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CSR in the WikiLeaks Age

Originally posted on the CSRwire website.

By Francesca Rheannon

WikiLeaks revelations aren’t just about politics but also about how well corporate practices conform to stated CSR goals.

The news broke several weeks ago the suppliers of several major U.S. apparel companies had convinced the Obama Administration to kill a plan by the Haitian Parliament to raise the country’s minimum wage.

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10:06 pm by csrwiretalkback[19 notes]

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Investing in Women & Girls

Originally posted on the BCLC Blog.

By Emily Drew

If you were a woman in rural Benin today, you would spend 10 hours each week carrying food and water. As a Tanzania Masaai woman, you would walk up to 30 kilometers to collect water in the dry season and, of course, walk back with your liquid burden.

“Women’s time and income poverty often reinforce each other with negative impacts,” the World Bank reports. A woman’s time in the formal economy – getting an education, holding a job, starting her own business, or cultivating surplus agriculture – means less time to spend on household duties. In most places today, women and girls simply don’t have an option of how to spend their time. If they don’t get water, they go thirsty, and if they don’t get firewood, they don’t eat.

Globally, the picture of women’s lives is grim and infuriating.

  • Women work two-thirds of the world’s working hours, produce half of the world’s food, and yet earn only 10% of the world’s income and own less than 1% of the world’s property.
  • Of the 1.3 billion people living in poverty around the world, 70% are women.
  • In the least-developed countries nearly twice as many women over age 15 are illiterate compared to men.

If you’re reading these facts from the Millennium Campaign’s website, you’re probably not a Masaai woman or a rural woman in Benin. You are probably a woman or man who has some pull somewhere to make a difference, and thankfully for women and girls, even small moves make a big impact. One extra year of secondary school raises a girl’s lifetime wages by 15% to 25%. A well or water-sanitation solution placed in a village suddenly eliminates that 30-kilometer walk. Efficient cook stoves can help reduce the hours women spend foraging for kindling and fuel, meaning they’ll have more time to improve their lots and their children’s lives. 

So how can you help get those cook stoves, wells and schools to women everywhere? Hearing stories of success, learning about replicable interventions and finding out how your business or organization can partner with others already involved – those are some good places to start.

On March 8, 2011, the Chamber BCLC, UN Office for Partnerships, Global Business Coalition, Center for International Private Enterprise and Girl Up are hosting a one-day conference titled “Investing in Women and Entrepreneurship: Solutions to MDG 3.”

Taking place at the United Nations in New York, the conference will:

  • Broaden the range of stakeholders, particularly interested companies, working towards MDG 3
  • Increase awareness within the corporate giving community
  • Provide a platform for interested companies to connect with UN agencies and NGOs

Registration is limited but still available, and you can visit BCLC’s website to learn more about the expert speakers and agenda at bclc.uschamber.com.

Even if your own daily time trade-offs won’t allow you to be at the event in-person, you can still engage with others trying to build lasting solutions in less time than it would take you to collect water for your family in Tanzania. Videos and blog posts will be updated on BCLCblog throughout the day and the official Twitter feed of the event is #csrwomen (follow BCLC’s Twitter feed on @chamberBCLC).   

Talkback Readers: Do you or your organization have plans to invest in women & girls? Share them on Talkback!

07:06 pm by csrwiretalkback[462 notes]
Your query didn't return any results. [csrwomen] [CSR] [MDG] [MDG3] [MDG 3] [women] [girls] [sustainability] [BCLC]

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