Home Search
ESG - search results
If you're not happy with the results, please do another search
Corporations Undermine Anti-Discrimination Efforts (Commentary)
Corporations undermine anti-discrimination efforts by supporting discrimination based on superficial characteristics, writes Scott Shepard. (Commentary)
More than 60 corporations signed on to an amicus brief in the U.S. Supreme...
Academic Journal Publishing Cartel (Commentary)
Academic journal publishing cartel of five commercial firms controls half the market and influences scientific research.
Here’s a business plan: Sell a product that …
...
Climate Change Weekly #452: No Consensus on Climate Crisis, Scientist Survey Finds
The Heartland Institute recently commissioned a survey by Fairleigh Dickinson University to get scientists’ thoughts on climate change. The survey results dispel the notion that 97 percent of relevant scientists believe humans are causing catastrophic climate change.
Colleges: Go Back to Basics
Colleges: go back to basics, shed the amenities, sports, and politics. Stick to teaching and research, says economist Richard K. Vedder.
Colleges perform two vital...
Climate Change Weekly #451: Green Energy Revolution Hits Energy Reality Wall
If carbon dioxide emissions from human activities are causing dangerous climate change, China is the straw that stirs the drink. China emits more carbon dioxide than all the developed countries on Earth combined.
Income Share Agreements: A Promising Alternative to Federal Student Loans
Under Income Share Agreements, students could fund their educations through lenders who bear the cost of tuition, then share in earnings.
Book Review: The Pessimistic Rationalist and the Philosopher of Fossil Fuels
Two new books explore the absolute continued necessity of using fossil fuels for the foreseeable future. More than 80% of global GDP is covered by net-zero targets, meaning the push for net zero is a war on fossil fuels and economic progress.
U.S. Farmers Grab the Lobbying Pitchforks as Greens Sow Costly New Reporting Mandates
Tensions between farmers and green-minded government policymakers are building in the United States, where producers are squaring off against a costly proposed federal mandate for greenhouse-gas reporting from corporate supply chains.
British Universities Show ‘More’ Doesn’t Mean ‘Better’
British Universities show "more" doesn't mean “better”; the value of credentials from degree mills might not be worth it to students.
The Biden administration is...
After Student-Loan Forgiveness, Mandatory Credentialing Has to Go (Commentary)
Employers use college degrees as a convenient way to screen and hire job applicants, even when the degree is not relevant to the position.