WorldBusinessAcademy
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Last updated 6/12/2008 3:40 pm
The World Business Academy is a non-profit business think tank devoted to rekindling the human spirit in business. It was founded in 1987 as a result of discussions conducted at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International in Menlo Park, California. These talks centered upon the role and responsibility of business in relation to the critical moral, environmental and social dilemmas of the day. Led by Founder Rinaldo S. Brutoco, a small group of senior business executives and academics emerged from these meetings to create a research and education institution, the World Business Academy, to help the global business community understand and participate in the new constructive role emerging for business as the dominant institution in society.
Core areas of the Academy’s research and work include sustainable business strategies, the challenge of values-driven leadership, development of the human potential at work, global reconstruction, and understanding “best practices” within new business paradigms. All of these concepts, linked together and applied, represent the ongoing work of the Academy in its dialogues, research, publications, meetings, and networking. The Academy provides a collaborative network for cutting-edge business leaders, entrepreneurs, and scholars who are aware of business’ pervasive role in society. The Academy hosts world-class forums, dialogues, and retreats. It has been continuously publishing leading-edge articles for the business community for 20 years. In 2007 it published over 850 pages of articles on topics of critical importance to business today and tomorrow, as well as a 550-page book entitled Freedom From Mid-East Oil. The Academy forms alliances with like-minded businesses and non-profit organizations and periodically delivers research and disseminates knowledge from the world’s top thinkers, many of them Academy Fellows.
The Academy delivers self-learning and educational resources to its sponsors and members, and conducts world research projects and forums in the areas of business consciousness, corporate responsibility, global reconstruction, human potential, and innovative and values-driven leadership. The Academy has extensive archives of published materials on the “new business paradigm” and innovative business practices. It maintains an extensive electronic publications program that regularly distributes timely information under titles that include EconForecast, Currents in Commerce, and Common ¢ents.
In addition to this extensive publications program, the Academy has a unique resource in its 100 Academy Fellows who comprise a veritable Who’s Who of world-class thinkers. These include Warren Bennis (leadership and management), Lester Brown (global environment), Deepak Chopra (healing and wellness), Steven Covey (author, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People), Hazel Henderson (economic futures), Amory Lovins (energy policy), Michael Ray (creativity in business), John Raisian (Hoover Institution), Peter Senge (business theory), and Margaret Wheatley (business leadership).
Feeling guilty about the carbon emissions that you caused by attending
that London meeting in person rather than by videoconference? Unsure how to make it up to the planet without being taken for a ride by a carbon cowboy?
Part of the trouble with carbon offsets
posted by
WorldBusinessAcademy
on 7/14/2008 3:15 pm
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Hawaii has become the first state in the nation to require that all new homes come equipped with solar water heaters. The new law will apply to homes built after January 1, 2010, and add about $5,000 to a home’s cost. Solar water heaters pay for themselves in a few years because they cut average electricity costs by 30-35%. Israel and Spain also require solar heating in all new homes.
Source: World Business Alliance (www.worldbusiness.org) Read more...
posted by
WorldBusinessAcademy
on 7/14/2008 3:06 pm
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The first U.S. demonstration-scale cellulosic ethanol plant has opened in Jennings, Louisiana. Verenium’s new plant will make ethanol from sugar cane waste and has the capacity to produce 1.4 million gallons a year. Until now, only labs and small-scale pilot projects have used the technology for converting non-food feedstocks into ethanol. Next year the company plans to start construction of commercial plants that will each produce 20-30 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol a year.
www.technologyreview.com/Energy/20828/?a=f Read more...
posted by
WorldBusinessAcademy
on 6/12/2008 3:43 pm
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