Supplement to a doomed Agile 2009 proposal.
Learning Outcomes
- To share with participants concepts in professional ethics
 - To tie the nature of ethical dilemmas to essential complexity and the means for tackling dilemmas to the practices of agile development
 - To emphasize the origins of agile practice in values and culture and to tie that to ethical imperatives
 - To identify gaps in agile values that prevent it from being a complete ethical framework – to broaden the definition of stakeholders
 - To challenge the common assertion that doing your job constitutes being ethical
 - To walk through real-world ethical dilemmas, and discuss possible actions and outcomes
 - To build the community of practitioners engaged in the topic and interested in supporting their peers through crises of conscience
 - To brainstorm tools and techniques for expanding the conversation to a broader community in a way that is safe, inviting, and does not violate our obligations
 - To engage the agile community in the larger development and academic community’s efforts to define ethical guidelines for us and potentially inflict them upon us
 - To discuss the growing potential for unintentional benefit and harm from non-safety critical systems
 - To discuss the potential for governmental intervention in response to some highly visible or damaging failure by software systems or software practitioners