Business Communication & Ethics (HS-304) : Maheen Tufail Dahraj

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 24

Business Communication & Ethics

(HS-304)
Week 5 (Recorded Lecture Part 3)

Maheen Tufail Dahraj


Lecturer & PhD Scholar (Applied Linguistics)
Department of Humanities
NED University of Engg. & Tech. Karachi
Recap of Lecture 5 (Part 2)

Code of Ethics
Codes of Engineering Societies
Ethical Problems
Conflicts in Codes
Code of Conduct

Code of conduct clarifies an


organization’s mission, values
and principles, linking them
with standards of professional
conduct.

Written codes of conduct or ethics


become the benchmarks against
which individual and organizational
performance can be measured.
CODE OF CONDUCT

Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Article 9
Article 10
Article 11
Article 12
Article 13
Article 14
Article 15
Article 16
Article 17
Article 18
Article 1

 This Code of Conduct may be called the Pakistan


Engineering Council Code of Conduct.
 This shall come into force at once.
 This shall apply to all members of the Pakistan
Engineering Council.
Article 2
To maintain, uphold and advance the honor and dignity of the engineering
professional in accordance with this Code, a member shall:

 uphold the ideology of Pakistan;


 be honest, impartial and serve the country, his employer, clients and the public at large with
devotion;
 strive to increase the competence and prestige of the engineering profession;
 use his knowledge and skill for the advancement and welfare of mankind;
 promote and ensure the maximum utilization of human and material resources of Pakistan for
achieving self-reliance;
 and not sacrifice the national interest for any personal gain.
Article 3
A member shall be guided in all professional matters by the highest
standards of integrity and act as a faithful agent or a trustee for each of
his client and employer.
A member shall :
 be realistic and honest in all estimates, reports, statements and testimony and
shall carry out his professional duties without fear or favor;
 admit and accept his own errors when proved and shall refrain from distorting
or altering the facts justifying his decision or action;
 advise his client or employer honestly about the viability of the project
entrusted to him;
 not accept any other employment to the detriment of his regular work or
interest without the consent of his employer;
 not attempt to attract an engineer from another employer by false or
misleading pretenses;
 not restrain an employee from obtaining a better position with another
employer; and
 not endeavor to promote his personal interest at the expense of the dignity
and integrity of the profession.
Article 4

A member shall have utmost regard for the safety, health and welfare of
the public in the performance of his professional duties and for that
purpose he shall:

 regard his duty to the public welfare as paramount;


 seek opportunities to be of service in civic affairs and work for the
advancement of the safety, health and well-being of the community;
 not undertake, prepare, sign, approve or authenticate any plan, design or
specifications which are not safe for the safety, health, welfare of a person or
persons, or are not in conformity with the accepted engineering standards and
if any client or an employer insists on such unprofessional conduct, he shall
notify the authorities concerned and withdraw from further service on the
project; and
 point out the consequences to his client or the employer if his engineering
judgment is over-ruled by any non-technical person.
Article 5
A member shall avoid all acts or practices likely to discredit the dignity or honor
of the profession and for that purpose he shall not advertise his professional
services in a manner derogatory to the dignity of the profession. He may,
however, utilize the following means of identification.

 professional cards and listing in recognized and dignified publications and classified section of
the telephone directories,
 sign boards at the site of his office or projects for which he renders services; and
 brochures, business cards, letter-heads and other factual representations of experience,
facilities, personnel and capacity to render services.

A member may write articles for recognized publications but such articles should
be dignified, free from ostentations or laudatory implications, based on factual
conclusions and should not imply other than his direct participation in the work
described unless credit is given to others for their share of the work.

A member shall not allow himself to be listed for employment using exaggerated
statements of his qualifications.
Article 6

A member shall endeavor to extend


public knowledge and appreciation of
engineering profession, propagate the
achievements of the profession and
protect it from misrepresentation and
misunderstanding.
Article 7

A member shall express an opinion of an


engineering subject only when founded
on adequate knowledge, experience and
honest conviction.
Article 8

A member shall undertake engineering


assignments only when he possesses
adequate qualifications, training and
experience. He shall engage or advise for
engaging of the experts and specialists
whenever the client's or employers' interest
are best served by such service.

A member shall not discourage the necessity


of other appropriate engineering services,
designs, plans or specifications or limit-free
competition by specifying materials of
particular make or model.
Article 9

A member shall not disclose confidential


information concerning the business
affairs or technical processes of any
present or former client or employer
without his consent.
Article 10
A member shall uphold the principles of appropriate and adequate
compensation for those engaged in engineering work and for that
purpose he shall not:

 undertake or agree to perform any engineering service free except for civic,
charitable, religious, or non-profit organizations or institutions;
 undertake professional engineering work at a remuneration below the accepted
standards of the profession in the discipline;
 and accept remuneration from either an employee or employment agency for
giving employment.

A member shall offer remuneration commensuration with the


qualifications and experience of an engineer employed by him.

A member working in any sales section or department shall not offer


or give engineering consultation, or designs, or advice other than
specifically applying to the equipment being sold in that section or
department.
Article 11

A member shall not accept compensation, financial


or otherwise, from more than one party for the
same service, or for services pertaining to the
same work unless all interested parties give their
consent to such compensation.

A member shall not accept:

 financial or other considerations, including free


engineering design, from material or equipment
suppliers for specifying their products; and
 commissions or allowances, directly or indirectly,
from contractors or other parties dealing with his
clients or employer in connection with work for which
he is professionally responsible.
Article 12
A member shall not compete unfairly with another member or
engineer by attempting to obtain employment, professional
engagements or personal gains by taking advantage of his superior
position or by criticizing other engineers or by any other improper
means or methods.

An engineer shall not attempt to supplant another engineer in a


particular employment after becoming aware that definite steps have
been taken towards other's employment.

A member shall not accept part-time engineering work at a fee or


remuneration less than that of the recognized standard for a similar
work and without the consent of his employer if he is already in
another employment.

A member shall not utilize equipment, supplies, laboratory or office


facilities of his employer or client for the purpose of private practice
without his consent.
Article 13
A member shall not attempt to injure, maliciously or
falsely, directly or indirectly, the professional reputation,
prospects, practices or employment of another engineer
or member.

A member engaged in private practice shall not review


the work of another engineer for the same client, except
with knowledge of such engineer or, unless the
connection of such engineer with work has been
terminated;

Provided that a member shall be entitled to review and


evaluate the work of other engineers when so required
by his employment duties.

A member employed in any sales or industrial concern


shall be entitled to make engineering comparisons of his
products with products of other suppliers.
Article 14

A member shall not associate with or allow the use of


his name by an enterprise of questionable character nor
will he become professionally associated with engineers
who do not conform to ethical practices or with persons
not legally qualified to tender the professional service
for which the association is intended.

A member shall strictly comply with the bye-laws,


orders and instructions issued by the Pakistan
Engineering Council from time to time in professional
practice and shall not use the association with a non-
engineering corporation, or partnership as a cloak for
any unethical act or acts.
Article 15
A member shall give credit for engineering work to those to whom credit is
due, recognize the proprietary interests of others and disclose the name of
a person or persons who may be responsible for his designs, inventions,
specifications, writings, or other accomplishments.

When a member uses designs, plans, specifications, data and notes supplied
to him by a client or an employer or are prepared by him in reference to
such client or the employer's work such designs, plans, specifications, data
and notes shall remain the property of the client and shall not be duplicated
by a member for any use without the express permission of the client.

Before undertaking any work on behalf of a person or persons for making


improvements, plans, designs, inventions or specifications which may
justify copyright or patent, a member shall get ownership of such
improvements, plans, designs, inventions or specifications determined for
the purpose of registration under the relevant copyright and patent laws.
Article 16

A member shall disseminate professional knowledge


by interchanging information and experience with
other members or engineers and students to provide
them opportunity for the professional development
and advancement of engineers under his
supervision.

A member shall encourage his engineering


employees to improve their knowledge, attend and
present papers at professional meetings and provide
a prospective engineering employee with complete
information on working conditions and his proposed
status of employment and after employment keep
him informed of any change in such conditions.
Article 17

A member employed abroad shall order


his conduct according to this Code, so
far as this is applicable, and the laws
and regulations of the country of his
employment.
Article 18

A member shall report unethical


professional practices of an
engineer or a member with
substantiating data to the Pakistan
Engineering Council and appear
as a witness, if required.
Any Questions?

If you have any questions regarding


this Part 3 of Recorded Lecture i.e.
“PEC Code of Conduct”, you can
ask in the live session at your
scheduled live session timings.

You might also like