Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements(if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies. We have updated our Privacy Policy. Please click on the button to check our Privacy Policy.

Social Responsibility

Mexico: CSR cases supporting local suppliers and reducing urban waste

Corporate social responsibility in Mexico promoting local suppliers and waste management

Mexico faces two intersecting sustainability challenges: a high volume of urban waste and a need to strengthen the competitiveness of local suppliers. Major urban centers generate millions of tons of municipal solid waste each year; recycling rates for household and commercial waste remain under 10% in many regions, and informal waste-picking plays a substantial role in material recovery. At the same time, small and medium suppliers—farmers, processors, workshops, and logistics providers—often lack access to formal procurement channels, financing, or quality-assurance support required to enter large corporate supply chains.Corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs in Mexico are increasingly addressing both problems together:…
Read More
Mexico: CSR cases supporting local suppliers and reducing urban waste

CSR in Mexico: linking local supplier development with urban waste reduction

Mexico faces two intersecting sustainability challenges: a high volume of urban waste and a need to strengthen the competitiveness of local suppliers. Major urban centers generate millions of tons of municipal solid waste each year; recycling rates for household and commercial waste remain under 10% in many regions, and informal waste-picking plays a substantial role in material recovery. At the same time, small and medium suppliers—farmers, processors, workshops, and logistics providers—often lack access to formal procurement channels, financing, or quality-assurance support required to enter large corporate supply chains.Corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives in Mexico increasingly tackle both challenges at once,…
Read More
Greece: CSR supporting heritage recovery and the social economy on islands

Promoting cultural heritage and economic resilience on Greek islands through CSR

Greece’s islands blend remarkable cultural and natural heritage with pronounced economic fragility, as nearly 200–250 of them remain permanently inhabited and feature historic settlements, archaeological landmarks, traditional architecture, and living customs that shape local identity and fuel national tourism. Yet these islands also contend with shrinking populations, seasonal job patterns, constrained public funding, and climate-driven threats. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) can therefore become essential in supporting heritage restoration and reinforcing the social economy that underpins island communities throughout the entire year.How CSR plays a vital role in revitalizing heritage and strengthening the social economyFunding gap. Public resources for restoration and…
Read More
Grenada: tourism CSR cases supporting local jobs and coastal protection

Grenada tourism CSR linking local jobs with coastal ecosystem protection

Grenada, known as the "Spice Isle" in the southeastern Caribbean and home to about 112,000 people, relies extensively on its coastal assets to sustain its economy and local livelihoods. Tourism serves as a leading generator of foreign exchange and a key provider of jobs, while the island’s beaches, coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass meadows offer the natural appeal that draws travelers and the protective buffer that helps safeguard communities from storms and erosion. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives within the tourism industry have increasingly aimed to connect employment opportunities with responsible ecosystem management, creating a synergy that benefits both residents…
Read More
Grenada: tourism CSR cases supporting local jobs and coastal protection

How Grenada’s tourism CSR programs strengthen coastal ecosystems and local employment

Grenada, known as the "Spice Isle" in the southeastern Caribbean and home to about 112,000 people, relies extensively on its coastal assets to sustain its economy and local livelihoods. Tourism serves as a leading generator of foreign exchange and a key provider of jobs, while the island’s beaches, coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass meadows offer the natural appeal that draws travelers and the protective buffer that helps safeguard communities from storms and erosion. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives within the tourism industry have increasingly aimed to connect employment opportunities with responsible ecosystem management, creating a synergy that benefits both residents…
Read More
Ghana: mining and agriculture CSR with transparency and sustainable community projects

CSR accountability in Ghana: from gold extraction to cocoa production sustainability

Ghana's economy is anchored by two interlinked sectors: mining and agriculture. Mining — led by gold, manganese, bauxite and industrial minerals — is a major provider of export earnings and government revenue. Agriculture, dominated by cocoa, staples and smallholder production systems, supports livelihoods for a large share of the population and supplies global commodity chains. Both sectors create wealth and stress ecosystems and communities. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) and transparency therefore matter not as optional extras but as essential tools to manage environmental risk, protect human rights, and deliver durable community benefits.Key CSR challenges in Ghana's mining sectorGhanaian mining contends…
Read More
Angola: CSR cases improving safe water access and preventive health in rural areas

Extractive industry CSR programs bridging safe water and preventive health gaps in Angola

Angola’s post-conflict development trajectory has improved macroeconomic indicators, but rural communities still face persistent deficits in safe water and preventive health services. Private-sector actors — particularly oil and gas firms, mining companies, and international corporations operating in Angola — have implemented Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs that target water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH) and preventive health. These interventions often complement government and donor efforts and can generate durable gains when they are community-led, technically sound, and coordinated with public systems.Background and RequirementsDemographics and access gaps: Angola’s population stands in the mid-thirty‑million range, with many residents living in rural provinces like Huíla,…
Read More
Côte d’Ivoire: cocoa CSR with traceability and better incomes for growers

Beyond the LID: how CSR programs empower smallholder cocoa farmers

Ivory Coast generates about 40% of the world’s cocoa, yielding nearly 2 million metric tons in recent years, and this crop remains vital to national export revenue as well as to the daily income of countless smallholder households; however, the industry continues to grapple with entrenched issues such as limited farmer earnings, ongoing child labor, aging plantations with weak yields, widespread deforestation, and disjointed supply networks, while corporate social responsibility initiatives paired with advanced traceability technologies are increasingly viewed as tools capable of connecting industry profitability with meaningful social and environmental progress.The CSR environment: regulations, corporate pledges, and key hurdlesCorporate…
Read More
Burundi: food-sector CSR cases improving nutrition and climate resilience

RSE alimentaria en Burundi: mejorando la nutrición y la resiliencia al clima

Contextualizing CSR initiatives within Burundi’s food sector to support nutrition and climate resilienceSocioeconomic and nutritional landscape — Burundi stands among the world’s least affluent nations, with most families relying on smallholder agriculture for sustenance and earnings. Child malnutrition remains a persistent concern: longstanding, widely referenced assessments have reported stunting levels in children under five that rank Burundi among the countries facing the heaviest chronic malnutrition burdens. Micronutrient shortfalls, periodic food shortages and restricted dietary variety frequently affect both rural communities and low-income urban households.Climate vulnerability — Agriculture in Burundi is extremely susceptible to climate fluctuations. Smallholder production systems often endure…
Read More
Charles Schwab Foundation Launches Schwab Moneywise Momentum Grants as Part of a  Million Multi-Year Commitment to Financial Education

Charles Schwab Foundation’s multi-year $20M pledge includes Moneywise Momentum Grants

Charles Schwab Foundation has launched a new nationwide grant initiative designed to bolster financial education delivered through nonprofit organizations, aiming to inspire fresh strategies that empower individuals to gain the understanding and confidence required to make sound financial choices.Access to practical financial education has become ever more crucial as households throughout the United States face escalating living expenses, heavier debt loads, and an economic landscape that continues to evolve quickly. Although discussions about financial wellness often emphasize saving, investing, or preparing for retirement, many people still lack dependable resources that clearly show how everyday money management truly works.In response to…
Read More