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Abstract.

The pervasiveness and impact on society and on every day human life of technology has led to a growing awareness that science and technology cannot be considered above or beyond the realm of value judgements and hence of ethics. This is especially true for Operations Research / Management Science (OR/MS), that particular science which is concerned with methodologies for scientifically deciding how to design and operate man-machine systems in an optimal way, usually under conditions requiring the allocation of scarce resources. Here we try to give a historical account of the growing interest for ethics within the OR/MS community from its birth to present days. Starting from attempts to define models and codes of ethical behaviour in our profession, the OR/MS community has arrived at more fundamental questions about the ethical responsibility it faces in a world of growing inequalities and in which the ever greater stress that human activities impose on the environment puts at risk the very survival of human kind.

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Correspondence to Jean-Pierre Brans.

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Received: March 2004, Revised: April 2004,

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01-02, 90-02, 90-03, 90B-99

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Brans, JP., Gallo, G. Ethics in OR/MS: Past, present and future. 4OR 2, 95–110 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10288-004-0039-5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10288-004-0039-5

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