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OverviewThe world took notice at the Johannesburg Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002 when companies, the UN and NGOs came together to advocate for collective action to address climate change. However, the movement towards cooperation between the UN, NGOs and the business community was slow to take hold. By 2005, the Financial Times was still calling a collaborative project between Unilever and Oxfam 'globalization's strange bedfellows'. But despite slow recognition by the media, a fundamental change was occurring. Instead of confrontation, NGOs, the United Nations and businesses were beginning to speak the same language and seeking to work together to tackle global challenges. Today, over sixty-five percent of the Global Compact's corporate participants are engaged in partnerships with NGOs and the UN.This publication is a response to the exploding demand for guidance. The Business Guide for Partnering with NGOs and the United Nations provides a comprehensive and accessible market-based assessment of leading non-profit social actors and agencies of the United Nations that have demonstrated competency in partnering with companies in a number of areas such as advocacy, awareness-raising, health and the environment, among others. It was born out of the belief that if companies are aware of the success of other businesses in engaging in partnerships, they themselves will be more inclined to seriously consider the prospects of partnering. Thus, the overarching aspiration of this business guide is to increase the number of partnerships and the quality and impact of those partnerships.Through three distinct avenues it is a product that helps both companies and social actors prepare themselves for partnership building: transparency: attempts to create greater transparency in the marketplace by identifying successful partnership examples. The enclosed organizational profiles enable companies to sort and identify partners based on geography, strengths, focus areas, etc., making it significantly easier to find the right partner; access: provides readers with contact information and highlights topics around which profiled organizations are interested in creating partnerships. Thus, it will be easy for companies to make a connection with an appropriate organization on an issue of relevance to both of them; and, role models: showcases social actors and partnerships that have been successful, displaying some of the important factors - such as execution capabilities, accountability, and entrepreneurship - that companies are looking for in partners.The research was undertaken in collaboration with some of the most highly regarded players in the corporate citizenship sector, including Business for Social Responsibility (BSR), International Business Leaders Forum (IBLF), American Chambers of Commerce, International Chambers of Commerce (ICC), World Bank Institute (WBI), World Business Council on Sustainable Development (WBCSD), and CSR Wire. This book contains 865 valid partnership ratings from 445 companies, who rated social actors on the basis of their accountability, adaptability, execution, and communication. The Business Guide for Partnering with NGOs and the United Nations is an indispensable resource for all companies and civil society organizations looking for guidance on how to identify suitable partners as well as for researchers and academics studying this new and rapidly evolving area. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Dalberg Global Development ADV , The Global CompactPublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: Dalberg Global Development Weight: 1.500kg ISBN: 9780980185201ISBN 10: 0980185203 Pages: 543 Publication Date: 01 May 2008 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |