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Susan Steinhagen

Rural development at Nestlé Pakistan

26. April 2010 10:57
Ethical Corporation’s Pam Muckosy speaks with Ian Donald (Managing Director), Fakhar Ahmed (Head of Corporate Affairs) and Jack Moser (Advisor for Agricultural Services) of Nestlé Pakistan on the Company's work with farmers around sustainability.

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Categories: Creating Shared Value

ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Measuring and disclosing CSR performance

6. April 2010 11:02
What makes a company sustainable? Or unsustainable? CSR Advisor Mallen Baker talks about what creates irresponsible businesses and also examines stakeholder engagement and why businesses need to measure their CSR performance. This opinion piece in the Ethical Corporation talks about integrated sustainability and financial reporting as an ethical obligation. Also in the Ethical Corporation, Mindy Lubber, President of CERES, a network of investors, environmental organizations and other public interest groups working to address sustainability challenges, argues that companies should be forced to issue non-financial reports. Should CSR/sustainability reporting be made mandatory for businesses or should it be kept voluntary? What are your thoughts?
ssteinhagen Submitted by
Susan Steinhagen

Prakash Sethi on Corporate Social Accountability

6. April 2010 10:58
Prakash Sethi, management professor at Baruch College at the City University of New York talks to Ethical Corporation about corporate accountability, the role of NGOs, and how companies can move from corporate social responsibility to corporate social accountability.

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Categories: CSR | Corporate Social Responsibility

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Susan Steinhagen

Corporate Social Responsibility: a valid tool or just a toy?

12. March 2010 10:27
Corporate Social Responsibility programmes are now common place across the business world.  What constitutes successful CSR, however, continues to be questioned, especially as the economic crisis dominates headlines.  Now, more than ever, Corporate Social Responsibility programmes need to earn their place in the business world.  This week, three commentators are united in their recognition that there is a real value in maintaining and supporting CSR projects, but only if organisations ensure all projects contribute to the core business.  The future lies in creating shared value, not simply charity for charity's sake. The first of these commentators, Mike Pandey who writes in the Economic Times, argues that Corporate Social Responsibility principally provides companies with a 'tool created for giving back'.  He questions, however, whether we have used the tool in the way in which it was first intended.  He discusses the strain we have collectively placed on the Earth's resources, suggesting that the economic downturn has forced us into a period of retrospection and introspection.  He questions whether we have done enough to 'pay back what we have taken' from the Earth and suggests that this may be an empty promise for many companies and corporations.  Some, however, have begun to live up to their promises, taking the first steps towards making CSR something real and valid within a company, for real benefit to the world around us.  He concludes that a 'greater collective effort is needed if we want a change, if we want a future'. Julian Evans of the Wall Street Journal agrees that that the global recession has forced companies to reassess what their corporate social responsibility means to them.  More so than Mike Pandey, Evan is hopeful that this is giving companies the opportunity to ensure that their CSR projects are core to the wider business values and intentions, rather than 'marginal initiatives'. Very much in line with the central arguments that sit behind Creating Shared Value, Evans refers to the comments of Eric Schmidt, chief executive of Google at Davos; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpDjcuYVWxo who said that he sees no difference between the social responsibilities of business and their fundamental business responsibilities. Not only must a business use their CSR projects to support the wider business needs and objectives, this integration must then be clearly communicated through CSR reporting.  Prakash Sethi writes on this issue for Ethical Corporation, stressing that a business' CSR programme must have both business and social benefits if it is to be seen positively by consumers.  He argues that companies need to ensure their corporate social responsibility reporting has a sense of true integrity. Sethi writes that the 'new emphasis' in CSR reporting is to focus on a company's core business activities and their impact on the sustainability of the planet's environment and inhabitants. We aim to achieve this with Creating Shared Value.  There’s a mutual business and philanthropic benefit to be had from projects that are sincerely devised to assist the world around us while furthering the values and needs of the business.  One example of this is the work being done in Latin America to ensure that Creating Shared Value is at the heart of each stage of the value chain.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNlEvxxp2fU

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Amir Dossal from the United Nations Office for partnerships explains why the private sector - with its expertise, technology, management skills, and global reach - must be encouraged to "invest its creativity" in the Millennium Development Goals.

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Water management

How can we solve the world's water crisis?

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The non-profit organisation, International Development Enterprises (IDE) Cambodia, was awarded the first Nestlé Prize in Creating Shared Value for a rural development project which aims to improve the living standards of the Cambodian rural population by increasing agricultural productivity and income.

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