Unethical Agency Practices | ethicalsocialwork (2024)

Unethical Agency Practices

By Frederic G. Reamer, PhD

Reprinted and Adapted with the permission of Social Work Today ©. Great Valley Publishing, Co.

Devi is a social worker who works for a social service agency. Her job entails making clinical assessments for subsidy applications.

Devi routinely submits her assessments to her supervisor, who often rewrites and edits the summaries, overturns some decisions, and gives final approval. However, the supervisor does not sign off on the assessments or indicate in the documentation that she participated in the report preparation or decision. Only Devi’s signature appears in the documentation.

Devi is concerned that her supervisor is misrepresenting the agency’s decision-making protocol by camouflaging the agency’s internal procedures. “Only my name appears in the final assessments even though in many cases it’s my supervisor who made the final decisions behind the scenes. Also, I think this process is just unethical,” said Devi. “It misrepresents how these important decisions are made.”


Many social workers have encountered instances when supervisors or administrators have asked or instructed them to participate in, condone, or overlook unethical practices. Examples include supervisors who ask social workers to exaggerate service utilization data supplied to funders, ignore eligibility criteria for agency services to enhance revenue, and alter client records in advance of a site visit conducted by an accreditation agency. In these instances, social workers must make difficult ethical judgments about how they will respond to unethical requests or mandates.

On the surface, social workers have a stark choice between looking the other way—perhaps to avoid angering a supervisor, stirring up controversy in the agency, jeopardizing the agency’s status, or losing their job—and challenging the unethical behavior as a matter of principle. It is easy, of course, to proclaim that social workers must always blow the whistle on ethical misconduct if more moderate efforts fail—for example, attempting to persuade supervisors and administrators to abandon their unethical course and adhere to prevailing ethical standards. In reality, however, agency-based politics and organizational dynamics are such that management of these ethical dilemmas requires considerable skill and nuance.

In my experience, supervisors who exercise their (usually legitimate) authority and prerogative to rewrite and, possibly, overturn subordinates’ decisions indicate that they have done so to make the sequence of actions and participating parties clear, especially in the event that questions arise or there is a formal challenge, litigation, and so on. This is normal administrative and supervisory accountability. Establishing this clear paper or digital trail is not only sound risk management, but supervisors have a fundamental ethical duty to conduct themselves in a way that avoids any appearance of impropriety, misrepresentation, deception, or fraud. Transparency is important.

Applying Ethical Standards


The NASW Code of Ethics includes several standards that pertain to instances when practitioners believe they have been asked or ordered to engage in or be associated with unethical activity. In principle, social workers should take assertive steps to challenge a supervisor’s alleged practices and take whatever measures they reasonably can to avoid participating in activities that may constitute unethical conduct, such as misrepresentation, deception, and fraud. According to the Code of Ethics, “Social workers should take adequate measures to discourage, prevent, expose, and correct the unethical conduct of colleagues”. Social workers cannot turn a blind eye from patently unethical behaviour.

The code also prescribes that “social workers should take reasonable steps to ensure that employers are aware of social workers’ ethical obligations as set forth in the NASW Code of Ethics and of the implications of those obligations for social work practice” (standard 3.09[c]). Thus, when feasible, social workers should alert people in positions of authority (e.g., senior administrators, members of a board of directors) about unethical practices within the organization. This may be politically awkward and uncomfortable, but it may be essential.

This step is important for three reasons.

First, in a strict moral sense, this is the right course of action. Ignoring wrongdoing poses a threat to clients and can undermine the organization’s ability to fulfill its mission.

Second, alerting people in positions of authority can minimize the organization’s legal exposure if disgruntled parties, such as clients or advocates, file a formal complaint or lawsuit.

Finally, assertive efforts to challenge wrongdoing help to protect social workers themselves, especially in the event that other parties allege that the social workers failed to take steps to expose unethical conduct within the organization.

Assertive action demonstrates social workers’ good-faith efforts to address wrongdoing.

This obligation is reinforced the Code of Ethics statement that “social workers should not allow an employing organization’s policies, procedures, regulations, or administrative orders to interfere with their ethical practice of social work. Social workers should take reasonable steps to ensure that their employing organizations’ practices are consistent with the NASW Code of Ethics”. In addition, “Social workers should not participate in, condone, or be associated with dishonesty, fraud, or deception”.

Morally upright and principled social workers sometimes face the unenviable task of responding to supervisors’ and administrators’ unethical instructions and behaviour. This is an unfortunate fact of organizational life. The challenge is managing these dilemmas with integrity and in a way that embraces relevant ethical standards. These are among the most difficult ethical circ*mstances that arise in social work. But social workers know well they cannot shy away from such difficult decisions. This kind of moral courage is part and parcel of being a professional.

As the British novelist and poet C. S. Lewis once said, “Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point.”

Unethical Agency Practices | ethicalsocialwork (2024)

FAQs

How do you deal with unethical practices? ›

How to Deal with Unethical Behavior
  1. Have a Policy Set in Place. ...
  2. Start with Leadership. ...
  3. Monitor and Evaluate Behavior. ...
  4. Create a Clear Reporting Process. ...
  5. Document Everything. ...
  6. Enforce (and Reinforce) What You Mandate.

What are the unethical practices in an organization? ›

Misleading communication, fraudulent behavior, anticompetitive activity, knowledge hiding, withdrawal, and production deviance are unethical business practices. It is illegal but not unethical to force an employee to work off their stipulated time.

Is unethical conduct always illegal explain your answer? ›

Answer and Explanation:

An unethical act is not always illegal. For illegal acts, lawmakers have established punishment in the law book. The doing of the act against humankind or society is called unethical i.e. theft, lie, and breaking a promise. All unethical acts are not illegal but all illegal acts are unethical.

What are 3 reasons you think some people act unethically at work? ›

Why Do Employees Make Unethical Decisions?
  • Pressure to Succeed. Employees may choose to act unethically based on unrealistic expectations to succeed. ...
  • Employees Are Afraid to Speak Up. ...
  • Lack of Training. ...
  • There's No Policy for Reporting. ...
  • Managers Setting Bad Examples.

What is an example of unethical behavior? ›

Any unlawful conduct, such as stealing someone's stuff or assaulting colleagues, are some common examples of unethical behavior in the workplace.

What is the first step to addressing an unethical practice? ›

Both Detert and Gentile agree that the best way to address unethical practices is to first discuss your concern with the perpetrator.

How to solve unethical issues at the workplace? ›

Managing Unethical Behavior in the Workplace: Strategies for Effective Control
  1. Establish a Strong Code of Ethics. ...
  2. Educate and Train Employees. ...
  3. Lead by Example. ...
  4. Encourage Open Communication. ...
  5. Investigate Thoroughly. ...
  6. Implement Clear Consequences. ...
  7. Promote a Strong Ethical Culture. ...
  8. Offer Support and Guidance.
Oct 21, 2023

How to challenge unethical behavior at work? ›

2. Six ways to prevent unethical behaviour in your workplace
  1. 2.1 Create a Code of Conduct. ...
  2. 2.2 Continuously review the code. ...
  3. 2.3 Reinforce consequences for unethical behaviour. ...
  4. 2.4 Hire the right people. ...
  5. 2.5 Work on building a loyal community. ...
  6. 2.6 Implement monitoring and reporting systems.
Jun 13, 2022

What is unethical behavior that can destroy a company? ›

Unethical actions such as fraud, dishonesty, or unfair treatment can create doubt and skepticism among customers, leading to a loss of reputation, and ultimately, sales. Employees may also become demoralized and disengaged in such an environment, affecting productivity and loyalty.

How to deal with an unethical employer? ›

Here's what you can do
  1. Politely say no. Now is not the time to hurl forth a heated stream of righteous indignation your manager's way about what an immoral jerk he is. ...
  2. Find a compromise. ...
  3. Find another job. ...
  4. File a complaint. ...
  5. CYA. ...
  6. Start a revolution.

How to deal with unethical leadership? ›

How HR Can Deal with Unethical Leadership
  1. Continuously train employees. ...
  2. Establish a Line Of Communication That Is Direct. ...
  3. Teach your leaders how to assess their own motivation. ...
  4. Use the same set of guidelines. ...
  5. Obtain Buy-In. ...
  6. Hold them to Account. ...
  7. Set the tone for the company's culture. ...
  8. Make an Ethics Code.

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