Remove Corporate Social Responsibility Remove Manufacturing Remove Value Creation
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ESG Acronyms and What They Mean

3BL Media

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) CSR is viewed as a form of self-regulation or a voluntary initiative by organizations to contribute to environmental or social goals and to be accountable to themselves, their stakeholders and broader society.

UNSDG 147
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A $500 Billion+ Market Opportunity for Real Impact: Three Ways Corporations Can Engage in Social Procurement

James Militzer

Since global procurement budgets amount to trillions of dollars, dedicating even a small percentage of these budgets to social enterprises could generate billions of dollars in new revenue for the sector – and substantial new impact for both corporate ESG efforts and the communities and causes they target.

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From Net Zero to Net Positive

Sustainable Round Table

Since this sort of visionary, catalytic leadership is needed now more than ever before, it is right to ask: how can some executives and companies across different industries repeatedly be so far ahead of their peers in multi-stakeholder value creation that has proven more sustainable in complex globally scaling businesses?

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From Net Zero to Net Positive

Sustainable Round Table

Since this sort of visionary, catalytic leadership is needed now more than ever before, it is right to ask: how can some executives and companies across different industries repeatedly be so far ahead of their peers in multi-stakeholder value creation that has proven more sustainable in complex globally scaling businesses?

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US Pharma Prices: a Hard Pill to Swallow

Chris Hall

And in this age of corporate social responsibility, companies have a role to play in ensuring their products are made available to those who need them most.