'Brimming with fascinating historical details and economic insights, 'Between Ethics and Economics' develops a powerful case for a 'moral leeway' approach to business ethics. Professors Sandberg and Walsh build on a clear-eyed appraisal of markets' goods and harms to deliver a principled middle path, navigating deftly between the extremes of unrealistic moralism and pathological amorality.' Hugh Breakey, Principal Research Fellow and Deputy Director, Griffith University's Institute for Ethics, Governance & Law 'Scholars disagree about how to approach ethical issues in business. Sandberg and Walsh offer an innovative solution: the moral leeway approach. Drawing on insights from economics and philosophy, they shed new light on classic issues such as just prices, market harms, and corporate social responsibility.' Jeffrey Moriarty, Professor of Philosophy, Bentley University 'This important book offers a fresh and compelling perspective on markets and morality, developing an original and highly plausible account of business ethics and corporate responsibility. It will appeal to ethicists, economists, and business scholars alike for its nuance, rigour, and clarity. Along the way, the authors offer incisive insights into the invisible hand, corporate moral agency, the just price of labour, the harm principle, and more, making this book a valuable and engaging contribution to contemporary debates in the field.' Boudewijn de Bruin, Professor of Financial Ethics, University of Groningen, and editor of the 'Journal of Business Ethics' 'Joakim Sandberg and Adrian Walsh articulate a view that is challenging to defend that people are morally permitted to do things in business that are otherwise morally impermissible, but this does not mean that business is ethics-free. The authors helpfully summarize ethical debates on key topics including pricing, corporate governance, and CSR and situate them in economic and historical contexts. Their book deserves to be widely read. Business ethics scholarship will be deeper for it, and practitioners, richer.' Nien-hê Hsieh, Kim B. Clark Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School