Menu Close

🧭 Integrity in the Workplace: A Compass for Polarized Times

By Lilit Hakobyan, Chartered MCIPD

In an age of political polarization and ethical fatigue, integrity is often invoked—but rarely unpacked. Is it simply about honesty? Or is it a deeper commitment to coherence, moral courage, and professional responsibility?

šŸ“š In management literature, integrity is described as an umbrella concept—a blend of wholeness, moral reflection, and contextual judgment. It is both a personal ideal and a professional imperative. In public service and business alike, stakeholder trust hinges on ethical conduct. But what happens when integrity is violated?

HR’s Unique Role

HR professionals are uniquely positioned to shape the ethical climate of organizations. This climate—defined as the shared understanding of what’s right and how ethical issues are handled—sets the tone for decision-making at every level.

Yet here lies the challenge: How do we protect integrity without paralyzing people with fear of moral missteps?

Leo Huberts, a Dutch scholar, warns against ā€œintegritismā€ā€”the overgeneralization of integrity that blurs moral priorities and stifles initiative. If every mistake is treated as a breach of ethics, organizations risk cultures of silence and anxiety.

What Integrity Demands Today

  • Discernment of right and wrong
  • Acting on that discernment
  • Speaking openly about one’s moral stance

But laws and codes alone cannot guide every decision. Sometimes, they even contradict societal values. So where does HR stand—as compliance officers or cultural architects?

The Dilemma of Neutrality

What is HR’s role when employees feel morally conflicted by organizational policies? Is staying politically neutral always the right choice? In polarized environments, HR must help leaders and teams navigate ethical gray zones with clarity, empathy, and accountability.

A Balanced Framework šŸ› 

To safeguard integrity without stifling initiative, organizations need:

  • Clear articulation of moral values in legal documents
  • Differentiation between types and causes of integrity violations
  • Leadership strategies tailored to specific ethical risks
  • Safe spaces for ethical reflection and dissent
  • A shift from rule-based compliance to values-based culture

Two Contrasting Views

  • Minimalist ā€œhire and fireā€ approach: values are fixed in childhood; integrity management means recruiting ethical people and removing ā€œbad apples.ā€
  • Systemic approach: organizations can actively shape ethical behavior through culture, structure, and leadership.

Integrity as Strategy

As we rethink the future of work, let’s not forget: integrity isn’t just a virtue—it’s a strategy for resilience.

šŸ—£ I’d love to hear from fellow HR and leadership professionals:

  • How is your organization safeguarding integrity?
  • Do you measure integrity through Codes of Ethics or Codes of Conduct alone?
  • What mechanisms exist in recruitment, selection, and performance management to ensure integrity is more than compliance?

Are we equipping people to act with integrity—or merely to avoid punishment?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *