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YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 40 MATCHES. PAGE 1 of 5 Items 1-10 of 40
Authors: Gonzalez, Rosa Amelia; Layrisse, Francisco; Lozano, Gerardo
Product Type: Cases
Source: Social Enterprise Knowledge Network
Publication Year: 2012
In 2003, the FEMSA Corporation – a Mexican company – acquired 100% of the shares of the largest franchise of the Coca-Cola system in Latin America, and placed itself at the lead of the sales of carbonated beverages and other soft drinks in different countries of South America, including Colombia, which had been struggling with armed groups since the 1970s. This case explores how Coca-Cola FEMSA included different initiatives in its sustainability strategy, aimed at supporting the process of peaceful demobilization...
Author: Fort, Timothy L.
Product Type: Magazine / Newspaper Articles
Source: Network for Business Sustainability
Publication Year: 2012
Timothy Fort, professor at the George Washington University School of Business, describes how existing business practices can support world peace.
Authors: Jones, Geoffrey G.; Ghanem, Lana
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2012
The case is concerned with Elia Nuqul, the founder of Jordanian-based Nuqul Brothers, a large diversified business group. The case is positioned within the wider context of the regional conflict in Palestine and Israel, and it provides a vehicle for exploring the role and responsibility of entrepreneurs, if any, in such conflicts...
Author: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Product Type: Policy and Issue Reports
Source: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Publication Year: 2011
The United States Peace Index (USPI) is the first in a series of national peace indices that builds on the work of measuring and understanding the fabric of peace, initiated with the Global Peace Index. The USPI ranks the 50 states by their levels of peacefulness, utilizing a methodology based on indicators measuring the absence or presence of violence in society, with data obtained from U.S. Government sources.
Author: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Product Type: Policy and Issue Reports
Source: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Publication Year: 2011
The 2011 Global Peace Index Discussion Paper sets out to explain how the environments that shape peace are also the same environments that create the appropriate conditions for social sustainability.
Author: The Aspen Institute Center for Business Education
Product Type: Reading Collections
Source: The Aspen Institute Center for Business Education
Publication Year: 2011
This collection offers resources to help teach business students about peace. We hope this collection grows and encourages further inquiry into the business and peace nexus.
Author: Institute for Economics and Peace
Product Type: Policy and Issue Reports; Web Sites
Source: Institute for Economics and Peace
Publication Year: 2011
Peace is one of the most used and esteemed words in the human vocabulary. The most peaceful societies have higher per capita income, higher levels of well-being, more freedom, perform better at sustainability, and appear to have a more equitable distribution of social spending. Yet if we wish to create peace then we must first pose the question; "what do we know about peace?” The Institute for Economics and Peace, in conjunction with the Economist Intelligence Unit and with the guidance of an international team of academics and peace experts, has compiled the Global Peace Index.
Author: Dimon, Denise
Product Type: Syllabi
Source: University of San Diego: School of Business Administration
Publication Year: 2011
This course focuses on how changing political environments affect business strategies and competitive advantage of domestic and international firms. It also analyzes the ways in which businesses contribute to the peace and prosperity of the global community through commerce.
Authors: Anderson, Jamie; Markides, Constantinos C.; Kupp, Martin
Product Type: Journal Articles
Source: California Management Review
Publication Year: 2010
By operating in war zones, urban slums, and deep rural areas, companies could not only achieve growth and profits, but could also improve the economic and social conditions of these impoverished regions. Yet how can a company operate in areas with unstable security, poor infrastructure, and little or no formal legal frameworks in place?
Author: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Product Type: Policy and Issue Reports
Source: The Institute for Economics and Peace
Publication Year: 2010
2010 Global Peace Index methodology, results, and findings.
YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 40 MATCHES. PAGE 1 of 5 Items 1-10 of 40