Corporate responsibility
- Death and taxes
- This report finds that loss of corporate tax to the developing world due to tax evasion through some of the common forms of evasion is currently US$160bn a year (£80bn). That is more than one-and-a-half times the combined aid budgets of the whole rich world. It argues that the lives and prospects for poor people in the developing world could be transformed if the same proportion of tax revenues were spent on healthcare in these countries.
Latest Additions
- How can foreign oil companies better manage developmental and environmental challenges in South Sudan
- ( K. Ives;M. Buchner / , 2011)
-
How can oil companies and consortia working in South Sudan (a newly independent country) better manage and mitigate the social and environmental challenges that so urgently need addressing? This re...
- Strengthening the petroleum sector in Uganda
- ( ECON Pöyry , 2011)
- This review looks at the overall results of the Petrad Capacity Building Programme for strengthening the State Petroleum Administration of the upstream petroleum sector in Uganda and assesses the exte...
- Evaluation of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
- ( T. Reite (ed);A. Disch (ed);D. Gairdner (ed) / Scanteam , 2011)
- During the short period since Evaluation of Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) ,became operational with an elected Board and Secretariat in 2006-07, EITI has seen an impressive growt...
- Achievements and challenges of ethical trade
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2001)
-
Ethical trade as an approach to supply chain management has mushroomed in recent years. Northern companies are becoming increasingly concerned with the ‘ethics’ of their operations and ...
- The links between globalisation and poverty
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2003)
-
Globalisation is one of the most controversial development issues of the day. ‘Globaphobes’ attribute most of the ills of the world to globalisation. The anti-globalisation movement has...
- Regulating for development: id21 insights, issue 49
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2003)
-
Developing countries are now being asked to follow developed countries in the privatisation of goods and services previously provided by the state. It is argued that these countries will gain from ...
- Debating GM crops: id21 insights, issue 52
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2004)
-
The debate over genetically-modified (GM) crops is one of the most controversial and fiercely contested of recent times. While media coverage often focuses on disagreements between the United State...
- Making business work for development: id21 insights, issue 54
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2005)
-
Business is everywhere. Some is crucial to development, while some is implicated in poverty, human rights abuses and environmental destruction. In recent years there has been an upturn in corporati...
- Harnessing trade for development: id21 insights, issue 59
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2005)
-
Developing countries cannot achieve sustainable growth and poverty reduction unless they integrate into the world economy. Trade reforms are necessary, but not enough to maximise the potential bene...
- How pro-poor is tourism?: id21 insights, issue 62
- ( id21 Development Research Reporting Service , 2006)
-
Pro-poor tourism should increase the benefits of the tourism industry for poor people. It is a term increasingly used by several development agencies, but what does it mean in practice?
...


Meet other Eldis readers interested in corporate responsibility issues. Create a profile for yourself and publish your own research. 


