An approach that encourages corporations to work with governments and organizations proactively to change economic and political systems and regulations that motivate them to ignore costs incurred by societies and the environment by their activities. These costs might be externalities or other effects that harm people or the Earth but for which changes in behaviour can’t be brought-about in a competitive environment. Instead, changing systems and policy for all companies can allow these effects to improve without making any one organization less competitive.
Made of highly stable materials which can be used again and again, technical nutrients are designed to be retrieved and reused within the closed-loop cycle of sustainable manufactu...
The three pillars of sustainability are: (i) the society, (ii) the environment, and (iii) the economy. These are also referred to as (i) people, (ii) planet, and (iii) profit, resp...
A way of looking at the way change happens in the world, put forth by Malcolm Gladwell in his bestselling book, The Tipping Point. The book contends that ideas, behaviors, messages...