Barrera, Albino2019-09-252019-09-252012-12-212012http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/188626The scholastic principles of double effect and legitimate material cooperation with wrongdoing are essential tools in disentangling firm responsibility or liability for facilitating others’ wrongdoing or contributing to a collective harm. Implementing these principles in business ethics requires further distinctions on the different types of material cooperation. Moreover, these conceptual tools can be sharpened even further by situating them within a much larger framework of analysis that takes into account the capacity of the moral agent(s), the nature of the injury, and the causal relations.engWith permission of the license/copyright holderviolation of codesscholastic principleseconomic wrongdoingThomas Aquinasethics of economic cooperationEconomic ethicsBusiness ethicsCorporate Complicity in Economic Wrongdoing or in Collective HarmsConference proceedings