Ethical Challenges in Human Resource Management Practices

 

Dollops of ethical challenges can be seen in Human Resource Management. These are related to various areas, from recruitment to performance to satisfaction to technological advancement (Sposato et al., 2025). It is an important role in HR to balance business objectives with employee rights and legal compliance Valecha (2022). This is impacted by ethical challenges. Therefore, two foundational tensions arise: (i) a "dual loyalty" conflict between serving management's profit goals and advocating for employee fairness, and (ii) the struggle to maintain necessary confidentiality with sufficient transparency. To handle these tensions, having an idea about the key ethical challenges is important.

Key Ethical Challenges by HR Practice Area

1. Recruitment & Selection

One of the areas with the majority of ethical challenges is the recruitment and selection process. This is affected by various sub-parts, including discrimination from unconscious or conscious bias, as well as nepotism Al-Kassem (2021). Such practices prioritise connections over merit. Furthermore, misrepresentation through unrealistic job descriptions or poor communication with candidates damages trust. And also, invading a candidate's privacy by conducting overly intrusive background checks or social media scrutiny crosses ethical boundaries. Therefore, within an organisation, an eye should be kept on eradicating such unethical practices

2. Compensation & Benefits

Related to compensation, it is mainly about equity and transparency in payments (Yang & Wei, 2022). There can be two individuals with the same qualifications but with different salaries in the same position. These will impact the individual who gets a lesser salary. This will result in demotivation and dissatisfaction. Within an organisation, there should be equitable pay and fair wage structures. Additionally, the vast disparity between executive compensation and the average employee's salary raises significant questions about internal fairness and social justice. An organisation should always try to keep these ethical challenges to a minimum.

3. Performance Management

Due to inherent subjectivity and bias, there can be ethical challenges in performance management. This often occurs due to a lack of due process, failing to give employees clear goals and a fair chance to improve before disciplinary action (Van Buren & Greenwood, 2012). Furthermore, forced ranking systems can be demotivating and unfair. Such practices pit employees against each other and potentially push out valuable staff who are not ranked at the top.

4. Employee Relations & Termination

Ethical challenges in employee relations often come from an abuse of power, such as excessive surveillance that invades privacy and erodes trust (Indiparambil, 2019). This is compounded by failing to protect whistleblowers from retaliation or carrying out wrongful dismissals without just cause or a fair process. Even during difficult layoffs, a lack of compassion, transparency, and adequate support for departing employees raises serious ethical concerns about the organisation's commitment to its people.

5. Ethical concerns related to Artificial Intelligence (AI)

These come from its profound influence on decision-making, privacy, and human welfare. One major issue is bias in algorithms, where systems trained on skewed data can reinforce discrimination and inequality (Alotaibi, 2018). Privacy risks also arise as AI systems collect and analyse vast amounts of personal data, often without full consent or transparency. Accountability is another critical concern, as it becomes difficult to determine who is responsible when AI makes errors or causes harm. Additionally, the rapid automation driven by AI threatens employment and widens the socio-economic gap. There are also fears about manipulation, misinformation, and loss of human autonomy as AI becomes more integrated into daily life. Therefore, strong ethical governance, transparency, and human oversight are important to guarantee AI serves humanity responsibly and equitably (Kamila & Jasrotia, 2023). Remember, AI is not everything; it is just a helpful tool. Organisations should be extremely beware of the consequences of reckless use of AI.

Conclusions

HR is the primary function responsible for proactively mitigating ethical challenges within an organisation. This involves developing and enforcing a clear code of ethics, providing realistic training, creating safe and confidential reporting channels, auditing HR processes for systemic bias, and championing leadership accountability. By institutionalising these practices, HR demonstrates its strategic value and fulfils its dual mandate: protecting the organisation from risk while simultaneously fostering a just, equitable, and productive workplace for all employees. Therefore, it is important that organisations and HR take necessary steps to address the ethical challenges that organisations face.

 

References

Al-Kassem, A. H. (2021). Recruitment and Selection Practices in Business Process Outsourcing Industry. Archives of Business Research, 5(3).

Alotaibi, S. S. (2018). Ethical Issues and Related Considerations Involved with Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systems. International Journal of Advanced Computer Science and Applications, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.14569/ijacsa.2018.090407

Indiparambil, J. J. (2019). Privacy and beyond: socio-ethical concerns of “on-the-job” surveillance. Asian Journal of Business Ethics, 8(1), 73–105. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13520-019-00089-0

Manoj Kumar Kamila, & Sahil Singh Jasrotia. (2023). Ethical issues in the development of artificial intelligence: recognizing the risks. International Journal of Ethics and Systems, 41(1). https://doi.org/10.1108/ijoes-05-2023-0107

Sposato, M., Dittmar, E. C., & Patricia, J. (2025). New technologies in HR: bridging efficiency and ethical considerations. International Journal of Organizational Analysis. https://doi.org/10.1108/ijoa-09-2024-4814

Valecha, N. (2022). A Study on Importance of Ethical Responsibilities in HR Management. International Journal for Global Academic & Scientific Research, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.55938/ijgasr.v1i1.7

Van Buren, H. J., & Greenwood, M. (2012). Ethics and HRM Education. Journal of Academic Ethics, 11(1), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10805-012-9174-3

YANG, H., & WEI, X. (2022). The impact of guanxi human resource management practices on beneficiaries’ altruistic behavior: The perspective of compensatory ethics. Acta Psychologica Sinica, 54(10), 1248. https://doi.org/10.3724/sp.j.1041.2022.01248

 

Comments

  1. This article lists and analyzes the primary ethical concerns in HRM, such as hiring, compensation, performance reviews, employee relations, and AI integration. It emphasizes that the two mandates of HR professionals are equity, legal compliance, and balancing organizational objectives with employee rights. Ethical concerns include algorithmic discrimination in AI, subjective performance reviews, bias in hiring, unequal compensation, and privacy violations. The article highlights that HR must actively institutionalize ethical practices through codes of ethics, training, auditing, confidential reporting channels, and leadership accountability in order to foster a fair, transparent, and effective workplace. Excellent work!

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  2. The article is a timely analysis of the ethical issues in HRM practice. The revelation of dual loyalty tensions that you have made is very insightful. It embodies a basic quandary of HR professionals in the current times.

    The systematic practice environment in the five areas is good. It covers important ethical issues in a systematic manner. The fact that you have included AI-related ethical challenges shows that it is relevant in the present day. Privacy concerns and algorithmic bias are becoming more pressing problems.

    The gender problems of recruitment bias, unequal pay, and subjectivity of performance management reveal unresolved issues. These are the matters that the HR practitioners have to monitor. The importance of whistleblower protection and surveillance issues that you address concern vital power dynamics.

    Nevertheless, the article could also do better by delving into the strategies of practical resolutions further. What should be done to steer organizations through conflicting ethical demands? Which decision-making models can assist HR practitioners to overcome ethical dilemmas? It would be better to include case examples or specific intervention strategies in order to enhance practical application. However, this is a good way of determining the major ethical dilemmas in contemporary HRM

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  3. This was such a thoughtful look at the real ethical challenges HR faces today. I really like how you break down issues like biased hiring, unequal pay, privacy concerns, and even the risks that come with using AI. These are things employees feel every day, so it’s refreshing to see them explained so clearly.

    What stood out most is your focus on practical solutions clear policies, training, fair processes, and safe ways for people to speak up. It’s a good reminder that ethical HR doesn’t just “happen”; it requires intention, empathy, and consistency.

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  4. This article gives a clear and structured overview of key ethical challenges in HR, especially in recruitment, performance evaluation, and the use of AI. The explanations are practical and relevant. Adding real-world examples or case insights would make it even stronger, but overall it’s an informative and well-written piece.

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  5. This blog is a comprehensive and informative discussion of the ethical issues that Hr has to deal with in various fields- recruitment and performance management up to the introduction of AI. I especially like that the focus is on dual loyalty and that the HR management undergoes a fine line between organizational and employee equity. It is timely to raise AI-related ethical issues, and technology is affecting decision-making, privacy, and equity. The proposed mitigation measures such as codes of ethics, training, auditing, and leadership accountability give an effective roadmap that HR professionals should use to address these issues with responsibility. All in all, an excellent and insightful debate into the significance of ethics in HR practices.

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  6. The core function of HRM is managing an organization's most valuable asset, its people. This involves key areas like recruitment, compensation, performance management, and training. Ethical considerations must permeate every one of these functions to ensure fairness and transparency. In the face of technological shifts like AI, HR must evolve into an ethical advocate and strategic partner. By prioritizing human dignity and compliance, HR builds a sustainable, high-performing culture.

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  7. This clearly shows that HR faces many ethical challenges across all areas, from recruitment and compensation to performance management and AI use. Balancing fairness, transparency, and employee rights with business goals is critical. Particularly with AI, HR must ensure human oversight, protect privacy, and prevent bias. Overall, ethical HR practices are essential for trust, employee satisfaction, and long term organizational success.

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  8. This is a well structured and timely discussion of the ethical challenges shaping modern HRM. I like how you highlight the dual loyalty tension HR faces and connect it to real issues like biased hiring, unequal pay, privacy concerns, and the fast growing risks around AI. The way you frame these challenges across key HR functions makes the topic very relatable. Overall, the article clearly shows why ethical awareness and consistent, responsible practices are essential for building fairness and long term organizational trust.

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  9. Dilrangi, this article outlines the ethical pressures facing Human Resource Management. Well-structured discussion of foundational tensions, particularly the "dual loyalty" conflict.
    Explanation of the Key Ethical Challenges, such as Recruitment & Selection, Compensation & Benefits and Ethical concerns related to Artificial Intelligence, strengthens your article well. This article establishes HR's indispensable role as the organisation's ethical guardian, tasked with fostering a just, equitable, and productive workplace.

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  10. Nadeesha, this blog offers a strong and well-structured analysis of the ethical complexities embedded in core HRM practices, clearly reinforcing the critical HRM principle that fairness, transparency, and accountability are central to sustainable people management. The coverage of recruitment, compensation, performance management, and AI ethics is particularly impactful and practically relevant. The conclusion effectively positions HR as a strategic ethical guardian. To enhance it further, adding one brief real organizational case would strengthen practical application and contextual depth.

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  11. This is an insightful and comprehensive blog that effectively highlights the multifaceted ethical challenges in HRM. Your analysis across recruitment, compensation, performance management, employee relations, and AI ethics provides a clear picture of potential pitfalls. The emphasis on proactive HR practices—ethical codes, training, audits, and accountability—offers practical guidance, reinforcing HR’s role as a guardian of fairness, trust, and responsible organizational conduct.

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  12. This is a very insightful exploration of the ethical challenges inherent in HRM. I particularly appreciate how the article highlights the ‘dual loyalty’ tension between organisational goals and employee fairness, as well as the nuanced ethical concerns across recruitment, compensation, performance management, and employee relations. The discussion on AI’s ethical implications is timely and emphasizes the importance of human oversight alongside technological advancement. Overall, the blog effectively underscores the strategic role of HR in fostering a fair, transparent, and accountable workplace while balancing organisational objectives with employee rights.

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  13. This is a very thoughtful and comprehensive overview of the ethical challenges in HR. I really appreciate how you’ve broken it down by practice area, it makes it much easier to understand where problems can arise, from recruitment to AI. The discussion on balancing organizational goals with employee rights really resonated with me, especially the “dual loyalty” conflict. I also liked the emphasis on AI ethics; it’s a timely reminder that technology is just a tool, and its impact depends on how responsibly we use it. Overall, this article highlights how crucial HR is not just for managing people, but for fostering fairness, trust, and accountability within organizations.

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  14. This article provides a clear and well-structured overview of key ethical challenges in HRM. The discussion on dual loyalty, transparency, and the growing risks linked to AI offers valuable perspective. It rightly highlights the need for fair recruitment, equitable pay, and unbiased performance management. Overall, a concise and insightful piece that reinforces HR’s vital role in promoting ethical and responsible practices.

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  15. The article offers a timely and insightful examination of ethical challenges in HRM, especially your discussion on dual-loyalty tensions. Your structured breakdown of issues—including AI-related concerns like privacy and algorithmic bias—adds strong contemporary relevance. I also appreciate how you highlighted ongoing gender-related problems such as recruitment bias, pay inequality, and subjective performance evaluations. Your points about whistleblower protection and workplace surveillance further emphasise key ethical power dynamics. It would be even more valuable if future work explored practical strategies, decision-making frameworks, or real-world examples to help HR professionals navigate these dilemmas.

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  16. Great overview of the major ethical challenges HR faces today. You’ve highlighted how issues like bias in recruitment, inequitable pay, subjective performance reviews, and the growing risks of AI all shape employee trust and organisational fairness. I especially like the focus on HR’s responsibility to balance business goals with ethical accountability. Strong, practical insights!

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  17. This article shows a clear, well structured summary of the ethical problems that HR roles must manage. From those problems, main will the technology AI and data analytics links with human processes. Further it showcases conflicts that HR professionals faces currently in linking traditional HR with developing AI issues. Ethics cannot be being omitted rather those are strategic.

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  18. Nadeesha, this article offers a clear and well-structured overview of key ethical challenges in HR, particularly in recruitment, performance evaluation, and the use of AI. Your explanations are practical and highly relevant to current HR practice. Including brief real-world examples would further enrich the discussion, but overall this is an informative and well-written piece that highlights the importance of ethical decision-making in modern HRM.

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  19. This article highlights the many ethical issues that HR must deal with, including bias in hiring, unequal compensation, performance management, employee relations, and the growing risks of artificial intelligence. Particularly crucial is the emphasis on dual loyalty and finding a balance between confidentiality and transparency, which serves as a reminder that HR must serve as both a strategic partner and a defender of fairness. Organizations may foster trust, protect workers, and ensure long-term success by implementing strong governance, transparent policies, and codes of ethics.

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  20. This blog provides a clear and well-structured overview of the major ethical challenges that arise across HRM functions, from recruitment to technology driven decision making. The analysis effectively highlights the core tensions HR faces, such as balancing organisational goals with employee fairness and navigating confidentiality while ensuring transparency. The discussion of ethical risks in areas like biased selection, inequitable pay, subjective performance evaluation, and AI driven discrimination demonstrates strong understanding of contemporary HR concerns. The conclusion appropriately emphasises HR’s strategic responsibility in establishing ethical safeguards through policies, training, audits, and accountability structures. Overall, this is a concise and academically grounded reflection on the ethical complexities that modern HR practitioners must manage.

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