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edelman [2022/09/12 08:40] liam [COVID-19] | edelman [2022/10/05 21:50] (current) liam [Clients] |
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Global President and Chief Operating Officer [[Matthew Harrington]] participated in [[Event 201]], a [[pandemic war games|pandemic preparedness exercise]], in [[united_states:new york:New York City]] in October 2019.((//Biography of Matthew Harrington | Participant for Event 201.// Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from http://archive.today/2022.07.08-135816/https://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/our-work/exercises/event201/players/harrington.html)) | Global President and Chief Operating Officer [[Matthew Harrington]] participated in [[Event 201]], a [[pandemic war games|pandemic preparedness exercise]], in [[united_states:new york:New York City]] in October 2019.((//Biography of Matthew Harrington | Participant for Event 201.// Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. Retrieved September 11, 2022, from http://archive.today/2022.07.08-135816/https://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/our-work/exercises/event201/players/harrington.html)) |
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In 2020, as host of the Edelman Trust Barometer annual event at the [[World Economic Forum]] in [[switzerland:Davos]], Richard Edelman explained to a small audience that in the first ten years of the new millennium, certain events during the proceeding decade negatively affected the level of trust people now have in institutions. He identified the [[Iraq War]], [[globalization]], the [[Great Recession]], and the rise of [[India]] and [[China]] as the leading factors in the loss of trust. Edelman contended that these events were the primary cause of the mass class divide, the battle for truth (due to [[social networks]]), and an “incredible concern for the future of work” because they led to the rise of the [[gig economy]], [[automation]], and [[outsourcing]]. Edelman went on to say, “The hypothesis I’m going to make today about the construct for trust is that it now relies not just on competence, but it also relies on ethical behavior.” Richard Edelman’s use of a technical description of truth is telling as to how he perceives the concept of “ethical behavior.”((Vedmore, J. (2021, June 17). Edelman PR and the Manufacturing of “Trust.” Unlimited Hangout. https://archive.ph/ul7Qq)) | In 2020, as host of the Edelman Trust Barometer annual event at the [[World Economic Forum]] in [[switzerland:Davos]], Richard Edelman explained to a small audience that in the first ten years of the new millennium, certain events during the proceeding decade negatively affected the level of trust people now have in institutions.((Edelman. (2020, January 28). //2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Global Launch at the World Economic Forum.// YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwozUUIYI3s)) He identified the [[Iraq War]], [[globalization]], the [[Great Recession]], and the rise of [[India]] and [[China]] as the leading factors in the loss of trust. Edelman contended that these events were the primary cause of the mass class divide, the battle for truth (due to [[social networks]]), and an “incredible concern for the future of work” because they led to the rise of the [[gig economy]], [[automation]], and [[outsourcing]]. Edelman went on to say, “The hypothesis I’m going to make today about the construct for trust is that it now relies not just on competence, but it also relies on ethical behavior.” Richard Edelman’s use of a technical description of truth is telling as to how he perceives the concept of “ethical behavior.”((Vedmore, J. (2021, June 17). //Edelman PR and the Manufacturing of “Trust.”// Unlimited Hangout. https://archive.ph/ul7Qq)) |
===== Activities ===== | ===== Activities ===== |
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* [[Citibank]] | * [[Citibank]] |
* [[united_states:illinois:Chicago|City of Chicago]] | * [[united_states:illinois:Chicago|City of Chicago]] |
* [[Consumer Health Products Association]] | * [[Consumer Healthcare Products Association]] |
* [[Danone]] | * [[Danone]] |
* [[David Suzuki Foundation]] | * [[David Suzuki Foundation]] |