Report (Part 5): Sustainable Development Convention 200231 Octubre 2002 © ICVolunteers and IBEX, Geneva, Switzerland Contenidos Highlights of Day 1Time: 31 October 2002, 10:00 Location: Salle A Chair: Peter Sissons Presenters/ Participants: Ms. Promise Mthembu, International Community of Women Living with AIDS (South Africa) Rather than providing his own summary of the previous day's events, Mr. Peter Sissons, the chair of this highlights session, invited four representative speakers to provide their perspectives in an interview-style panel discussion. The bulk of the discussion centred on that morning's keynote speech by Mr. Michael Hoelz of Deutsche Bank, though there was some reference at the end to the workshops of the previous day. Ms. Julia Hausermann, President of Rights and Humanity, said that what had struck her most about the speech by Mr. Hoelz was his emphasis on cultural diversity as the driving force of innovation. He also talked about sustainable development being a collaborative process, which Ms. Promise Mthembu (International Community of Women Living with AIDS) felt was an extremely important point. Panelists discussed whether or not the principles of sustainable development have really permeated the business community, or whether they are paying lip service to these concepts due to pressure from non-governmental organizations and civil society in general. Mr. Mike Horner from IBEX Knowledge Systems said that people like Mr. Hoelz should be distinguished from their organizations because while they may have some power and influence within their businesses, they do not represent the thinking of everyone in upper management or on the boards of directors. He also observed that banking practices change very slowly. Dr. Ashok Khosla agreed that many corporate leaders have mastered the jargon of sustainable development and attend all the right conferences but do not take concrete action to forward sustainability. Ms. Mthembu noted that Mr. Hoelz speaks with authority on behalf of the sustainable development activities of Deutsche Bank and that the bank must be held accountable for its commitments. Ms. Hausermann talked about the potential for showing the banking community how women's and human rights actually contribute to economic development ? in other words, talking about the social "bottom line" in terms that mean something to financiers. Dr. Khosla talked about "getting to action" and obtaining finance for sustainable development projects by critiquing the projects from the perspective of financiers and ensuring a solid business case. Surprising Issues Interesting Questions Conclusions Publicado: 2010-1-04 Actualizado: 2010-1-05 | ||||