• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The Business of Society

The Business of Society

  • Insights
  • Podcast
  • About
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Insights

Universities – Front Runners or Falling Behind The Green Transition?

13 August 2017
By Louise Thomsen

Universities are knowledge generators, facilitators of innovation and play a key role in shaping the mindsets and developing the skills of our future leaders. Universities bear a tremendous responsibility for not just talking the talk, but also for walking the walk on social responsibility. However, when visiting a university campus, it is not always commonplace that we find […]

How the Fringe is Becoming Mainstream. Or is it the Other Way Around?

21 July 2017
By Hans Krause Hansen

These are indeed interesting times! as one of my good colleagues recently exclaimed over a cup of coffee. Disinformation and conspiracy theories all over the place. Obama now accused of being the founding father of ISIS. Can you believe it? Politics is definitely going berserk. Needless to say, I happened to be in complete agreement with my […]

Malcolm McIntosh – Tribute to an Academic Entrepreneur

12 July 2017
By Andreas Rasche

Malcolm McIntosh passed away on 7 June 2017. We lost, as Sandra Waddock recently remarked, an intellectual shaman – someone who cared deeply about the state of the world and who was thinking so wonderfully enthusiastic, “wild” and unconventional about corporate responsibility and sustainability.

In Tribute: Malcolm McIntosh

28 June 2017

Have fun and laugh. I had a ball. Sorry to go early. Laugh a lot, it oxygenizes the brain just as well as yoga. Malcolm McIntosh Malcolm McIntosh’s words, quoted in an announcement of his passing on June 7, 2017, sent out by his family, epitomize how he lived his life. I first met Malcolm […]

The “sandwich trick”: How ethically questionable practices get normalized

6 June 2017
By Dennis Schoeneborn, Fabian Homberg

At some resort hotels in Las Vegas, it is an established practice that guests at check-in hand-over to the receptionist a ‘$20 sandwich” (i.e. a banknote slipped between credit card and ID) in order to attain a room upgrade. Such benefits can include luxurious suites, top floor rooms with views, etc.

Creativity: Africa’s new gold?

30 May 2017
By Ana Alacovska, Thilde Langevang

Cocoa, precious minerals and crude oil ceased to be Africa’s only natural resources. Creativity is ‘the oil of the 21st century’ (Ross, 2008). Creativity and culture are nowadays intensely hailed by global development institutions as ‘a wonderstuff’ (Ross, 2008)—the magical passkey to Africa’s sustainable development—poised to propel inclusive growth, cultural diversity and job creation especially […]

What if unethical behavior is just matter out of place?

18 May 2017
By Anna Kirkebæk Gosovic

It’s always puzzled me why it is that we might share words and concepts but that the meaning we fill into these concepts is very different. Kinda like a hotdog. Danish hot dog makers enjoy to fill it with important hotdog defining ingredients such as remoulade, mustard and pickles, whereas rumor has it that Swedish […]

How is Ayn Rand Still a Thing? From Ridicule to Serious Concern

18 April 2017
By Steen Vallentin

A recent article in The Washington Post informs us that Donald Trump is affectionate about the works of Ayn Rand (1905-1982), often referred to as the ‘high priestess of selfishness’. He shares this affection with several of his members of cabinet. These include Rex Tillerson, Secretary of State, Andy Puzder, Secretary of Labor, and Mike Pompeo, Director […]

CSR is Dead. Long Live CSR

17 March 2017
By Andreas Rasche, Jeremy Moon, Mette Morsing

We – Andreas Rasche, Mette Morsing, and Jeremy Moon – just edited an international textbook entitled Corporate Social Responsibility: Strategy, Communication, Governance (Cambridge University Press). When talking to people about the book, one common response was: “Why didn’t you just call it Corporate Sustainability? After all, this term is used by everybody these days…” In 2014, […]

Redistributing resource rights in a resource-dependent economy: The case of the Faroese fisheries reform

2 February 2017
By Árni Petersen

The distribution of rights to natural resources is a complex and challenging task to solve because of the many stakeholders involved. At present, the Faroe Islands are in the process of reforming its fishing system, which undoubtedly will have a significant impact in a country where 95 percent of exports are fish products. The case […]

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

The Business of Society

BOS is a research insights platform by the CBS Sustainability Centre to discuss, inspire and reflect on CSR and sustainability-related issues.

  • Newsletter
  • Linkedin
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

The Business of Society

About

Explore

Blog

Podcast

Newsletter & Social Media

  • Newsletter
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Contact & Information

CBS Sustainability Centre
Copenhagen Business School
Dalgas Have 15
2000 Frederiksberg

sustainability@cbs.dk

Copyright © 2025 · Copenhagen Business School

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Impressum
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies