Search results by "Frameworks"

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posted by Admin  on November 24, 2010
Harvard Business School in mid-October played host to the 2010 Workshop on Integrated Reporting: Frameworks and Action Plan. Under direction of conference organiser Robert G. Eccles, participants recently published an electronic book around themes developed at the workshop.
     

posted by Admin  on February 25, 2010
This is the contents page for the Tomorrow's Company Briefing Documents. You can use the links below to reach the various Documents stored on forceforgood.com. The Tomorrow's Company Briefing Documents are intended to provide the reader with a comprehensive introduction to a particular topic. Please get in touch if you have any ideas for further briefings at admin@forceforgood.com.
     

posted by Admin  on November 17, 2009
Dialogue between Anthony Alexander, writer, consultant and Director for Research for Alan Baxter & Associates engineering and planning consultancy; and David Vigar, report author.   AA: My work in the built environment sector is focussed on the practical delivery of carbon reductions. This is affected by a number of factors including: the extremely long development cycles in planning, urban design, architecture and construction, the need to transform the working practices and business models of the commercial property sector, and the institutional inertia and steep learning curve related to any change in policy.    Hence, I thought your analogy in the introduction to the Beyond Peak Carbon report that the government was like an architect and business was like a builder was rather an interesting one. 
     

posted by Admin  on November 9, 2009
GLOBE-Net (October 16, 2009) What is the role of investors in creating a more sustainable economy? A survey of fund managers just published by the UK’s Fair Pensions campaign provides challenging reading for anyone who believes that a green future will emerge simply through market forces operating in the investment community. The market purist argument is that the system should regulate itself; because if climate change really is a material risk for businesses, it should be built into the way companies are valued. Companies whose factories or plantations could be destroyed by climate change-induced floods or droughts should be less attractive investments than ones making wind turbines or hybrid car engines. 
     

posted by Admin  on July 17, 2009
The eyes of the world will be on Copenhagen this December. What kind of climate deal will be reached - sustainable blueprint for a green economy, limited agreement or ineffective fudge?  
     

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