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What are the qualities people look for in a leader? Could charisma be top of the list? Steve Kempster explores the issue.
The picture is more complex than George Osborne lets on, says Stephen Bevan.
Swarnodeep Homroy argues that CEO salaries are high to compensate for the risk of dismissal in the International Business Times.
The business presence at COP21 may be on the sidelines but support for climate change is strong, says Gail Whiteman.
The Pentland Centre's Gail Whiteman is one of a team of experts who put their questions to UN special envoy and former Irish president Mary Robinson about the 2015 Paris climate negotiations.
Can we predict and manage the effect of promotions in supply chains? Are promotions beneficial to retailers? Nikolaos Kourentzes and Oliver Schaer discuss.
"China’s 21st Century Maritime Silk Road could be a game changer for Africa’s development," argue Wei Shen and colleagues in the Business Times.
LUMS's Mark Shackleton discusses a new technique which might change the future of fuel.
Professor Wei Shen and colleagues discuss China's relationship with Africa in the China Daily.
Paul Sparrow discusses how companies can put more thought into their "employer brand" in a blog post on Changeboard.
Efforts to break our financial addiction to the energy sector might find useful lessons in the slow decline of tobacco, argues Mark Shackleton.
On the World Economic Forum website, Professor of International Business, Wei Shen, blogs about China's 'one belt, one road' initiative.
Figures released by the TUC show that the UK gender pay gap for top earners is currently 55%. Recent revelations from Hollywood show that both social and political action is needed to reduce this shocking statistic once and for all.
We should be asking what a recent expose of drug price rises tells us about how health is being managed in the UK, argues Chris Ford.
Swarnodeep Homroy and Colin Green argue that quotas do not necessarily solve the underlying cause of gender inequality.
Professor Bryan Lukas, from Lancaster's Marketing department, talks about what we can learn from the VW emissions scandal from a branding perspective.
Clinton, who named drug companies among her enemies in this week's debate, is pushing policies that could hamper the flow of new medicines, argues Chris Ford in The Conversation.
This year's award recognises the value of micro analysis and good, old-fashioned legwork, argues Dr Vincent O'Sullivan.
In the Independent, LUMS's Dr Vincent O'Sullivan and Dr Hakim Yadi, Chief Executive of the Northern Health Science Alliance, argue that any Northern Powerhouse must try to bring talented graduates back from the capital.
Swarnodeep Homroy argues that it is compensation for the risk of dismissal, rather than greed, which is behind rising CEO salaries.
Professor Gail Whiteman, from the Pentland Centre for Sustainability in Business, discusses the emissions scandal.
In her latest blog post for the World Economic Forum, Gail Whiteman and colleagues warn that melting ice caps will impact on agriculture, insurance and tourism.
Following allegations of harsh working practices at Amazon, Monideepa Tarafdar talks about the dangers of technology in the workplace.
The Pentland Centre's Gail Whiteman and Jeremy Wilkinson discuss why a shrinking Arctic matters, including its effects on the economy.
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