Nearly 1,400
MBA students,
professionals
and sponsors
attended
the 2004
Net Impact
conference,
Business
Leaders Building
a Better
World,
which took
place from
November
11 to 14.
The sold-out
conference
drew participants
from 80 business
schools,
167 companies
and 11 countries.
Professor and Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz has joined two University of California, Berkeley, economists in launching the Economists’ Voice, a journal featuring analysis and opinion by leading economists about key national and international policy issues.
Dean Glenn
Hubbard presented
the annual
Dean’s
Prize for
Teaching
Excellence
to management
professors
Toby
Stuart and Daniel
Ames in recognition
of their
outstanding
teaching
in the core
curriculum.
The annual
award was
established
in 1998 by
alumnus George
Weigers ’61
to recognize
faculty achievements
in the classroom.
Have you ever wondered what happens on the board of a nonprofit or how you get involved? Last Monday, the Social Enterprise Club was fortunate to have David LaGreca, CBS '89 lead a session on NonProfit Board Leadership.
SEC commissioners
Paul
Atkins and Harvey
Goldschmid join Dean
Glenn Hubbard and incoming
MBA students
today for
a vigorous
debate on
the merits
and costs
of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act. The
panel discussion
kicks off
a new School-wide
curriculum
titled the
Individual,
Business,
and Society:
Tradeoffs,
Choices and
Accountability.
In this five-part series, Professor Bruce Greenwald talks with Motley Fool about identifying franchises, the dos and don'ts of shorting, holding cash, and the investment manager he's betting on.
Continuing
an annual
tradition,
Columbia
Business
School board
members — including
Sallie
Krawcheck
’92,
Henry Kravis
’69 and Mario
Gabelli ’67 — carved
time out
of their
busy schedules
to meet with
small groups
of MBA students
to discuss
industry
trends and
opportunities.
Columbia Business School's Research Initiative on Social Entrepreneurship (RISE) Program, Investors' Circle, and the Social Venture Network have partnered to conduct the first national survey of for-profit social ventures, which are defined as businesses that seek to create positive social and environmental impact through financially successful businesses.
Professor
Rita
Gunther
McGrath was
among
the
industry
leaders
and
international
economists
who
presented
a
strategy
for
ensuring
Ireland’s
competitive
advantage
to
that
country’s
government
and
business
community.
The
Columbia Business School community of students, faculty, staff and
alumni raised nearly $100,000 this summer to subsidize 18 internships
for students interested in working in the nonprofit, public or social
enterprise sectors.
Joseph Azrack, MBA ?72, president and CEO of Citigroup Property Investors, generously donated the complete Urban Land Institute (ULI) ?library? to the School.
The latest issue of the Chazen Web Journal of International Business puts the spotlight on global branding initiatives in the fashion, media and automotive industries. Bernd Schmitt,
the Robert D. Calkins Professor of International Business and Executive
Director of Columbia Business SchoolÕs Center on Global Brand
Leadership, served as faculty editor for the global branding issue.
Complementing the articles are video interviews with three renowned CEOs — Ken Chenault of American Express, Daniel Piette ’70 of LV Capital and Francisco Trapani of
Bulgari — reflecting on the challenges of building global brands. In
addition to global branding, the Journal also features articles
addressing a range of international business topics, including tax
policy in Ireland and Germany, microfinance in Bangladesh and the IT
industry in Ghana.
The Chazen Web Journal of International Business is
the only online student-driven publication of its kind. Each semester,
a team of MBA students produces the Journal in concert with faculty
members and PhD students. Subscribers include thousands of alumni,
students and recruiting companies worldwide.
A
Columbia Business School venture focusing on urban regeneration was
among four teams taking top honors in the 2004 Global Social Venture
Competition. The final judging event took place in London, where the
winning teams were selected from 129 entries submitted from countries
around the globe, including Canada, Costa Rica, Colombia, Finland,
France, India, Kenya, the Netherlands, Peru and Singapore. Winning
teams received cash and travel prizes totaling $100,000.
Columbia
University President Lee Bollinger announced today that internationally
renowned economist R. Glenn Hubbard has been named the new dean of
Columbia University’s Graduate School of Business. Hubbard, the former
chair of President Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers, will assume
leadership of the School effective July 1, 2004, upon the retirement of
the current dean, Meyer Feldberg.