| It’s easier to go with the flow, to follow the accepted path, to stick with the tried and true. But when that flow creates harm rather than benefit, it prompts a need to stand up and speak up for change. As more people see that current systems are unsustainable and realize that their economic choices can create positive ripple effects around the world, they’re standing up and speaking up as consumers and business leaders to call for an end to exploitative practices that harm us all. Certified B Corporations and other stakeholder-minded organizations that realize our interdependent nature help amplify the positive impact of our collective actions. This week’s articles highlight the influence we can wield by collaborating to reshape our economy for good. In community, B The Change Did a friend forward this to you? Subscribe here. | |
| Changing Systems and Minds for a Sustainable Future The impending climate crisis has forward-thinking people and businesses increasingly looking to reduce their environmental footprint by reshaping their daily routines. Leaders at B Corps ReCIRC and Numi Organic Tea are starting with the basics: product packaging. While the two companies have differing products and approaches to sustainable packaging, they both realize the importance of changing systems and policies — as well as people’s minds — to reshape business norms and ensure a resilient future. | |
| Give and Take for Environmental Good Everything we own comes at some environmental cost. But as consumers, we can go straight to the source and demand those who produce the goods we consume do so in a more ethical and environmentally just way. On B The Change, Stephen Tracy of B Corp Keap Candles shares how some producers are leading the way by aligning their actions to give back more than they take and advance more sustainable systems. | |
| This practical guide from B Lab features information to help business leaders understand the intersection of climate action and social justice and advance a justice-centered approach to climate action. | |
| A Collaborative Model for Sustainable Change There’s a reason why sustainability challenges are often called “wicked” problems, Dr. Wren Montgomery says in this article for the Network for Business Sustainability. They tend to be complicated, involve many stakeholders, and lack clear solutions. But in her studies of the water system in Detroit, she has seen how broad community coalitions can take a system that was barely functional back to a more stable state. | |
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