Corporate social responsibility: latest trend or the way forward?
- UKLSE-DL1PL01015034
- Folder
- 1 Mar 2005
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Roddick, Anita
Chair: Howell, Jude
3012 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Corporate social responsibility: latest trend or the way forward?
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Roddick, Anita
Chair: Howell, Jude
Corporate social responsibility: latest trend or the way forward? - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Cosmopolitan Europe: European politics and identity beyond the nation state
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Beck, Ulrich
Chair: Giddens, Anthony
Cosmopolitan Europe: European politics and identity beyond the nation state - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Cosmopolitanism and the banality of geographical evils
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Harvey, David
Chair: Giddens, Anthony
Series: Miliband lecture
Cosmopolitanism and the banality of geographical evils - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Creating a single financial market in Europe: what do we mean?
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Davies, Howard
Chair: Goodhart, Charles
Series: London Financial Regulation seminar
Creating a single financial market in Europe: what do we mean? - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Creativity and knowledge: managing and respecting intellectual assets in the 21st century
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Quah, Danny
Chair: Davies, Howard
Series: Clifford Barclay memorial lecture
Creativity and knowledge: managing and respecting intellectual assets in the 21st century - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Crime and politics: spot the difference
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Cohen, Stanley
Crime and politics: spot the difference - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Cultural perspectives on cities: from Georg Simmel to Italo Calvino
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Turnaturi, Gabriella
Chair: Sennett, Richard
Series: Jane Jacobs lecture
Cultural perspectives on cities: from Georg Simmel to Italo Calvino - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Culture and inequality: a talk about talent
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Sennett, Richard
Chair: Held, David
Series: Miliband lecture on inequalities: dimensions and challenges
Culture and inequality: a talk about talent - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Culture and inequality: a talk about talent - Video
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Lecture recording in video format
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Smith, Chris; Lynch, Michael
Chair: Travers, Tony
Series: Jane Jacobs lecture
Culture and regeneration - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Culture, ideology and nationalism
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Halliday, Fred
Series: The world at 2000
Culture, ideology and nationalism - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Cultures of ideas in the knowledge society
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Thrift, Nigel; McLennan, Gregor; Bentley, Tom; Giddens, Anthony
Chair: Moore, Henrietta
Cultures of ideas in the knowledge society - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Cupid, Mars and Armageddon: Philip II and England in the later sixteenth century
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Speaker: Rodriguez-Salgado, Mia
Chair: Preston, Paul
Cupid, Mars and Armageddon: Philip II and England in the later sixteenth century - Audio
Part of LSE Public Lectures 1990 - 2006
Extracted audio track
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Goldsby, Curtis
2017 graduation old building
CV19 A Film by the Department of Government
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey
Date: May-August 2020
During Britain's first Covid lockdown in spring/early summer 2020, the Government Department launched a project to communicate some of the research that we were conducting on responses to Covid by various countries. Even as we were all working from home, we put together this film, which explores the emergency powers that governments were using to control the spread of coronavirus, and how the relationship between the people and their governments had fundamentally changed.
"CV-19: A Film by the Department of Government" highlights research being carried out into the impact and consequences of these changing relationships. The film explores the threat to liberal democratic norms, public support for an authoritarian government response, how governments are being held accountable, what the effects are on public transport and a new digital frontier for political campaigning.
As a measure of the interest in this film, the contributors held a roundtable discussion (over Zoom) in November 2020, and this is also available online. More broadly, the film has achieved remarkable success in film festival competitions. As of July 2021, and from international film festivals in 13 countries, the film has received 16 top awards (Best Short Documentary, Best Health Film, Best Edited Film, Best Web an New Media, etc), as well as 3 finalist positions, 2 semi-finalist positions, 13 official selections and 2 honorable mentions.
CV19 A Film by the Department of Government.mp4
Part of LSE Community Histories