...to raise your hand and raise your voice!
I would LOVE to hear from you if you have read one or more of my blog posts. What are your comments and thoughts?
It is very rare that I receive any feedback and with 40-440 viewings per post, I am interested to know who you are and what you think!
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I have had almost 12,000 blog views since starting this blog in 2009, most of you hailing from the United States, closely followed by the United Kingdom, Russia, Canada, Australia and the rest of Europe.
Thank you so much for reading my blog, I hope you have found it fun, funny or inspirational in some way thus far.
Rosie :)
Thursday, 14 March 2013
Saturday, 2 March 2013
Sydney Mardi Gras 2013
Absolutely loved the parade last night- there was an electric atmosphere filled with music, love and pride (as well as glitter, feathers and a little bit of leather)! Celebrating the gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, trans-sexual and trans-gender communities, it was truly heart-warming to experience.
Lesbians on motorbikes (aptly named 'dykes on bikes') were swiftly followed by the Sydney Mayor and representatives from the services, in uniform: police men and women, fire men and women, ambulance staff, park rangers, life guards, army and navy personnel. It was the 35th year the Sydney Mardi Gras has taken place and the first year that the Australian Army representatives had been permitted to march in uniform.
There were amazing floats and parade partakers from night clubs, schools, youth groups, political parties, faith groups, Australian national sports organisations (I liked that the swimmers and water polo players had sprayed themselves with body glitter so that they looked fresh out of the water), large companies, HIV charities and same-sex marriage support groups. The 'hairy bears' group made us laugh- gay men who are particularly rotund, hairy and bearded. I was told to look out for the 'fruits in suits' group, but we must've missed that. It was a whole bunch of fun; just google the images and videos and you will see what I mean. Here are some of the best images.
As you would expect, some of the costumes were absolutely amazing. The really impressive ones were mostly worn by people who looked very professional, like this was something they do regularly. These beautiful drag queens and lady-boys were my favourite part, but as a second to that I appreciated the 'rainbow babies' section, where same sex couples walked and danced along with their children. We were actually stood by a gay couple and their two children.
As someone with gay friends as well as family members, it was great to be able to join in with all the happy cheers of encouragement, of course whilst admiring the outfits and hot bods!
Monday, 25 February 2013
Business and Human Rights
GSB nails it yet again in addressing big issues in an understandable, manageable, yet interesting way.
Click the links here for the round-up and the full live discussion on business and human rights (particularly the challenges companies face in implementing measures to tackle human rights). If you are in London on March 20th, why not check out GSBQ (there will be an online write- up of the evening event available afterwards).
Sustainable Fashion Top Tweeters
A few more for you to follow right here: thank you to Guardian Sustainable Business for your list of those who tweet most excellently about ethical fashion and also to GSB readers who have added their own recommendations to the list.
Sunday, 24 February 2013
Shop of the Month
Linked beautifully with my previous blog post is this one, which is about sustainable E-TAILER Indigo Bazaar!
Click here to view my latest article for the Ethical Fashion Forum's SOURCE. The model in the image above is showing off a gorgeous Athinaeum bag, just one of a selection sold at the multi-brand online store Indigo Bazaar.
Thursday, 21 February 2013
Wuh Wuh Wuh Whaat!
Something happened to me recently that I will tell my
grandchildren in the future: I attended a talk by the inventor of the WWW, aka the World Wide Web… It was a
thoroughly oversubscribed event and I only just sat in a seat before it began,
with queues of people outside Sydney Town Hall. The web may be “for everyone”
but the talk about the web is evidently not!
Although the internet was invented in 1969, it was Sir Tim Berners-Lee who
in 1989 took this global and wrote the first web page. At the front of the
stage were the words “Green, Global, Connected”. It blew my mind to think of
what Tim created when he wrote that first ‘http://’. Without Tim’s innovative
action we would not have this blog you are reading now, Twitter, Linked In,
Facebook, holiday and restaurant booking sites, online job applications, online
fashion stores…the list is endless and the uses are indeed, global. At the
World Economic Forum in Davos it was recently said that online education is on
the rise. We are certainly more connected, at least virtually. Is the world
greener thanks to the WWW? Very difficult to judge.
I like Tim. He seemed down to earth despite always thinking
of things in the ether and he seemed a bit jittery, which is what I get like
when I have had one too many coffees. He is a real person. When asked ‘who is
the bigger legend, Steve Jobs or Bill Gates?’ he responded (in so many words)
to say that he will not answer that as he does not like to bad-mouth his
friends. When asked ‘so… why all the videos of cats?’ he joked ‘yes, that is a
very important part of the plan, it is all about cats!’
Tim was introduced as ‘the greatest disruption to humanity
since the invention of warfare’, but of course he is also a great force for
good. Lord Mayor of Sydney, Clover Moore, sang the web’s praises and
highlighted the recent rise of crowd sourcing sites for social projects such as
Brick Starter.
Tim Berners-Lee was born in 1955, just like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates.
His parents met putting together the first computer to be commercially sold. As
I said, 1969 was the year the internet was invented, but at that time Led
Zeppelin and man landing on the moon were more exciting than internal office newsletters.
After an Oxford degree in Physics, Tim came up with something special. He
described the task of persuading business people and academics that the WWW was
a good idea as like being in a bobsled team: in 1989 it was difficult to push,
then ‘92-4 was the jumping in and steering bit. There are now more web pages than neurons in the human
brain. Tim joked that numbers of web pages are increasing while our neurons are
decreasing.
As the most creative invention of the twentieth century, the
web enables us to have two way flows of information not only between people but
between people and businesses. With instant feedback, companies must be
accountable to their actions now more than ever. The web has changed the way we
operate as a society. People wondering ‘have I got cancer?’ or ‘am I gay?’ may
turn to the web for guidance before going to a close friend or doctor. It has
changed the way we do business; the competition is only one click away.
The talk reminded me not to take the web for granted, as is
so easy to do now that it is a part of our every day lives. The TV set, radio,
newspaper and phone are now converged. Of course in some countries (China)
there are stronger censorship controls over the press and the web than in other
countries. In Egypt over the Arab Spring, the internet was turned off. Tim
believes that the internet should be classed as an independent estate and
should not be controlled by external forces.
Tim also strongly believes that what computers can do is
limited only by our imaginations. Changes are already taking place that will
mean more power is put into the hands of consumers, with the ability to code
our own computers for example.
I was glad I stayed until the end because the geeks at
Digital Sydney had devised a fantastic technical light and music display across
the inside of the great hall. It was a performance that began with that old
school sound of attempts to connect to the internet and descended into a heavy dubstep
remix scattered with dancing images of disks, USBs and mini computers with dots
connecting them, mice and keyboards.
When asked what he’d change if he were to do it all again,
Tim replied ‘I’d probably take out the two slashes’.
Hear hear to a British legend!
Friday, 1 February 2013
The Foundations of Business
I am particularly pleased with this exclusive
thought-leadership piece, because I helped to undertake the background research that
provides the bedrock of the discussion and conclusions, during my placement
with Corporate Citizenship over the summer of 2012.
TheFoundations of Business is the most recently released publication by
Corporate Citizenship. It gives a unique insight into the current workings of
corporate foundations in England and Wales, which can be loosely defined as
distinct legal entities that contribute to community causes on a company’s
behalf. Yes, they are independent from the companies that provisionally fund
them, but there are varying degrees of company and foundation integration to be
found, with equally varying degrees of employee involvement in activities such
as fundraising and volunteering.
In my capacity as researcher, I was lucky enough to work
with Amanda Jordan OBE to help produce this piece using the Charity Commission database, a
survey and in-depth interviews with the foundations of Zurich, Sodexo as well
as the Association of Charitable Foundations.
Since the last Corporate Citizenship publication into
corporate foundations in 2006, the numbers of such foundations in England and
Wales has actually grown, despite the economic downturn.
During my research I was both astonished and overjoyed to
see that a large part of the new corporate foundations established since 2006
were in the fashion sector. Not only that, but this was an entirely new sector
to realise the benefits of corporate foundations, with clothing retailers such
as Burberry (2008), Primark (2008), White Stuff (2010) and Jimmy Choo (2011)
all establishing foundations in recent years.
An area for future improvement across corporate foundations
in all industry sectors, however, was shown to be impact assessment. This was
demonstrated when a shocking 42% of survey respondents from corporate
foundations said that they do not undertake any form of impact assessment.
This publication is focused upon corporate foundations based
in the UK, although some of them had additional global operations. With great
potential to take this research further, there are some brief European
comparisons made at the end and there may be an American perspective brought
out in the future.
Corporate foundations are certainly valuable contributors to
social good and this research is really only the start of what is to come within this expanding sector. A
great piece of thought-leadership- keep up the good work guys and girls!
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