INTRODUCTION Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is an idea that corporations taking some sort of activities with responsibility for society’s benefits to effect their customers, employees, shareholder and environment within their operations. This is a voluntary behavior to improve employees and their families’ quality of life as well as society. Nevertheless, it is not a statutory law that organizations have to comply with. Over the last two decades, the public and the media have increasingly
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Many things threaten our world: war, climate change, and poverty are among them. While many people are concerned with our economy, our oil dependency, and dwindling food and water supplies, others acknowledge the simple reason as to why we are faced with these issues – the Earth is overpopulated. Exponential growth has been seen in our world population over the past two centuries, with a grand total of 7 billion (6.97 as of my last essay) people roaming the Earth today (Tomkin, 2011). Mankind
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“A Giant So Big It’s a Proxy for India’s Economy,” New York Times, June 6, 2004, p. W1. Ibid. WTO, “World Trade 2003, Prospects for 2004; Stronger Than Expected Growth Spurs Modest Trade Recovery,” WTO Press Release 373, April 5, 2004, p. 1. Ibid. Thomas Friedman, The Lexus and the Olive Tree: Understanding Globalization (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1999). Jonathan P. Doh and Hildy Teegen, Globalization and NGOs: Transforming Business, Government, and Society (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003).
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[pic] McDonald's and the Environmental Defense Fund: a case study of a green alliance Sharon Livesey Originally published in…The Journal of Business Communication • January 1999 In 1987, the United Nations World Commission on Environment and Development, which had convened to address the global ecological crisis, produced Our Common Future (the Brundtland Report). This watershed event established the conceptual underpinnings for environmental politics and debate in the 1990s by reframing
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R outledge Revision: Questions & Answers Jurisprudence 2011–2012 Each Routledge Q&A contains approximately 50 questions on topics commonly found on exam papers, with answer plans and comprehensive suggested answers. Each book also offers valuable advice as to how to approach and tackle exam questions and how to focus your revision effectively. New Aim Higher and Common Pitfalls boxes will also help you to identify how to go that little bit further in order to get the very best marks and highlight
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Environment The biggest threat to our environment is global warming and there are many theories as to what causes it. Scientists have concerns that over the past 250 years, man-kind has been artificially raising the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at an ever-increasing rate, mostly by burning fossil fuels. Over the last century the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil has increased the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). This happens because the coal or oil
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available to retailers specifically facing a threat from WalMart. Toward that end, the remainder of the paper begins with an overview of the big box phenomenon and a framework for understanding how the big box influences the strategic landscape. Three theory-based potential strategic responses are evaluated, followed by conclusions and opportunities for further research. Wal-Mart and the Big Box Phenomenon The emergence of big box retailers in the United States has changed the retailing landscape considerably
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Cover Page Written Case Study – “Marketing the Eco-Shack” Table of Contents Cover Page 1 Table of Contents 2 1. Eco-Shack Concept/Executive Summary 3 i. Aims and Objectives 4 ii. Project Aim 4 iii. Objectives 4 iv. Background 5 v. Project Rationale 6 2. Issues Identification 6 i. Solution 7 3. Analysis 7 1. Market Segmentation 7 2. Business Segment 8 a. Income Segmentation 8 b. Brand Concentration 8 3. Pricing Strategies 9 4. Recommendations 9 i
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MP A R Munich Personal RePEc Archive The Pecking Order, Trade-off, Signaling, and Market-Timing Theories of Capital Structure: a Review Anton Miglo University of Bridgeport 2010 Online at http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/46691/ MPRA Paper No. 46691, posted 6. May 2013 19:07 UTC The Pecking Order, Trade-off, Signaling, and Market-Timing Theories of Capital Structure: a Review Anton Miglo Associate professor, University of Bridgeport, School of Business, Bridgeport, CT 06604, phone
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highly relevant. Recently, there has been much interest in the characterization of d’Alembert monodromies. Therefore this could shed important light on a conjecture of Brouwer. This reduces the results of [40] to standard techniques of operator theory. Hence this could shed important light on a conjecture of Frobenius. In [19], it is shown
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