A Conceptual Approach to Building a Culture of Compliance through Continuous Monitoring and Ethical Risk Leadership
Abstract
Organisational compliance has become increasingly critical in a regulatory environment characterised by complexity, heightened stakeholder expectations, and escalating ethical demands. Financial institutions, public-sector organisations, and corporations across diverse industries face risks arising from regulatory breaches, misconduct, fraud, governance failures, and cultural deficiencies. This paper proposes a conceptual approach to building a sustainable culture of compliance through continuous monitoring and ethical risk leadership. Drawing exclusively from pre-2020 scholarship, the article examines theoretical foundations, behavioural influences, monitoring mechanisms, leadership values, and organisational design principles that underpin compliance systems. The review synthesises research on risk governance, ethics, behavioural regulation, internal control system design, and continuous auditing. The analysis highlights how ethical leadership, real-time monitoring processes, behavioural reinforcement mechanisms, and cross-functional accountability structures collectively strengthen compliance culture. The paper concludes by outlining implications for organisational practice and future research.
How to Cite This Article
Olawole Akomolafe, Michael Uzoma Agu (2020). A Conceptual Approach to Building a Culture of Compliance through Continuous Monitoring and Ethical Risk Leadership . Journal of Frontiers in Multidisciplinary Research (JFMR), 1(2), 164-172. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54660/.IJFMR.2020.1.2.164-172