Skip to main content
CityEthics Breaking the oxymoron: "City Ethics"

Main navigation

    • Conflicts of Interest
    • Ethics Codes & Reform
    • Ethics Commissions & Administration
    • Local Government Practice
    • Enforcement & Complaints
    • Transparency & Disclosure
    • Campaign Finance & Pay-to-Play
    • Resources & Learning
    • News & Commentary
    • Resources Overview
    • City Ethics Essentials
    • Working Definitions
    • Top Ten Ethics Films
    • Books of Interest
    • Safra Working Papers
    • About City Ethics
    • Carla Miller
    • Robert Wechsler
    • Don McClintock
Ethics topic
Conflicts of Interest
421 articles

Conflicts of Interest

Conflicts of Interest March 22, 2008

The Privilege of Slicing Into the Body Politic

The following appeared in a recent op-ed column in the Los Angeles Times by a young doctor, SreyRam Kuy. The issue was a health insurer asking doctors to report patient conditions that might be used to cancel health insurance. “Physicians hold a trust to protect the health of our patients. We canno…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest March 14, 2008

A Public Interest That Is Personal and Material

There is an assumption held by people involved in government ethics that putting one’s personal interests ahead of the public interest is bad, that a healthy democracy depends on government officials working for the public interest rather than for themselves. But not everyone holds this view. In fa…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest March 8, 2008

Is Helping One's Industry Really Different from Helping One's Employer?

The ethics rules of the Minnesota State Senate limit conflicts of interest to instances where a bill would provide a financial benefit to a senator or his or her employer that is not shared by other similarly situated individuals or firms. This is a common standard. According to an article in today…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest February 23, 2008

Can a Postage Stamp Be a Bribe?

When we talk about gifts to politicians, we often talk about gifts of nominal value being okay. Buy a politician a coffee, what’s wrong with that? But what happens when it’s the other way around? What if the politician buys a coffee for a citizen? One citizen, no problem. A few more at a fundraiser…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest February 6, 2008

Dealing Openly and Responsibly with a Conflict of Interest

You hear it again and again: “I didn’t know. I wasn’t told.” It’s the ultimate defense. Rarely do you hear, “I didn’t know, but I should have. It’s my responsibility to know and make sure I’m told things like this. I will act as if I knew, because I should have known.” There’s nothing wrong with a …
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest February 4, 2008

A Controversial Indianapolis Board Appointment: Perception and the Dilemma Between Competence and Conflicts of Interest

The new mayor of Indianapolis, Greg Ballard, who ran as a candidate who would bring ethics to city government, is already embroiled in a controversial ethics issue. He has appointed Robert T. Grand as chair of the Capital Improvement Board (CIB), which manages the city’s convention center and sport…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest January 29, 2008

Commercial Bail Bond System: Local Corruption and Ends vs. Rules

The most important division in ethics is between ends-based approaches (consequentialist or teleological, best known as "the ends justify the means") and rules-based approaches (deontological). The most important problem for individuals in government is that we are taught rules-based approaches whi…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest December 21, 2007

How Much Expertise Is Too Much?

It is natural for a current or former firefighter to be interested in serving on a fire commission, or a current or former teacher in serving on a school board. But is there an ongoing conflict of interest in doing so? The question arose on the Milford, Connecticut school board recently. Three memb…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest August 28, 2007

Mayoral Allowances - An Alternative Solution to Preventing Unethical Conduct

Taiwan has come up with the perfect way to prevent mayors from misusing government funds. Its solution appears to be based on the way parents prevent their children from taking money out of their wallets: give them an allowance to spend any way they please. The mayor of Taipei gets a $62,000 annual…
Read more →
Conflicts of Interest August 1, 2007

Election Officials and Their Conflicts

Election officials. Who in a democracy should be more above suspicion than election officials? At the place where I vote, the line that is the required number of feet from the voting area is traditionally right along the near side of the sidewalk that runs along the edge of the school parking lot. …
Read more →

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹‹
  • Page 38
  • Next page ››
Subscribe to Conflicts of Interest

Search

User account menu

  • Log in
CityEthics
Local government ethics, explored
© 2026 CityEthics.org