"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.
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.
[Editor's Note: Alyse Nelson will keynote at BCLC’s International Women’s Day Forum.]
In a world of free enterprise, gender does not play a role in an individual’s ability to participate or prosper in the marketplace. In this ideal world, women have equal access to an education; they can acquire a loan and have the right to open their businesses of their choosing.
America’s young entrepreneurs are aggressively building a new generation of businesses, products and services
How one woman inspired generations of explorers, scientist, and dreamers
The topic of women in the workplace is certainly not a new subject for discussion, but how we look at their role and impact is most certainly changing. History has accurately recorded the foundation that women bring to our families and communities, but what about in business?