Microsoft and its Citizenship team last week unveiled a new nonprofit alliance to enhance disaster relief management.
While BCLC was incorporated ten years ago, its spiritual founding happened the year before at a conference called “Corporate Citizenship and Globalization.”
There are many practical, logical reasons for government, nongovernmental organizations, and the business community to cooperate on disaster activities to maximize resources and reduce losses.
The humble molecule dihydrogen monoxide is so ever-present that it is often forgotten.
Nielsen released a study this week showing that, among the 28,000 online respondents to a 56-country survey, socially conscious consumers care most about environmental sustainability
[Editor's Note: This article was originally posted on the UPS Blog]
We asked the BCLC Business & Society Relations Working Group to vote on the top ten iconic business movies.
It’s perfectly understandable why disaster preparedness might not be a front-burner issue for most small business owners.
In Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steven Jobs, a transformative moment occurs when Jobs returns to Apple (where he’d been fired a few years before) and rescues the company from collapse.
