Showing results by author : Grahame Broadbelt

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Corporate Sustainability Reporting - learning from a recent clinic
posted by Grahame Broadbelt  on June 29, 2010

The issues around the how, what and who of corporate reporting continue to run around the same loops that they have been on for some time if the content of the clinic conversation we had recently is anything to go by. The issue of sustainability reporting – as a subset of the corporate reporting agenda more generally – continues to get subsumed into the wider angst about purpose, about audience and about impact of the reporting process and outputs.


Want to know the value of something? Ask the price.
posted by Grahame Broadbelt  on July 19, 2009

Will carbon pricing work to shift behaviour away from carbon intensive activities and towards a low carbon future? The answer is I don’t know. The more worrying answer is neither does anyone else.
 


Run away from Runaway
posted by Grahame Broadbelt  on July 17, 2009

We had the launch of our pamphlet, Tomorrow’s Climate: Beyond Peak Carbon at the Institution of Civil Engineers last night. It went well, good speakers (Lord Smith and our very own David Vigar) and good attendance


Seeing systems - the people connection
posted by Grahame Broadbelt  on February 3, 2009

We had planned to launch our talent report, Tomorrow’s Global Talent, yesterday but the weather defeated us and we have postponed. It is a shame; I was looking forward to some good conversations at the event with people who are thinking deeply about the relationship between labour and capital (a subject upon which there has been much musing historically and upon which great ideologies and counter ideologies have been built). I was especially looking forward to talking about how our understanding of labour markets needs to be updated to reflect our increasingly clear sense that we are living through a time of extraordinary change; perhaps one where the standard script of labour-capital theory no longer is helpful to our thinking or our action.
In many ways the recession has seen some serious reverting to type and replaying old, and very tired, ideas about the role of labour in our economy, one which sees people as disposable and organised labour as militant. Widespread job losses. Wildcat strikes calling for protectionist labour market policies. So far, so familiar.


Corrections
posted by Grahame Broadbelt  on October 7, 2008

As the global financial crisis continues and we await the next wave of bad economic news or the details of the next bank to collapse there are some who think that this is all a jolly good thing.

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