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Deception in marketing research: ethical, methodological and disciplinary implications

Subject

Marketing

Publication Year

2000

Abstract

Although marketing researchers often find it necessary to deceive their research participants, little attention has been given within marketing to the ethical issues underlying the use of deception or to the potential consequences of deceptive research practices. This paper provides a conceptual starting point for developing a more complete understanding of deception in marketing research, including an ethical analysis from the viewpoint of consequentialist and deontological theories of moral reasoning. A research agenda is outlined that draws on the extensive behavioral science literature on this topic and includes empirical questions relevant to the ethical, methodological, and disciplinary implications of using deceptive practices in marketing research.

Publication Research Centre

Centre for Marketing

Series Number

00-703

Series

Centre for Marketing Working Paper

Available on ECCH

No


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