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Net gains: producer responsibilities in a digital world
Today's digital society of ebanking and mobile phones finds consumers more empowered than ever before. Does this reduce businesses' responsibility for the impact of their products? Not if the sustainable potential of these new technologies is ever going to be recognised, Vidhya Alakeson argues.
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New technology:
information evolution not revolution
After the early hype, the discovery of a digital divide burst the bubble of euphoria about how ICT would change the world. Slowly, the benefits are starting to show through.
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The Briefing Interview:
Gareth Williamson, Smartchange
When many Generation Xers were chasing the big bucks of the dot.com boom one chose another course, we ask one of CSR's brightest young things why he put his chips on a dot.org dream.
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IT for the community
affairs manager
In her second article on the impact of IT, Alison Gulliford asks where the real value-added for community affairs managers lies
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Comment: Bridging the
digital divide
On both sides of the Atlantic, schemes are launched to help those left behind in the headlong race to a wired-up future. The information revolution is bringing huge benefits - and new responsibilities - to all of
business, not just the big name computer companies. |
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Bridging the digital
divide
On both sides of the Atlantic, schemes are launched to help those left behind in the headlong race to a wired-up future. The information revolution is bringing huge benefits - and new responsibilities - to all of business, not just the big name computer companies.
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The IT Revolution –
opportunity or threat?
In the first of two articles on the information technology revolution, Alison Gulliford summarises the main implications of IT for the socially responsible company. Part two in the next edition will focus on how IT affects management of community programmes.
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Good corporate citizens,
good web sites
Ellen West from CAF offers a six point plan to creating meaningful corporate citizenship web pages.
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F.I. GROUP: a partnership
business
As the political debate about stakeholding hots up, this fast growing company, still new to the community affairs scene, offers a model for the inclusive, partnership-based, company of tomorrow
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Surfing the community net
Behind all the hype, companies are others are starting to examine the social implications of the information revolution.
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A Japanese approach:
Toyota
In the UK, Toyota aspires to be "a truly British company". As its first car rolls off the production line in Derbyshire, how does its community affairs programme measure up to that aspiration?
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