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Corporate Social Responsibility
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4.09.2008 - 03:40pm ET
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Interviews with E.O. Wilson, Lester Brown, Majora Carter, and Others Available Online from Inaugural Aspen Environment Forum
Aspen Institute and National Geographic magazine websites offer insight from Forum participants
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON, DC - April 9, 2008 - The Aspen Institute and National
Geographic magazine are pleased to announce that video and audio clips
from the first-ever Aspen Environment Forum are now available online. A
powerful, four-day gathering of more than 350 thought leaders that began
on March 26, 2008, in Aspen, CO, the Aspen Environment Forum was designed
to stimulate open-minded dialogue about the future of our shared
environment and how we, as citizens, corporations and countries, can be
responsible stewards.
"The Aspen Institute places significance on discussion, on dialogue, on
spirited debate around any number of issues," says David Monsma, the
executive director of the Institute's Energy and Environment program. "And
the Aspen Environment Forum is no different."
"National Geographic magazine has a long history of reporting on the
environment, and we are delighted to have brought together so many voices
around the issues," said Chris Johns, editor in chief of the magazine.
Clips available to the public already include urban environmental activist
Majora Carter; Earth Policy Institute Founder Lester Brown; J. Carl Ganter
of Circle of Blue; David Malakoff of NPR; Colorado Gov. William Ritter;
and Tim Appenzeller, executive editor of National Geographic, interviewing
Harvard University’s E.O. Wilson. Clips will continue to be added to the
site at
www.aspenenvironment.org/live-from-the-forum. The Aspen Institute's
YouTube channel is rich with video at www.youtube.com/aspeninstitute,
and podcasts are available on iTunes.
National Geographic magazine's online coverage of the Forum is at
http://ngm.typepad.com/aspen_forum. It features interviews of key
speakers, including E.O.Wilson, Canadian Inuit activist and Nobel Prize
nominee Sheila Watt-Cloutier, and National Geographic Emerging Explorer
Alexandra Cousteau.
Visit these sites to hear E.O. Wilson caution that we need to save the
"living environment" because "if we only try to save the physical
environment, we'll lose both," and watch Majora Carter call out to "make
the invisible places visible."
Sponsors for the Aspen Environment Forum, presented by the Aspen Institute
and National Geographic magazine, include Camco, Duke Energy, General
Motors, Goldman Sachs and Shell.
The Aspen Institute, founded in 1950, is an international nonprofit
organization dedicated to fostering enlightened leadership and open-minded
dialogue. Through seminars, policy programs, conferences and leadership
development initiatives, the Institute and its international partners seek
to promote nonpartisan inquiry and an appreciation for timeless values. The
Institute is headquartered in Washington, DC, and has campuses in Aspen,
CO, and on the Wye River near the shores of the Chesapeake Bay in
Maryland. Its international network includes partner Aspen Institutes in
Berlin, Rome, Lyon, Tokyo, New Delhi and Bucharest, and leadership
initiatives in Africa, Central America and India.
National Geographic magazine is the official journal of the
National Geographic Society, one of the world's largest nonprofit
educational and scientific organizations. Published in English and 31
local-language editions, the magazine has a global circulation of around 8
million. It is sent each month to National Geographic members and is
available on newsstands for $4.95 a copy. Single copies can be ordered by
calling (800) NGS-LINE, also the number to call to apply for membership in
the Society. The magazine's Web site is at www.ngm.com.
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