Skip to main content

National Research Conference on Business, Management and Sustainable Development

On 7th December 2017, the Management College of Southern Africa (MANCOSA) and REGENT Business School jointly hosted a one day National Research Conference on Business, Management and Sustainable Development. The focus was on emerging opportunities and challenges.
The theme of the Conference ‘Business, Management and Sustainable Development: Emerging Opportunities and Challenges’ underpinned the need for collaboration and cooperation of all delegates attending the conference.
The Conference Programme was rich and varied with a keynote address and fifty paper presentations across three sessions– not forgetting the teas, a lunch and a Banquet Dinner. The event was a success in every respect and the organising committee members, who had all worked extremely hard for the details of important aspects of the conference were commended.
The Conference offered a platform for scholarly and applied conversations among a wide variety of stakeholders concerned with the continual challenge of advancing the sustainable development and business agenda: people, planet, and growth. Because this is an emerging paradigm, there is much research and exploration that is needed. Academics, researchers, and professionals shared their findings and learnt from each other, in order to facilitate the transformation in how economic activity is conducted, allowing human societies to be sustained and to thrive.
In her Keynote Address, Councillor Fawzia Peer, the Deputy Mayor of eThekwini emphasised the Principles for Responsible Management Education (PRME), an initiative by the United Nations Global Compact which is a collaborative, collegial learning community that thrives on sharing good practices to inspire and champion responsible management education, research and thought leadership globally. Successful implementation of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), she empahsised, will require all players to champion this agenda and the role of higher education is critical to this. She also stressed that the SDGs are relevant for business and management schools. Higher Education Institutions have the ability to influence students with responsible and sustainable business practices. This influence shapes tomorrow’s business leaders and society
She further stated that whilst government plays a key role in advancing the goals, it is business that will be instrumental in the success of the individual targets through the way they operate, develop new business models, invest in communities, innovate, and collaborate. For companies, successful implementation of the SDGs will strengthen the enabling environment for doing business, minimising increasing risks while also providing a myriad of new opportunities. As such, she indicated that it is business schools who will play an even more crucial role in the successful implementation of the SDGs.
Finally she reminded the delegates at the conference that it is imperative that we all remember we only have ONE PLANET EARTH. There is no planet B. She exhorted the house to do whatever is necessary to sustain our planet, ourselves, our children and their great, great, great great, great grandchildren. “We owe it to the future”, she said.
As the fields of sustainable development and business and management cross over into multiple areas and disciplines, delegates presented a range of topics and perspectives. The range of research submissions included conceptual, empirical, experimental, and case studies. In particular, papers made empirical and theoretical contributions about the social and economic processes impacting on sustainable development; business and management; global environmental governance, business and public policy approaches; technological innovations; climate change adaptation & mitigation; renewable energy development.
During the conference, it emerged that in order to achieve transformation towards a more sustainable world, the main political, economic and societal actors are looking for global solutions to face the global climate change which is perceived as the most important issue of our time. An ever increasing number of regions, sectors, ecosystems and social groups are confronted in the same time by the impacts of climate change on future societal transformation.
Chair of the conference organising committee and Associate Director for Research at Mancosa [GSB], Mr Paresh Soni, indicated that the outcomes of deliberations suggested that we should encourage any type of multi-, inter- or transdisciplinary studies and practices linking disciplines, knowledge systems and stakeholders to help the world to reach the sustainable development goals. Towards this end, a variety of conceptual and empirical submissions, drawing on a range of theoretical perspectives and diverse methodologies (case studies, in-depth issue studies, speculative analyses) were used. Soni went on to say that the overall outcomes of this National Conference were of great interest to a wide variety of stakeholders, including: researchers, scientists, experts, policy practitioners, business decision makers and industry experts who were committed toward more sustainable business and management practices. He also thanked delegates for their unique and interesting contributions in making the event an outstanding success.
Source: https://goo.gl/LMZLdE 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Joyous Celebration

One of the "to do things" I have always wanted to do since I started going to South Africa in 2004 was to watch Joyous Celebration perform live. Who is Joyous Celebration? Joyous Celebration is a gospel music outfit of local South African and international artists that have produced gospel CDs and DVDs since 1994. Joyous Celebration is a dream that was born when Jabu Hlongwane, Lindelani Mkhize and Mthunzi Namba who had met in concerts and conventions in and around Durban toyed around the idea of collaborating. In 1994 a show dubbed Joyous Celebration was held to  celebrate the peaceful transition of South Africa when it became independent.  Each year since 1994 Joyous Celebration has been releasing an album as a CD and DVD around March/April. The release is followed by tours in various South African cities. Since 2004 I have made sure I have collected all the CDs that have been released to-date, the last being Joyous 17 (a triple CD offering) and double DVD offering. T...

Book Review: Letter to my Children

Letter to my Children Kenneth Kaunda Veritas Trust 1977 139 pages One of the things that I and my fellow boarders at Kafue Secondary School looked forward to during our meals in the dining hall was receiving letters especially those from our parents and guardians. These letters were important in maintaining connection with our families as we got news of what was happening in our families as well as get advice on how to conduct ourselves at school.  The book 'Letter to my children' by Kenneth Kaunda, the first Republican President of Zambia was written to his children as a kind of public apology for neglecting his children so badly by putting his political career before his family. This book is dedicated to his children and the youth of Zambia. Some key highlights of this book are: Faith and values. Here Dr. Kaunda discusses issues of power. He states that the earliest form of power that he encountered and had a lasting effect on him was the power of the gospel. He further says...

Micahel Eaton: Biographical Sketch

Michael Eaton was the fourth pastor of Lusaka Baptist Church from 1976 to 1977. He was a good expository preacher/teacher and prolific writer of many Christian books including commentaries on a number of books of the Bible. Michael Eaton was born in 1941. He came from a very ordinary family in London. He became a Christian (late 1950s) when he was a teenager through a youth group in an Evangelical Anglican Church. The Billy Graham campaigns in London may also have played some part in his salvation. He did his Bachelor of Divinity at Tyndale House Cambridge. He then entered the ministry as a curate (assistant minister) at an Anglican church in Surrey, England. In 1967, he resigned from the Anglican ministry on theological grounds and joined an Evangelical Free Church in south-west London. In March 1969 he moved to Zambia where he and his wife Jenny joined Lusaka Baptist Church and later became a deacon and an elder. From early days in the church he taught an adu...