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Fiduciary Duties and Moral Blackmail

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-09-01, 01:37 authored by Simon KellerSimon Keller
In meeting legal or professional fiduciary obligations, a fiduciary can sometimes come to share a special moral relationship with her beneficiary. Special moral relationships produce special moral obligations. Sometimes the obligations faced by a fiduciary as a result of her moral relationship with her beneficiary go beyond the obligations involved in the initial fiduciary relationship. How such moral obligations develop is sometimes under the control of the beneficiary, or of an outside party. As a result, the fiduciary can be the target of a distinctive kind of moral manipulation; it is sometimes possible to force a fiduciary to perform a particular act by placing her into circumstances under which she is morally obliged to perform it, because all her other options are morally unacceptable. This is moral blackmail. Moral blackmail is a powerful force within many sorts of human interactions. By understanding the ways in which fiduciaries become vulnerable to moral blackmail, we can better understand the pressures faced by fiduciaries in keeping their personal and professional lives separate, the dynamics of certain kinds of employment negotiations, and the injustice that results when women take on the bulk of the work within caring professions.

History

Preferred citation

Keller, S. T. (2018). Fiduciary Duties and Moral Blackmail. Journal of Applied Philosophy, 35(3), 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1111/japp.12234

Journal title

Journal of Applied Philosophy

Volume

35

Issue

3

Publication date

2018-08-01

Pagination

1-15 (15)

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2016-07-01

ISSN

0264-3758

eISSN

1468-5930

Language

en