Materiales docentes

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/10171/2618

En este área se incluyen los materiales docentes de los profesores de la Universidad de Navarra.

See

Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 16
  • Thumbnail Image
    Materiales complementarios para la asignatura «Historia de Estados Unidos»
    (2024) Escobedo-Romero, R. (Rafael)
    Temario desarrollado, glosarios conceptual, geográfico y onomástico, cronología y anexos sobre varios de los temas no tratados directamente en aula.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Guía para la elaboración de TFG de Marketing: consultoría de grupo
    (2024) Sánchez-Blanco, C. (Cristina); Sádaba-Chalezquer, C. (Charo); Kaufmann-Argueta, J. (Jürg); Gutiérrez-García, E. (Elena); Recalde-Viana, M. (Mónica)
    Guía para el Trabajo Fin de Grado de Marketing.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Comunicación empresarial: herramienta estratégica para la responsabilidad social
    (2024) Recalde-Viana, M. (Mónica)
    Apuntes para la asignatura de Comunicación empresarial, máster en Comunicación Política y Corporativa. Mucho se ha publicado y opinado en los últimos diez años acerca del desarrollo sostenible en las organizaciones, de las obligaciones que asumen las empresas con la sociedad y de las nuevas exigencias de la ciudadanía (Beck, 2004). El marco de dicho debate tiende a ser la denominada corriente de responsabilidad social empresarial (en adelante RSE) o corporativa, en cuyo seno acontecen interpretaciones desde prismas y colores diversos y proyectan horizontes divergentes (Crane et al., 2008).
  • Thumbnail Image
    From the global Compact to the Code of Conduct 2024
    (2024) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    By the end of the Twentieth Century, many new terms arose evidencing the need to build a safer frame for developing people and companies, in balance with nature and the environment. Those are the origin of what we know now as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). It is a management concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns into their business operations and interactions with their stakeholders. CSR is generally understood as being the way through which a company achieves a balance of economic, environmental, and social imperatives, while at the same time addressing the expectations of shareholders and stakeholders (UNIDO, 2019). But academic literature about Corporate Social Responsibility issues different concepts closely related among them, and to the Triple-Bottom-Line Approach (Elkington, 1994, 1997, 1998) that intends to rationalize the development that promotes economic growth while working on social inclusion and minimizing the environmental impact, but with several nuances.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Sustainability in the Fashion Value Chain 2024
    (2024) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    Sustainability is a complex word related to the three bottom line1 of economic, social, and environmental dimensions of the development that meets the needs of the present without compromising those of the future2, within the planet’s physical boundaries. Sustainability in Fashion companies is no longer an option, but the “new normal”, evidenced by its privileged place in the Fashion Industry’s Agenda since 20203. The fashion industry is considered the second most polluting in the world, textiles are the fourth highest-pressure category for the use of raw materials and water, after food, housing, and transport, and fifth for GHG emissions4. Clothing production doubled from 2000 to 2014 and the number of garments purchased each year by the average consumer increased by 60%5. People use their clothes half as much as they did in 20006: in some countries such as China, clothing utilisation has decreased by 70% in the same period5. Undoubtedly, the fashion industry is now a relevant player in the economic scene, with a contribution of more than $2.4 trillion to global manufacturing7, and more than 300 million people employed if we include the clothing industry along the value chain6 all across the world. It is clearly a growing sophisticated business with a fragmented and relatively low-tech production system5. It began 200 years ago, but innovation to improve quality developed most significantly in the last 50-60 years; health and safety product control developed over the last 10-15 years, and sustainability emerged as a key concern only 5-6 years. The path to this transformation process is extremely difficult and multifaceted and must progress quickly. Sustainability in the Fashion value chain needs the collaboration between academia and business (research in many fields like Communication, Environmental Sciences, Chemistry, Business, Biology, Law, Engineering, Design, Architecture, etc., and different players in the industry: providers, textile manufacturers, retailers, delivering services, etc.). It also needs the fuel of the public institutions and the commitment of the consumers. But what does sustainability mean?
  • Thumbnail Image
    From the global Compact to the Code of Conduct 2022
    (2022) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    By the end of the Twentieth Century, many new terms arose evidencing the need to build a safer frame for developing people and companies, in balance with nature and environment. Those are the origin of what we know now as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). It is a management concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business operations and interactions with their stakeholders. CSR is generally understood as being the way through which a company achieves a balance of economic, environmental, and social imperatives, while at the same time addressing the expectations of shareholders and stakeholders (UNIDO, 2019). But academic literature about Corporate Social Responsibility issues different concepts closely related among them, and to the Triple-Bottom-Line Approach (Elkington, 1994, 1997, 1998) that intends to rationalize the development that promotes economic growing while working on social inclusion and minimizing the environmental impact, but with several nuances.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Sustainability in the Fashion Value Chain 2022
    (2022) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    Sustainability is a complex word related to the three-bottom line1 of economic, social, and environmental dimensions of the development that meets the needs of the present without compromising those of the future2, within the planet’s physical boundaries. Sustainability in Fashion companies is no longer an option, but the “new normal”, evidenced by its privileged place in the Fashion Industry’s Agenda in 20203. Fashion industry is considered to be the second most polluting in the world, textiles are the fourth highest-pressure category for the use of raw materials and water, after food, housing, and transport, and fifth for GHG emissions4. Clothing production doubled from 2000 to 2014 and the number of garments purchased each year by the average consumer increased by 60%5. People use their clothes half as much as they did in 20006: in some countries such as China, clothing utilisation has decreased by 70% in the same period5. Undoubtedly, the fashion industry is now a relevant player in economic scene, with a contribution of more than $2.4 trillion to global manufacturing7, and more than 300 million people employed if we include the clothing industry along the value chain6 all across the world. It is clearly a growing sophisticated business with a fragmented and relative low-tech production system5. It began 200 years ago, but innovation to improve quality developed most significantly in the last 50-60 years; health and safety product control developed over the last 10-15 years, and sustainability emerged as a key concern only 5-6 years. The path to this transformation process is extremely difficult, multifaceted and must progress quickly. Sustainability in the Fashion value chain needs the collaboration between academia and business (research in many fields like Communication, Environmental Sciences, Chemistry, Business, Biology, Law, Engineering, Design, Architecture, etc., and different players in the industry: providers, textile manufacturers, retailers, delivering services, etc.). It also needs the fuel of the public institutions and the commitment of the consumers. But what sustainability does mean?
  • Thumbnail Image
    From the global Compact to the Code of Conduct 2021
    (2021) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    By the end of the Twentieth Century, many new terms arose evidencing the need to build a safer frame for developing people and companies, in balance with nature and environment. Those are the origin of what we know now as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). It is a management concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business operations and interactions with their stakeholders. CSR is generally understood as being the way through which a company achieves a balance of economic, environmental, and social imperatives, while at the same time addressing the expectations of shareholders and stakeholders (UNIDO, 2019). But academic literature about Corporate Social Responsibility issues different concepts closely related among them, and to the Triple-Bottom-Line Approach (Elkington, 1994, 1997, 1998) that intends to rationalize the development that promotes economic growing while working on social inclusion and minimizing the environmental impact, but with several nuances.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Sustainability in the Fashion Value Chain 2021
    (2021) Pérez-Bou, S. (Silvia)
    Sustainability is a complex word related to the three-bottom line1 of economic, social, and environmental dimensions of the development that meets the needs of the present without compromising those of the future2, within the planet’s physical boundaries. Sustainability in Fashion companies is no longer an option, but the “new normal”, evidenced by its privileged place in the Fashion Industry’s Agenda in 20203. Fashion industry is considered to be the second most polluting in the world, textiles are the fourth highest-pressure category for the use of raw materials and water, after food, housing, and transport, and fifth for GHG emissions4. Clothing production doubled from 2000 to 2014 and the number of garments purchased each year by the average consumer increased by 60%5. People use their clothes half as much as they did in 20006: in some countries such as China, clothing utilisation has decreased by 70% in the same period5. Undoubtedly, the fashion industry is now a relevant player in economic scene, with a contribution of more than $2.4 trillion to global manufacturing7, and more than 300 million people employed if we include the clothing industry along the value chain6 all across the world. It is clearly a growing sophisticated business with a fragmented and relative low-tech production system5. It began 200 years ago, but innovation to improve quality developed most significantly in the last 50-60 years; health and safety product control developed over the last 10-15 years, and sustainability emerged as a key concern only 5-6 years. The path to this transformation process is extremely difficult, multifaceted and must progress quickly. Sustainability in the Fashion value chain needs the collaboration between academia and business (research in many fields like Communication, Environmental Sciences, Chemistry, Business, Biology, Law, Engineering, Design, Architecture, etc., and different players in the industry: providers, textile manufacturers, retailers, delivering services, etc.). It also needs the fuel of the public institutions and the commitment of the consumers. But what sustainability does mean?
  • Thumbnail Image
    Recursos para la enseñanza y aprendizaje del aparato locomotor
    (2024) Ansó-López, C. (Carolina); Casas-Jericó, M. (María)