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The Gambia: agriculture CSR advancing fair value chains and rural training

The Gambia’s agricultural CSR: promoting fair value chains and rural training

Agriculture remains at the heart of livelihoods, employment, and food security in The Gambia, a small nation in West Africa where smallholder farmers largely shape the production of staple and cash crops, including groundnuts, rice, millet, maize, vegetables, and fruit. The sector contributes about one quarter of the country’s gross domestic product and underpins most rural employment. As a result, corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs focused on agriculture can yield significant social impact while strengthening supply chains and opening pathways for sustainable commercial growth.What fair value chains mean for Gambian agricultureFair value chains focus on ensuring value is shared fairly,…
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What trends are driving cross-border e-commerce and global market entry?

Why is Global Inequality on the Rise?

Global inequality—both between countries and within them—has been shaped by a complex mix of economic, technological, political and environmental forces over the past four decades. Some trends reduced differences across countries, notably rapid growth in China and parts of Asia; others sharply widened income and wealth gaps inside most advanced and many emerging economies. Understanding the drivers helps explain why wealth and income cluster in the hands of a few while large populations remain vulnerable.Key forces shaping the economyStrong returns to capital relative to growth The dynamic highlighted by Thomas Piketty—that returns on capital can outpace economic growth—remains central. When…
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Cameroon: CSR cases protecting forests and supporting alternative community incomes

Protecting Forests in Cameroon: CSR’s Role in Community Support

Cameroon sits at the ecological heart of the Congo Basin and contains large tracts of tropical forest that provide global climate regulation, biodiversity habitat, and local livelihoods. Corporate activity in the forest landscape—ranging from logging and plantation agriculture to commodity sourcing and infrastructure development—has stimulated a range of corporate social responsibility (CSR) responses. These responses aim both to reduce negative environmental impacts and to support alternative, sustainable sources of local income. This article reviews the context, typologies of CSR interventions, documented cases and results, common challenges, and practical design principles for CSR programs that genuinely protect forests while strengthening community…
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Guinea-Bissau: CSR cases supporting responsible fisheries and food security

Guinea-Bissau: CSR Strategies for Responsible Fishing & Food Security

Guinea-Bissau’s shoreline and the Bijagós archipelago underpin local livelihoods, cultural traditions, biodiversity and nationwide food security. The sector is largely shaped by small-scale and artisanal fisheries, while marine and estuarine ecosystems remain essential sources of animal protein for coastal populations and a cornerstone of rural economies. Yet the country simultaneously confronts mounting pressure from industrial fleets, illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, the degradation of vital habitats such as mangroves and limitations in governance capacity. Corporate social responsibility (CSR), when it aligns with effective fisheries management and community-driven priorities, can reinforce public and donor initiatives to conserve fish stocks, protect…
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What innovations are improving battery energy density and cycle life?

Why Energy Storage Extends Past Batteries

Public debate often associates energy storage with lithium-ion batteries, and understandably so, as these batteries have driven swift progress in grid flexibility, electric vehicles, and decentralized energy systems. However, achieving a full energy transition demands a diversified suite of storage technologies. Distinct storage methods offer different durations, capacities, costs, environmental impacts, and grid-support functions. Viewing storage as a one-technology issue can lead to technical mismatches, economic drawbacks, and lost chances to strengthen resilience. What “storage” must deliver Energy storage serves more than one purpose. Systems are evaluated based on: Duration: spanning milliseconds to seconds for frequency regulation, minutes to hours…
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Israel’s new spymaster is a Netanyahu aide who believed war with Iran would topple the regime

The New Spymaster: Netanyahu Confidante Who Championed Iran War

A high-level leadership transition within Israel’s intelligence community is unfolding amid ongoing tensions with Iran. Early expectations about the conflict’s outcome have not materialized, raising questions about strategy, decision-making, and the future direction of regional security policies. A significant transition is underway within Israel’s intelligence apparatus at a time when the country remains deeply engaged in a prolonged and complex confrontation with Iran. At the center of this shift is the upcoming appointment of Roman Gofman as the new head of Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence agency. His arrival comes after weeks of continued hostilities that have not delivered the swift…
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Why bad emissions accounting undermines climate action

Ineffective Emissions Accounting: A Barrier to Climate Solutions

Accurate emissions accounting is the foundation of effective climate policy, corporate climate strategies, and investor decision-making. When emissions are misstated, omitted, or double-counted, the result is not merely technical error: it warps incentives, delays mitigation, misdirects finance, and erodes public trust. Below I explain how and why poor accounting matters, give concrete examples and data, and outline practical fixes. What good emissions accounting is supposed to do Good accounting should reliably measure greenhouse gas (GHG) sources and sinks; assign responsibility across actors and activities; allow tracking of progress against targets; and enable comparable, verifiable claims. That requires three elements working…
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