The Wonder of New Ideas
An excerpt from Radical Curiosity on how awe can be a framework for rethinking the social practice of innovation.
Innovative ways to enhance corporate social responsibility (more)
An excerpt from Radical Curiosity on how awe can be a framework for rethinking the social practice of innovation.
A recent study shows that comparable, easily digestible metrics shifted donations from charities with only a good pitch to those with demonstrable results.
Companies and nonprofits need to be more realistic and empathetic that consumers’ decisions are not purely driven by cost.
Wouldn’t it be great if you could simply report your program results and get them externally verified by a trusted third-party registry? It’s not as impossible as it sounds—in fact, we’re close.
The ethical pause—a short period of reflection and inquiry about a project’s ethical implications and the team’s approach to the work—helps ensure teams ask the right questions and address issues of inequity and access in the services they develop.
Through intentional investments and informed divestments, investors, philanthropists, and foundations can support environmentally conscious, community-centered, and reparative approaches to economic and technological change.
If humanity is to survive the climate crisis, we must manage a just and orderly transition away from fossil fuels. The correct models for this resolution are triage, euthanasia, and hospice.
Open-access to this article made possible by University of Michigan.
Kobalt Music Group is challenging the dominance of the Big Three record labels by harnessing technology to pay musicians more, faster, and with greater transparency. But how far can it reform an industry built on the exploitation of its talent?
Regular corporations and B Corps continue to fight for dominance over the corporate social responsibility label.
The Fight for Privacy investigates how governments and businesses violate and profit from our personal lives online.