"Why give money to people who don't like us?"
"We're broke at home, so how can we afford to send money to people abroad?"
"Why give money to people who don't like us?"
"We're broke at home, so how can we afford to send money to people abroad?"
Teenage girls use computers and the Internet as much as boys do, but are five times less likely to consider a technology-related career.
BCLC just launched the nomination and application cycle for its 2013 Citizens Awards. These are important awards for the field; companies, local Chambers, and NGO partners are well served to go through the submission process.
The most lucrative and safest investment in the world – almost guaranteed to deliver outstanding financial returns as well as improving civic well-being and economic development – is to invest in the economic and social empowerment of women.
Poverty levels are well documented in India, and it is estimated that the country is home to at least one-third of the world’s poor.
BCLC’s Taryn Bird (@tarynebird) is reporting in from New York this week, where global development events including the Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting and the UN General Assembly (UNGA) Meetings are taking place.
To find leading examples of the innovative and diverse ways business makes a difference in society, look no further than the Corporate Citizenship Awards.
On a recent flight to Belize City, Belize, where some 400 PwC interns, staff, partners and retired partners flew down to teach financial literacy and entrepreneurship to more than 2,000 students, educators and parents, I began to think about a recent article I read entitled, What Do We Lose W