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The Biosphere rules

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<title>Biosphere rules</title>
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<title>Harvard Business Review</title>
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<name type="personal" usage="primary" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="MAPA20080118365">
<namePart>Unruh, Gregory</namePart>
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<dateIssued encoding="marc">2008</dateIssued>
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<abstract>Sustainability, defined by natural scientists as the capacity of healthy ecosystems to function indefinitely, has become a clarion call for business. Leading companies have taken high-profile steps toward achieving it: Wal-Mart, for example, with its efforts to reduce packaging waste, and Nike, which has removed toxic chemicals from its shoes. But, says Unruh, the director of Thunderbirds Lincoln Center for Ethics in Global Management, sustainability is more than an endless journey of incremental steps. It is a destination, for which the biosphere of planet Earth-refined through billions of years of trial and error-is a perfect model. Unruh distills some lessons from the biosphere into three rules</abstract>
<note type="statement of responsibility">by Gregory C. Unruh</note>
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<topic>Sostenibilidad</topic>
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<topic>Empresas</topic>
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<topic>Protección del medio ambiente</topic>
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<title>Harvard Business Review</title>
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<identifier type="local">MAP20077100345</identifier>
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<text>Vol. 86, nº 2, February 2008; p. 111-117</text>
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