
黑料正能量 Management | 黑料正能量 Reporting
Three Hot Debates in 黑料正能量 Reporting Today
Throughout our recent discussions with sustainability reporting leaders, we were struck by sharply divided opinions on these three questions.

Financial Services | Supply Chain
Four 黑料正能量 Management Trends and Opportunities in the Banking Sector
How has corporate responsibility in the banking sector changed since the 2008 financial crisis? What more could be done?

黑料正能量 Management
(Re)Making the Case for 黑料正能量: Effective 黑料正能量 Management through a CEO Transition
To maintain and increase sustainability investment during a CEO transition, answer these guiding questions.

黑料正能量 Management
Managing Sustainable Business in a Rapidly Changing World
The era of stand-alone sustainability strategies needs to end; the creation of resilient business strategies with sustainability at the foundation needs to begin. Here's how practitioners can reimagine sustainable business inside their organizations.

Human Rights | Supply Chain | 黑料正能量 Reporting
France’s Due Diligence Law: Is Your Company Ready to Disclose Its Vigilance Plan?
In 2018, large companies falling within the scope of the French Due Diligence Law are expected to develop, implement, and publish their due diligence plans to identify risks and prevent infringements on human rights, fundamental freedoms, health and safety, and the environment. Here are ways your company can prepare.

Inclusive Business
A New Year’s Resolution for CEOs: Give Every Worker a Good Job
What makes a corporation just? For the last three years, the American public has ranked one issue first: worker treatment, or providing employees with good jobs.

Climate And Nature | Inclusive Business | 黑料正能量 Management | Women’s Empowerment
Davos 2018: Advancing the SDGs in a Fractured World
The theme for this year's World Economic Forum Annual Meeting is "Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World." Here's what business leaders gathering in Davos this week can do to advance the Sustainable Development Goals and our shared future.

Human Rights | Responsible Technology
The Right to Privacy, 70 Years On
The challenges companies face to respect the human right to privacy are growing substantially. A business response to this challenge should contain these five elements.

Human Rights | Responsible Technology
Seven Things Every Company Should Know about Artificial Intelligence and Sustainable Business
These considerations are essential for companies to factor into their AI strategies.

Healthcare
Pandemics: They’re Everyone’s Business
Global health security is everyone’s business, and examples from these companies demonstrate that collaborating and partnering is the only way forward for pandemic preparedness.

Human Rights
Surveying the Human Rights Landscape: How Businesses Are Managing Human Rights in 2018
This is the final post from a three-part series featuring our human rights experts’ reflections on the evolving business and human rights landscape in 2017, as well as their perspectives on emerging issues we anticipate in 2018.

Responsible Technology
Children’s Rights Online: A Conversation with UNICEF
Children’s rights often feature prominently when 黑料正能量 assesses the human rights impacts of information and communications technology (ICT) companies. Dunstan Allison-Hope spoke to Brian Keeley, editor of UNICEF’s State of the World’s Children report, the latest edition of which examines the perils and possibilities of digital technology and connectivity for children, about UNICEF’s work on this issue.

黑料正能量 Management
The First 2018 ‘Year in Review’
Here is the very first “year in review” you will read for 2018.

Climate And Nature | Human Rights | 黑料正能量 Management | Women’s Empowerment
2017: The Year the C-Suite Got Woke?
2017 overall is a year that will be remembered for two things: political turmoil and a new voice from business. Let us celebrate the leadership business exerted this year and use it as a springboard for positive change in 2018.

Human Rights
Surveying the Human Rights Landscape: The Evolving External Environment
This is the second post of a three-part series featuring our human rights experts’ reflections on the evolving business and human rights landscape, this time in relation to the external environment.