellow, University of Melbourne, Social Justice Initiative (2012)
Brian is currently working on papers about autonomous vehicle ethics, corporate climate change mitigation obligations, effective altruism, and imposing and offsetting risk.
Brian Berkey (Forthcoming), Exploitation, Human Rights, and Corporate Obligations.
Brian Berkey (Forthcoming), Social Entrepreneurship and Obligations of Justice.
Brian Berkey (2024), When is it Permissible to Impose and Offset Risks? A Response to Barry and Cullity, Ethics, 134 (4), pp. 512-524. 10.1086/729709
Brian Berkey, “Who is Wronged by Wrongful Exploitation?”. In Exploitation: Perspectives from Philosophy, Politics, and Economics, edited by Benjamin Ferguson and Matt Zwolinski, (Oxford University Press, 2024), pp. 93-112
Brian Berkey and Vikram Bhargava (2024), Autonomous Vehicles and the Ethics of Driving, Social Theory and Practice, 50 (2), pp. 179-206. 10.5840/soctheorpract202437211
Brian Berkey (2024), Ethical Consumerism, Human Rights, and Global Health Impact, Developing World Bioethics, 24 (1), pp. 31-36. 10.1111/dewb.12415
Brian Berkey (2023), Effective Altruism, Global Justice, and Individual Obligations, Georgetown Journal of Law and Public Policy, 21 (), pp. 675-692.
Brian Berkey, “Utilitarianism and Poverty”. In Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Poverty, edited by Gottfried Schweiger and Clemens Sedmak, (Routledge, 2023), pp. 127-137
Brian Berkey (2023), Review of Larry S. Temkin, Being Good in a World of Need, Ethics, 133 (4), pp. 649-653. 10.1086/724531
Brian Berkey, “Relational Egalitarianism, Institutionalism, and Workplace Hierarchy”. In Working as Equals: Relational Egalitarianism and the Workplace, edited by Julian Jonker and Grant J. Rozeboom, (Oxford University Press, 2023), pp. 194-213
This course explores business responsibility from rival theoretical and managerial perspectives. Its focus includes theories of ethics and their application to case studies in business. Topics include moral issues in advertising and sales; hiring and promotion; financial management; corporate pollution; product safety; and decision-making across borders and cultures.
This course explores business responsibility from rival theoretical and managerial perspectives. Its focus includes theories of ethics and their application to case studies in business. Topics include moral issues in advertising and sales; hiring and promotion; financial management; corporate pollution; product safety; and decision-making across borders and cultures.
This course is a multidisciplinary, interactive study of business ethics within a global economy. A central aim of the course is to enable students to develop a framework to address ethical challenges as they arise within and across different countries. Alternative theories about acting ethically in global environments are presented, and critical current issues are introduced and analyzed. Examples include bribery, global sourcing, environmental sustainability, social reports, intellectual property, e-commerce, and dealing with conflicting standards and values across cultures. As part of this study, the course considers non-Western ethical traditions and practices as they relate to business.
A study of the nature, functions, and limits of law as an agency of societal policy. Each semester an area of substantive law is studied for the purpose of examining the relationship between legal norms developed and developing in the area and societal problems and needs. Please see department for current offerings.
This course is a multidisciplinary, interactive study of business ethics within a global economy. A central aim of the course is to enable students to develop a framework to address ethical challenges as they arise within and across different countries. Alternative theories about acting ethically in global environments are presented, and critical current issues are introduced and analyzed. Examples include bribery, global sourcing, environmental sustainability, social reports, intellectual property, e-commerce, and dealing with conflicting standards and values across cultures. As part of this study, the course considers non-Western ethical traditions and practices as they relate to business.
The seminar explores the growing academic literature in business ethics. It also provides participants an opportunity to investigate an ethical issue of their choosing in some depth, using their field of specialty as context. The seminar assumes no previous exposure to business ethics. Different business ethics theories and frameworks for investigating issues will be discussed, including corporate social responsibility, corporate moral agency, theories of values, and corporate governance. In turn, these theories will be applied to a range of issues, both domestic and international. Such issues include: corruption in host countries, the management of values in modern corporations, the ethical status of the corporation, ethics in sophisticated financial transactions (such as leveraged derivative transactions), and gender discrimination in the context of cultural differences. Literature not only from business ethics, but from professional and applied ethics, law, and organizational behavior will be discussed. Often, guest speakers will address the seminar. At the discretion of the class, special topics of interest to the class will be examined. Students will be expected to write and present a major paper dealing with a current issue within their major field. The course is open to students across fields, and provides integration of ideas across multiple business disciplines.
Student arranges with a faculty member to pursue a program of reading and writing on a suitable topic.
Student arranges with a faculty member to pursue a research project on a suitable topic. For more information about research and setting up independent studies, visit: https://ppe.sas.upenn.edu/study/curriculum/independent-studies
Student arranges with a Penn faculty member to do research and write a thesis on a suitable topic. For more information on honors visit: https://ppe.sas.upenn.edu/study/curriculum/honors-theses
Awarded half-time undergraduate research assistant to help prepare course on Environmental Ethics and Business.
Brian Berkey, professor of legal studies and business ethics, discusses whether we should feel morally obligated to protect the environment.…Read More
Knowledge at Wharton - 4/20/2023