Good News &
Bad: The Media, Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable
Development
SustainAbility is pleased
to announce the launch of its latest report, Good News & Bad:
The Media, Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable
Development.
The media is one of
the most powerful, yet least trusted and least accountable institutions
in the world. And it has a crucial role to play in the transition
to sustainability. So SustainAbility decided to take a closer
look. "No other industry," the authors suggest, "will
so powerfully
influence how people and politicians think about (and act on)
corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainable development
(SD)."
In Good News &
Bad, we investigate: the roles of the media in building the CSR
and SD agendas for business; the ways in which media people perceive,
prioritize and cover these agendas; and the governance, accountability
and transparency options for the media industry itself.
The report surveys
the media's response to CSR and SD over the period 1991-2001 in
four world regions: Asia, Europe, Latin America and the United
States. It charts three waves and two downwaves of public concern
and political action on the CSR and SD agendas. And it sketches
three scenarios describing how these waves might play out as we
move forward to 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
and beyond.
For business and NGOs
the report sheds light on how to communicate with and through
the media, concluding with some guideline Do's and Don'ts. And
for the media, who reckon with declining credibility, the report
offers a set of recommendations in relation to governance, accountability,
transparency and trust.
For more information
on the report please visit www.sustainability.com/media
CONTACT INFORMATION:
Copies of the report are available for sale on our website
www.sustainability.com
or contact:
Emily Foskett
SustainAbility
11-13 Knightsbridge
London SW1X 7LY
Ph: +44 (0) 207 245
1116
Fax: +44 (0) 207 245 1117
Email: foskett@sustainability.com
For further information
on the content of the report, or for an interview with an author,
please contact:
Francesca Müller
SustainAbility
11-13 Knightsbridge
London SW1X 7LY
Ph: +44 (0) 207 245
1116
Fax: +44 (0) 207 245 1117
Email: muller@sustainability.com