[{"_id":"project-settings","settings":{"translateMetaTags":true,"translateAriaLabels":true,"translateTitle":true,"showWidget":true,"customWidget":{"theme":"dark","font":"rgb(255,255,255)","header":"rgb(0,0,0)","background":"rgba(0,0,0,0.8)","position":"right","positionVertical":"bottom","border":"","borderRequired":false,"widgetCompact":true},"widgetLanguages":[],"activeLanguages":{"es":"Español","en":"English"},"enabledLanguages":["en","es"],"debugInfo":false,"displayBranding":true,"displayBrandingName":true,"localizeImages":false,"localizeImagesLimit":false,"localizeAudio":false,"localizeAudioLimit":false,"localizeDates":false,"disabledPages":[],"regexPhrases":[],"allowComplexCssSelectors":false,"blockedClasses":false,"blockedIds":false,"phraseDetection":true,"customDomainSettings":[],"seoSetting":[],"translateSource":false,"overage":false,"detectPhraseFromAllLanguage":false,"googleAnalytics":false,"mixpanel":false,"heap":false,"blockedComplexSelectors":[]},"version":5560},{"_id":"en","source":"en","pluralFn":"return n != 1 ? 1 : 0;","pluralForm":2,"dictionary":{},"version":5560},{"_id":"outdated","outdated":{"#9 Dec":1,"#Bolivia: +591":1,"#Not Sofía ? Click here.":1,"#Welcome back, Sofía !":1,"#One of our campaign organizers will be in touch soon. In the meantime, read more about the climate rapid response team below.":1,"#Thank you for signing up.":1,"#Like on Twitter 1866165920910966861":1,"#Retweet on Twitter 1866165920910966861":1,"#Reply on Twitter 1866165920910966861":1,"#Another front group with ties to #BigTobacco is lobbying public officials in Brussels -- including meeting with members of the health committee to discuss items like \"the future of the tobacco industry\".":1,"#will be matched dollar-for-dollar!":1,"#rein in corporate power and it":1,"#Give before Dec 31 to help":1,"#Another front group with ties to #BigTobacco is lobbying public officials in Brussels -- including meeting with members of the health committee to discuss items like \"the future of the tobacco industry\".":1,"#DOUBLE YOUR GIFT":1,"#Give before Dec 31 to help
rein in corporate power and it
will be matched dollar-for-dollar!":1,"#Rewrite with Grammarly":1,"#Open Grammarly.":1,"#Unknown":1,"#Ecuador: +593":1,"#Mobile Number, 011 15-2345-6789":1,"#Argentina: +54":1,"#This documentary by the Black Collective exposes the deep institutionalized racism within the school-to-prison pipeline and its devastating impact on youth of color, especially Black youth. It highlights how students are disproportionately funneled from classrooms into the criminal justice system and explores the role of the prison industrial complex. Together, we can raise awareness and fight for reform in education and juvenile justice.":1,"#The powerful truth behind the school-to-prison pipeline":1,"#In this tough moment, let’s stand strong together. Join us this Friday for La hora del poder popular — a gathering to mobilize and take action with the Corporate Accountability community. This is a space to connect, unite, and challenge corporate power by pushing back against forces profiting from harm to people and the planet. Let’s make every action count.":1,"#Más información en":1,"#🔗 Más información en":1,"#¡Hoy es":1,"#3 Dec":1,"#Declaración: ¿Quién está realmente corriendo contra reloj en la COP29?":1,"#November 24, 2024":1,"#Rachel Rosa Jackson, Diretora de Pesquisa Climática e Política da Corporate Accountability, divulgou a seguinte declaração sobre o estado das negociações, à medida que nos aproximamos do fim da COP29 no Azerbaijão:":1,"#Comunicado: Quem está realmente deixando o tempo passar na COP29?":1,"#Mientras la COP29 avanza hacia una posible prórroga en Bakú, es fundamental que todos veamos esto como lo que es: un intento concertado de los países y empresas contaminadoras de retrasar el avance de la acción climática.":1,"#Make your gift today and help power our campaigns to challenge corporate abuse for the coming year.":1,"##GivingTuesday":1,"#Today is":1,"#Like on Twitter 1864017198416527469":1,"#Retweet on Twitter 1864017198416527469":1,"#Reply on Twitter 1864017198416527469":1,"#Today is #GivingTuesday!

Make your gift today and help power our campaigns to challenge corporate abuse for the coming year.

🔗 More at https://corporateaccountability.org/":1,"#More at":1,"#https://corporateaccountability.org/":1,"#🔗 More at":1,"#2 Dec":1,"#Triple the impact of your gift to rein in corporate power when you donate by December 31!":1,"#Triple the impact of your gift to rein in corporate power when you donate by Dec. 31!":1,"#Help us reach our $20,000 #GivingTuesday goal today!":1,"#Thanks to a generous group of donors, all gifts made during Giving Tuesday will be TRIPLE matched, up to $20,000. That means when you give right now, your gift will have 3x the impact to stop corporations from devastating democracy, perpetuating systemic racism, trampling human rights, and destroying the planet.":1,"#This #GivingTuesday your gift will be tripled!":1,"#y más.":1,"#Junto con nuestros aliados, detuvimos un importante contrato de privatización del agua en Houston, logramos que el Fiscal General de uno de los estados más grandes de EE. UU. demandara a los":1,"#We celebrate today, but we know that the work is far from over. We will continue to partner with local allies in California to ensure that the funds from this lawsuit are directed to the communities that have been harmed, and that those communities are part of the decision-making process for where the money goes and how.":1,"#The lawsuit also aims to create a fund to help pay for the damage that the climate crisis will bring to the state. This means that if implemented, polluters that have knowingly driven the crisis—not the people least responsible for it—will pay for the harm and devastation that communities are already facing to rebuild and adapt.":1,"#This lawsuit, filed against Exxon Mobil, Shell, BP, ConocoPhillips, Chevron, and the industry trade group The American Petroleum Institute, breaks new ground for the liability movement. California is a major producer of oil and gas, and its size gives it the power to set a precedent that other states can follow.":1,"#This concerted pressure helped create the public demand for the Attorney General to use his power and authority to act.":1,"#Over the years, thousands of our members in California and beyond have demanded that the Attorney General and elected officials make Big Polluters pay. We also amplified this call at events like the 2017 People’s Climate Mobilization in the Bay Area, met with elected officials from Los Angeles to Oakland on the potential of legal action against the industry, and collaborated with local organizing including the Coalición de Nuestro Poder de Richmond, a group led by communities that have endured and exposed Chevron’s abuses for decades.":1,"#Corporate Accountability and our members played an important role in the nationwide, years-long mobilization that led to this moment, grounded in the success that we and our allies have had in making the tobacco industry pay.":1,"#This is one important milestone toward holding corporations accountable, ensuring justice, and stopping future harm. And it proves that when we stand together and take collective action, we can succeed in making Big Polluters pay!":1,"#That’s why we’re thrilled that California—home to a Chevron refinery and a state enduring droughts, forest fires, and more—is flipping the script. Last week, California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit against the world’s biggest fossil fuel corporations for feeding us, “lies and mistruths to further their record-breaking profit at the expense of our environment.”":1,"#Victory! California files lawsuit against Big Polluters - Corporate Accountability":1,"#This, and so many other recent climate victories, is evidence that the tide is shifting. With all of us working together, a just, beautiful future for all is possible.":1,"#And California, as big as it is, is one state in one country. We and our allies will build on this case to stop Big Polluters from poisoning and extracting from communities across the U.S. and the world. And we will make sure it serves as proof that people, acting together, can hold corporations accountable and make them pay for destroying our health and the planet.":1,"#For decades, Big Polluters have poisoned the air, water, and land. They’ve put Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian communities in harm’s way. And it’s time they be made to pay for it.":1,"#With our allies, we stopped a major water privatization contract in Houston, moved the AG of one of the biggest states in the U.S. to sue #BigPolluters, and more.

Learn about what your support made possible in our fiscal year 2024 Annual Report.
https://corporateaccountability.org/annualreport2024/":1,"#Like on Twitter 1863448005958922735":1,"#Retweet on Twitter 1863448005958922735":1,"#Reply on Twitter 1863448005958922735":1,"#Learn about what your support made possible in our fiscal year 2024 Annual Report.":1,"#, and more.":1,"#With our allies, we stopped a major water privatization contract in Houston, moved the AG of one of the biggest states in the U.S. to sue":1,"#Triple your impact to
challenge corporate power
this Giving Tuesday!":1,"#Like on Twitter 1862916755338752230":1,"#Retweet on Twitter 1862916755338752230":1,"#Reply on Twitter 1862916755338752230":1,"#🚭 The Surgeon General Report 2024 is out! Key findings include:

🚩Combustible tobacco products -- including cigarettes, cigars, and other smoked products -- continue to have an enormous impact on the health of millions of people in the U.S., including 760,000 middle and high…":1,"#Las corporaciones globales de agua como Nestlé y Veolia están intensificando sus esfuerzos para poner el agua del público en manos privadas, profundizando una crisis mundial del agua donde una de cada cuatro personas no tiene suficiente agua limpia para beber. Corporate Accountability lanzó una campaña para garantizar un mundo que defienda el derecho humano al agua y donde la necesidad humana se anteponga a la codicia empresarial. Desde 2006, nuestra campaña de agua ha movido a millones de personas, docenas de ciudades y cientos de parques nacionales a ir más allá del agua embotellada y reinvertir en el grifo. Hemos ayudado a obligar al Banco Mundial a deshacerse de una de las corporaciones de agua más grandes del mundo , y hemos protegido los sistemas públicos de agua al ayudar a evitar su privatización desde Lagos, Nigeria hasta San Luis, Misuri . Y en la ONU, estamos avanzando en un tratado que podría proteger el derecho humano al agua del abuso corporativo. Más sobre la campaña del agua .":1,"#Después del boicot de Nestlé, dirigimos nuestra atención a un conjunto de corporaciones que amenazaban a todo el planeta: la industria de las armas nucleares. Obligamos con éxito al líder de la industria, General Electric, a abandonar por completo el negocio de producción y promoción de armas nucleares. La campaña empleó una variedad de tácticas, incluida la producción de un documental ganador de un oscar . Más sobre la campaña de los fabricantes de armas nucleares.":1,"#Quotes from Make Big Polluters Pay partners:":1,"#In Peru, a farmer is suing a German utility for its role in the crisis harming his livelihood. And, in the United States this year, a federal court ruled against the fossil fuel industry in a procedural matter that could not only clear the way for more cities and states to seek industry accountability, it could even revive cases that had been previously dismissed at the U.S. federal level.":1,"#Today, a global coalition released a “liability roadmap”: a tool outlining how local to global decision-makers can hold polluting industries liable for the climate damage they knowingly cause, while unlocking climate finance needed to address the climate crisis and implement solutions.":1,"#RELEASE: Global coalition releases liability “roadmap” for governments to Make Big Polluters Pay - Corporate Accountability":1,"#Fossil fuel and other polluting industry liability is a growing area of focus for climate experts, academics and governments alike as the industry’s long history of denial and the link between industry emissions and climate impacts becomes more evidenced. From U.S. states to Vanuatu to Perú, elected officials and people are exploring holding polluters like the fossil fuel industry liable for its long history of deceit and environmental destruction.":1,"#– Harjeet Singh, Global Lead on climate change for ActionAid":1,"#This is an opportunity to build back better and protect all our futures by investing in green economies. Covid-19 must not be used as a cover for polluters and governments to continue their disastrous path towards catastrophic global warming.”":1,"#Martin Vilela, Responsable de Área, justicia climática e incidencia internacional. Plataforma Boliviana frente al Cambio Climático":1,"#“El poder corporativo no conoce límites, desde capturar las políticas públicas a nivel nacional, influenciar y entorpecer las negociaciones multilaterales del clima a impulsar falsas soluciones que además de exacerbar la crisis climática, incrementan únicamente sus riquezas. La avaricia de unos pocos está condenando al resto del mundo a una catástrofe ambiental, social y económica. Muchos ya han muerto a causa de este modelo económico que despoja, destruye y mata. Tenemos que crear vías de movilización y esperanza para cambiar la balanza a favor de los pueblos más vulnerables. El Mapa de Responsabilidad Legal es una valiosa herramienta que pretende ser un aporte para que los estados respondan a los pueblos, no al interés corporativo.” –":1,"#For example, The Philippines’ commission on human rights has concluded that the fossil fuel industry can be held legally responsible for their role in climate change. Earlier this year, the expansion of Heathrow Airport was successfully stopped after civil society argued it was a violation of the UK government’s Paris Agreement commitments. Indian fisherman challenging the International Finance Corporation (IFC) secured a precedent-setting judgement in the U.S. Supreme Court in 2019.":1,"#Nathalie Regifo Alvarez, Latin America Climate Campaign Director, Corporate Accountability":1,"#“The same people at the front line of the health, food and economic crises are the same people at the front line of the climate crisis. Transnational corporations have benefited from a broken system based in structural violence that repeatedly harms Black, Indigenous, peasant, and local communities. These systems of oppression only benefit corporations and the elites of the world. But, there is not a planet B. As peoples rise against oppression and racism, we must also rise against Big Polluters that are destroying our lives, our present, our future. This tool will bring us one step closer to making Big Polluters pay and thus, closer to justice.” –":1,"#Sara Shaw, Climate Justice & Energy Program Coordinator, Friends of the Earth International":1,"#“Big Polluters have wrecked our climate, ecosystems, lives and livelihoods, for too long. They manage to abdicate any responsibility, and only benefit from the damage they cause, which falls disproportionately on Global South communities, Indigenous Peoples, people of colour, women, workers, farmers, peasants and low-income communities. The Liability Roadmap is a tool we can use to call to account those who have knowingly caused the climate crisis, and make them pay. Not only that, it lays the foundations for systemic change – reducing corporate power and ensuring resources for the much-needed just transformation.” –":1,"#Akinbode Oluwafemi Executive Director -Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA)":1,"#“The launch of the liability roadmap is timely. It presents an opportunity and pathway that African governments must seize to finally hold polluting industries accountable for the environmental and human rights abuses they have caused in communities across Africa and the world over.” –":1,"#Sriram Madhusoodanan, U.S. climate campaign director, Corporate Accountability":1,"#“The liability roadmap is about more than lawsuits and courtrooms. This is about making Big Polluters pay for the havoc they’ve wreaked by fueling the climate crisis and about forcing them to end their abuses. This is about making Big Polluters pay for causing decades of suffering and destruction in communities on the global frontlines of the climate crisis, with no end in sight. The roadmap will carry us further down the road where Big Polluters are forced to put people’s well-being and the well-being of the Earth and its ecosystems above expansion, extraction, and profit making.” –":1,"#– Tom Goldtooth, Indigenous Environmental Network.":1,"#“When big polluters pollute big they not only exacerbate catastrophic climate change, the commit crimes. Arson and murder are crimes. Not only do indigenous communities directly suffer direct, more frequent and more destructive climate events with the pollution of fossil fuel energy, the production, infrastructure and refining of fossil fuel kill people and subject them to chronic debilitating illnesses and destroy our biodiversity, food security and ways of life. As local jurisdictions are usually responsible for prosecuting crime, they should be encouraged to go after these killers of all forms of life.”":1,"#Fossil fuel and other polluting industry liability is a growing area of focus for climate experts, academics and governments alike as the industry’s long history of denial and the link between industry emissions and climate impacts becomes more evidenced. From U.S. states to Vanuatu to Peru, elected officials and people are exploring holding polluters like the fossil fuel industry liable for its long history of deceit and environmental destruction.":1,"#– Souparna Lahiri, Climate campaigner and advisor, Global Forest Coalition":1,"#A bottom-up global Peoples’ Movement demanding liability from the rogue corporations and climate denier governments would be a Peoples Pathway that continues to demand climate justice recognising and respecting equity, gender equality and the rights of the Indigenous Peoples, Local Communities, Peasants, Fisherfolks and Workers,”":1,"#– Astrud Beringer, FIAN International":1,"#is clear, the prevailing agribusiness industry is one of the major drivers of climate change and eco-destruction. It is heavily reliant on fossil fuels, extractivism, agrochemicals, deforestation, and land-use changes. More importantly, this harmful industry is directly affecting the enjoyment of a number of human rights – in particular the human right to adequate food and nutrition. Big polluters have to be held liable for their ‘dirty’ agribusiness in order to restore essential eco-system services, heal the planet and protect present and future generations’ rights.”":1,"#Scientific evidence":1,"#in a procedural matter that could not only clear the way for more cities and states to seek industry accountability, it could even revive cases that had been previously dismissed at the U.S. federal level.":1,"#a federal court ruled against the fossil fuel industry":1,"#for its role in the crisis harming his livelihood. And, in the United States this year,":1,"#a farmer is suing a German utility":1,"#Liability has taken on new importance amid the COVID-19 pandemic and unprecedented climate disasters. Many Big Polluters are in large part responsible for the multi-faceted crises people are facing and are still attempting to profit from fueling it – demanding government bailouts and rolling out PR schemes that position themselves as solutions.":1,"#In Peru,":1,"#judgement in the U.S. Supreme Court in 2019.":1,"#precedent-setting":1,"#, the expansion of Heathrow Airport was successfully stopped after civil society argued it was a violation of the UK government’s Paris Agreement commitments. Indian fisherman challenging the International Finance Corporation (IFC) secured a":1,"#Earlier this year":1,"#has concluded that the fossil fuel industry can be held legally responsible for their role in climate change.":1,"#The Philippines’ commission on human rights":1,"#For example,":1,"#, elected officials and people are exploring holding polluters like the fossil fuel industry liable for its long history of deceit and environmental destruction.":1,"#Last September, international climate organizations launched a global call for Big Polluter liability at the UN Secretary General’s Climate Action Summit in New York City. And at COP25 in Madrid, the demands of hundreds of thousands of people to make Big Polluters pay were delivered to government delegates. Organizations and signatories echoing this call hail from around 70 countries including Bolivia, The Philippines, and Nigeria.":1,"#U.S. states":1,"#between industry emissions and climate impacts becomes more evidenced. From":1,"#the link":1,"#of denial and":1,"#long history":1,"#for climate experts, academics and governments alike as the industry’s":1,"#growing area of focus":1,"#Fossil fuel and other polluting industry liability is a":1,"#and rolling out PR schemes that position themselves as solutions.":1,"#government bailouts":1,"#This roadmap, released just one week before UN climate week and days after Portuguese young people announced they’re suing 33 countries over inaction on climate change, is the next stage in the global campaign to Make Big Polluters Pay.":1,"#Liability has taken on new importance amid the COVID-19 pandemic and unprecedented climate disasters. Many Big Polluters are in large part responsible for the multi-faceted crises people are facing and are still attempting to profit from fueling it – demanding":1,"#in New York City. And at COP25 in Madrid, the demands of hundreds of thousands of people to make Big Polluters pay were delivered to government delegates. Organizations and signatories echoing this call hail from around 70 countries including Bolivia, The Philippines, and Nigeria.":1,"#launched a global call for Big Polluter liability at the UN Secretary General’s Climate Action Summit":1,"#Last September, international climate organizations":1,"#”: a first-of-its-kind tool outlining how local to global decision-makers, including government officials, can hold polluting industries liable for the climate damage they knowingly cause, while unlocking climate finance needed to address the climate crisis and implement solutions.":1,"#– Today, a global coalition released a “":1,"#WORLDWIDE":1,"#This is an opportunity to build back better and protect all our futures by investing in green economies. Covid-19 must not be used as a cover for polluters and governments to continue their disastrous path towards catastrophic global warming.” – Harjeet Singh, Global Lead on climate change for ActionAid":1,"#WORLDWIDE – Today, a global coalition released a “liability roadmap”: a first-of-its-kind tool outlining how local to global decision-makers, including government officials, can hold polluting industries liable for the climate damage they knowingly cause, while unlocking climate finance needed to address the climate crisis and implement solutions.":1,"#“El poder corporativo no conoce límites, desde capturar las políticas públicas a nivel nacional, influenciar y entorpecer las negociaciones multilaterales del clima a impulsar falsas soluciones que además de exacerbar la crisis climática, incrementan únicamente sus riquezas. La avaricia de unos pocos está condenando al resto del mundo a una catástrofe ambiental, social y económica. Muchos ya han muerto a causa de este modelo económico que despoja, destruye y mata. Tenemos que crear vías de movilización y esperanza para cambiar la balanza a favor de los pueblos más vulnerables. El Mapa de Responsabilidad Legal es una valiosa herramienta que pretende ser un aporte para que los estados respondan a los pueblos, no al interés corporativo.” – Martin Vilela, Responsable de Área, justicia climática e incidencia internacional. Plataforma Boliviana frente al Cambio Climático":1,"#“The same people at the front line of the health, food and economic crises are the same people at the front line of the climate crisis. Transnational corporations have benefited from a broken system based in structural violence that repeatedly harms Black, Indigenous, peasant, and local communities. These systems of oppression only benefit corporations and the elites of the world. But, there is not a planet B. As peoples rise against oppression and racism, we must also rise against Big Polluters that are destroying our lives, our present, our future. This tool will bring us one step closer to making Big Polluters pay and thus, closer to justice.” – Nathalie Regifo Alvarez, Latin America Climate Campaign Director, Corporate Accountability":1,"#“Big Polluters have wrecked our climate, ecosystems, lives and livelihoods, for too long. They manage to abdicate any responsibility, and only benefit from the damage they cause, which falls disproportionately on Global South communities, Indigenous Peoples, people of colour, women, workers, farmers, peasants and low-income communities. The Liability Roadmap is a tool we can use to call to account those who have knowingly caused the climate crisis, and make them pay. Not only that, it lays the foundations for systemic change – reducing corporate power and ensuring resources for the much-needed just transformation.” –Sara Shaw, Climate Justice & Energy Program Coordinator, Friends of the Earth International":1,"#“The launch of the liability roadmap is timely. It presents an opportunity and pathway that African governments must seize to finally hold polluting industries accountable for the environmental and human rights abuses they have caused in communities across Africa and the world over.” – Akinbode Oluwafemi Executive Director -Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA)":1,"#“The liability roadmap is about more than lawsuits and courtrooms. This is about making Big Polluters pay for the havoc they’ve wreaked by fueling the climate crisis and about forcing them to end their abuses. This is about making Big Polluters pay for causing decades of suffering and destruction in communities on the global frontlines of the climate crisis, with no end in sight. The roadmap will carry us further down the road where Big Polluters are forced to put people’s well-being and the well-being of the Earth and its ecosystems above expansion, extraction, and profit making.” – Sriram Madhusoodanan, U.S. climate campaign director, Corporate Accountability":1,"#“When big polluters pollute big they not only exacerbate catastrophic climate change, the commit crimes. Arson and murder are crimes. Not only do indigenous communities directly suffer direct, more frequent and more destructive climate events with the pollution of fossil fuel energy, the production, infrastructure and refining of fossil fuel kill people and subject them to chronic debilitating illnesses and destroy our biodiversity, food security and ways of life. As local jurisdictions are usually responsible for prosecuting crime, they should be encouraged to go after these killers of all forms of life.” – Tom Goldtooth, Indigenous Environmental Network. ":1,"#A bottom-up global Peoples’ Movement demanding liability from the rogue corporations and climate denier governments would be a Peoples Pathway that continues to demand climate justice recognising and respecting equity, gender equality and the rights of the Indigenous Peoples, Local Communities, Peasants, Fisherfolks and Workers,” – Souparna Lahiri, Climate campaigner and advisor, Global Forest Coalition":1,"#“The facade of promoting Nature based Solutions, Net Zero and offsetting is a clear pointer that the polluting industries continue to subvert their immediate obligation to reduce emissions. The New Normal is besieged with massive bail outs to the fossil fuel and aviation industries with the agri-business surviving merrily on perverse subsidies; denying the fact they are liable for the climate crisis and rising GHG emissions, deforestation, destruction of livelihoods and food security of billions.":1,"#“Scientific evidence is clear, the prevailing agribusiness industry is one of the major drivers of climate change and eco-destruction. It is heavily reliant on fossil fuels, extractivism, agrochemicals, deforestation, and land-use changes. More importantly, this harmful industry is directly affecting the enjoyment of a number of human rights – in particular the human right to adequate food and nutrition. Big polluters have to be held liable for their ‘dirty’ agribusiness in order to restore essential eco-system services, heal the planet and protect present and future generations’ rights.” – Astrud Beringer, FIAN International":1,"#RELEASE: Global coalition releases liability “roadmap” for governments to Make Big Polluters Pay":1,"#We can not allow Big Polluters to to poison our change for a livable planet. It's time for leaders at COP29 to deliver real climate action.":1,"#Statement: Who’s really running down the clock at COP29 - Corporate Accountability":1,"#Statement: Who’s really running down the clock at COP29":1,"#November 21, 2024":1,"#People Power Hour":1,"#del Glosario de Justicia Climática":1,"#Las Máscaras de la Economía Verde":1,"#CENSAT":1,"#Retiring Ronald McDonald, the beloved clown, is critical for protecting children’s and their families from the fast food corporation.":1,"#Clowning around with Kid's Health: A call to Retire Ronald":1,"#The public health community demands McDonald's retire Ronald McDonald.":1,"#This stunning report reveals, the character is the product of a well-orchestrated and shrewd marketing strategy by America’s king of fast food. By connecting its corporate image to a fun-loving clown, McDonald’s gains a tremendous amount of positive public relations. And what better way to bypass parents and market directly to children than through a clown – the icon of circuses and children’s parties.":1,"#Released in May 2010 on the eve of the launch of the Retire Ronald effort, Clowning with kids’ health: The case for Ronald McDonald’s retirement draws on a mountain of evidence – including findings from a nationwide poll commissioned by Corporate Accountability – to make the case that it is time for the most well-recognized American marketing icon to be retired. Retiring Ronald McDonald and ending McDonald’s predatory marketing of unhealthy food to children can protect the health of a generation of children.":1,"#Clowning with kid’s health: A case for Ronald McDonald’s retirement":1,"#18hours ago":1,"#medidas decisivas sobre el cambio climático":1,"#liability roadmap":1,"#Anita Carter - Corporate Accountability":1,"#People raise their fist in the air at a protest.":1,"#In addition, Wells Fargo has consistently shown that it has no reservations about targeting its Black patrons with predatory schemes. Their discriminatory practices against Black homebuyers have failed to shift, prompting the city government of New York City to divest from opening any new accounts with Wells Fargo in April 2022. This is noteworthy given that in the midst of the wave of racial reckoning that swept the nation in the summer of 2020, Wells Fargo CEO and President Charlie W. Scharf issued 5 major commitments in the realms of representation, compensation, diversity role reporting, education session and anti-racism manager training. From doubling black leadership, to establishing positions to drive diversity and inclusion, it seemed to be an ambitious plan. But with Wells Fargo still facing discrimintation lawsuits and government divestments in 2021 and 2022, these statements have proved to be nothing more than an attempt to save face in the eyes of the public. It is worth noting that the pledges from Scharf and Wells Fargo were made on already shaky grounds; Scharf chalked up the scarcity of Black employees at the company to “a very limited pool of Black talent to recruit from” in a virtual meeting, followed by a June 2020 company-wide memo. This statement drew criticism from U.S. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund President Sherrilyn Ifill, among others, but more importantly, it drew attention to Wells Fargo’s dismal record in the Black community.":1,"#In the same realm, Wells Fargo has a history of being among the top sponsors, funders and board members for police foundations of multiple major cities, including sponsoring police foundations in Charlotte, Sacramento, and Seattle, Atlanta and Charlotte. Police foundations are private organizations dedicated to raising money for police departments as well as supplying them with weaponry and surveillance technology. Their private status enables these foundations to add millions of dollars to police budgets with very little public oversight or approval. Police foundations have been known to supply departments with K-9s and police horses, both used as a means to harm black people and protestors. The surveillance technology these foundations provide to police departments are highly controversial and disproportionately “tested and targeted in Black, Brown and Indigneous communities”. In response to the calls to defund the police that arose in the general public during Summer 2020, the police foundations for NYC, Washington D.C, Seattle and Philadelphia removed information on their websites regarding partner organizations and board members. A shameful act intended to limit the public’s knowledge and to protect donating corporations, like Wells Fargo, from public outrage. In this year of 2022, a senior leader from Wells Fargo is listed on the Atlanta Police Foundations’ Board of Trustees, giving ample reason to believe that their efforts to fund state-sanctioned violence against Black Americans isn’t stopping anytime soon.":1,"#What’s the significance of this? Core Civic and GEO Group are corporations which profit from and perpetuate the imprisonment and modern day enslavement of Black Americans. In 2019, Wells Fargo succumbed to the mounting public pressure of prison divestment campaigns by stating it was exiting the credit agreement with Core Civic and phasing out of its partnership with GEO Group. This was a significant win for the organizers involved with these campaigns. But as of December 2021, Wells Fargo still held over a hundred thousand shares total in these private prison companies.":1,"#A federal investigation found that from 2004 to 2009, Wells Fargo harmed Black and Hispanic communities through engaging in discriminatory lending practices against 30,000 Black and Hispanic borrowers. This ultimately resulted in Wells Fargo paying over $175 million in a 2011 settlement with the United States Justice Department. But the same year of their discrimination settlement, Wells Fargo became the second largest investor in GEO Group, a leading private prison corporation, with 4.3 million shares in the company. Just one year later, Wells Fargo was named as the issuing lender on a $785 million line of credit for CCA, another leading private prison corporation presently known as Core Civic, and was also named as the trustee for a $300 million GEO Group bond. Not only did Wells Fargo learn nothing from its discriminatory lending lawsuit, it proceeded to bankroll the two leading corporations perpetuating modern-day enslavement of Black Americans through the private prison system. The chart featured in a report by In the Public Interest outlines the history between these private prison operators and Wells Fargo in more detail.":1,"#Atlanta’s Fourth National Bank was founded by former Mayor of Atlanta, James English, through the profits he generated from his company, the Chattahoochee Brick Company. By 1897, English leased at least 1,206 Black convicts in Georgia to labor for his businesses, including the Chattahoochee Brick Company. The conditions were abysmal, with historian Douglas Blackmon describing the company as a “death camp” for the majority Black convicts. When Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia, it made no apology for how Wachovia generated its wealth, in part, through slavery or convict labor. The past of Wachovia and Wells Fargo inform their present day practices, which build on this history of discrimination and harm through modern channels.":1,"#While Wells Fargo was founded in 1852, it acquired Wachovia in 2008, thus intertwining itself with a very dark history. Wachovia was founded in 1879, descended from the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company, the Bank of Charleston and Atlanta’s Fourth National Bank. All of these companies had deep ties to the mistreatment of black people. As part of their banking practices, the Georgia Railroad and Banking Company accepted slaves as collateral on mortaged properties or loans. They owned at least 162 slaves during their time. The Bank of Charleston had similar practices, accepting minimum 529 slaves as collateral for loans and mortagaged properties. When slaveowners defaulted on their payments, the Bank would seize ownership of some slaves.":1,"#Each June, Black Americans commemorate the emancipation of enslaved people on Juneteenth. On the 19th of June in 1865, federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas to free the last slaves, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed. This holiday holds deep significance for Black Americans as a celebration of liberation. In the years following emancipation, the so-called “owners” of captive slaves were compensated for their loss. Meanwhile, those whose forced labor built the wealth of this nation were never repaid and were, in fact, systemically harmed by those who profited in the wake of emancipation. The effects of this failure to redistribute wealth are felt to this day and have contributed greatly to current racial inequities. It’s time for those who profited from the suffering of black people to pay reparations, including Wells Fargo.":1,"#Check out a visual representation of the racist history of Wells Fargo, along with the actions organizers are taking to demand reparations, in the Roadmap to Reparations, a beautiful timeline illustrated by Paloma Rae.":1,"#But while Wells Fargo paying reparations will help mitigate some of the harm done, the systems that allowed these actions to unfold must also change. Systemic harms also require systemic solutions, which is why Corporate Accountability supports H.R.40, the congressional bill to develop and implement a comprehensive study focused on “the effects of slavery…and recommend appropriate remedies including reparations”. Action at the national level is necessary to repair the historic crime of kidnapping and slavery, and the ongoing exploitation of Black Americans from the forced labor of the convict leasing and prison systems, and discriminatory mortgage lending policies. Please join us and our allies at the Institute of the Black World 21st Century in supporting H.R. 40 by calling on your congressional representatives to cosponsor this bill today! You can learn more about H.R.40 on the Congress website.":1,"#Given all their wrongdoings, the only option is for Wells Fargo to use their billions of dollars to make restitution to all the Black people they exploited to become the financial powerhouse they are and all the Black lives they continue to profit off of to maintain their standing. There are incredible organizers applying pressure for Wells Fargo to resolve their past grievances and others who work on helping the average consumer find alternative banking methods.":1,"#The superficial nature of Wells Fargo’s PR response was revealed early last year when they asked shareholders to vote no on racial equity resolutions: “In recent days, they [Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JP Morgan Chase] have all officially opposed shareholder groups’ calls for them to conduct and publicize racial-equity audits and other changes, saying they are already doing enough to address equity issues” . Wells Fargo’s actions as of late, with its relationship with the Black community hanging on a tightrope, have only exacerbated the problem. A lawsuit filed on March 18 in a San Francisco federal court, argues that Wells Fargo’s practices push Black homeowners into foreclosure, which Bloomberg referred to as a modern form of redlining. Bloomberg published an article only a week earlier detailing how Wells Fargo, the largest bank mortgage lender in the country, accepted less than half of Black mortgage refinancing applicants in 2020. Seventy-two percent of White refinancing applicants were approved, compared to just forty-seven percent of Black applicants, per Bloomberg’s analysis and as visualized below. Most recently, Wells Fargo was accused of conducting “fake interviews” of diverse candidates for positions that were already filled, in a bid to boost diversity efforts on paper. Wells Fargo’s overtly discriminatory practices are a blatant indication that its claims of having a “watershed moment” during the height of Black Lives Matter protests was a lie. Simply put, since its acquisition of Wachovia, Wells Fargo continues to utilize its financial power to uphold the institutions that directly threaten the wellbeing of Black Americans, in a bid to prioritize its own financial gain.":1,"#primer tratado de responsabilidad empresarial y salud pública del mundo":1,"#Más sobre la campaña de fórmula infantil.":1,"#campaña de alimentos":1,"#Banco Mundial a deshacerse de una de las corporaciones de agua más grandes del mundo":1,"#Más sobre nuestra campaña de tabaco":1,"#¡La gente y el planeta!":1,"#Oops! You have 2 errors.":1,"#The Food and Agriculture Corporate Transparency (FACT) Index is a tracking tool designed to analyze and monitor the political activities of major food corporations. The findings expose deficiencies in food industry disclosures and disconnects between corporations’ political spending and their stated values and policy positions.":1,"#The index was created by Feed the Truth in collaboration with Corporate Accountability and other partners.":1,"#Apoye a los activistas africanos y
proteger el derecho humano al agua":1,"#Sonya Massey should still be alive":1,"#July 29, 2024":1,"#Los hallazgos del reporte publicados como parte de las actividades del Día Mundial Sin Tabaco, complementan un nuevo informe de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) que examina las estrategias más amplias de la industria tabacalera para dirigirse a la juventud y promover su adicción.":1,"#“PMI quiere limpiar su imagen, pero está utilizando los mismos trucos sucios para enganchar a la juventud con sus productos letales. No hay razón para promocionar los cigarrillos Marlboro en un festival orientado a los jóvenes si su objetivo declarado es hacer que los fumadores adultos opten por otros productos de tabaco y nicotina,” dijo Dorado, haciendo eco de las declaraciones realizadas durante la junta de accionistas de PMI en mayo.":1,"#Los autores del informe instan a los gobiernos de Colombia y a otros países latinoamericanos a monitorear y hacer cumplir cabalmente las leyes en materia PPP existentes, y a implementar regulaciones en línea con el Tratado Global de Control de Tabaco (CMCT). También instan a los organizadores del festival a que abandonen a PMI como patrocinador. Y hacen un categórico llamado a PMI para que deje de usar sus malintencionadas estrategias de PPP de productos de tabaco y nicotina, así como a que respeten y cumplan rigurosamente todas las disposiciones del CMCT en todos los países en que opera.":1,"#El estudio de caso se centra en Colombia, donde la gigante tabacalera Philip Morris International (PMI) al menos desde los últimos tres años patrocina el festival de música Estéreo Picnic (FEP), a pesar de la prohibición total que existe alrededor de todas las formas de publicidad, promoción y patrocinio (PPP) de productos de tabaco. El FEP es uno de los eventos más populares y más concurridos de América Latina, especialmente entre la juventud.":1,"#Lo anterior se suma a otras investigaciones que documentan la mal intencionada publicidad de PMI en Colombia, incluyendo la exhibición de cigarrillos a la altura de la vista de las/os niñas/os.":1,"#Bogotá, Colombia – A medida que las tasas de consumo de productos de tabaco y nicotina entre la juventud continúan disparándose, un nuevo análisis de Corporate Accountability arroja luces sobre cómo la industria tabacalera se dirige a este grupo de especial protección a través de eventos de cultura pop en el Sur Global, incluso en países con fuertes medidas de control de tabaco.":1,"#Nota de prensa: Colombia prohíbe la promoción de tabaco. Philip Morris International sigue patrocinando su mayor festival de música. - Corporate Accountability":1,"#“El Festival Estéreo Picnic es un creador de tendencias entre la juventud, y Philip Morris está tratando de marcar la tendencia de fumar para poder seguir obteniendo ganancias a medida que sus consumidores continúan falleciendo. El hecho de que esta industria centre sus tácticas de marketing en la juventud que asiste al festival no sólo es moralmente reprochable, sino que también plantea dudas sobre la legalidad del patrocinio,” dijo Daniel Dorado, Director de la Campaña de Control de Tabaco de Corporate Accountability y co-autor del informe.":1,"#Hoja de Ruta de Responsabilidad":1,"#Demandas Populares por la Justicia Climática":1,"#Centro de Recursos COP9 y MOP2: - Corporate Accountability":1,"#ES: Bulletin 2: November 2021, Centro Cooperación Internacional de Control de Tobaco (CCICT), Uruguay":1,"#Maximizando la transparencia y la responsabilidad jurídica de la industria tabacalera Haga clic aquí para inglés. Haga clic aquí para francés. Bienvenido al Centro de Recursos de Corporate Accountability para las próximas reuniones del tratado global sobre el control del tabaco en las que participan las delegaciones de las Partes, los representantes de las organizaciones ...":1,"#Set de herramientas de responsabilidad jurídica del artículo 19 del CMCT de la OMS.":1,"#2020-2021 Índice de interferencia de la industria tabacalera en América Latina.":1,"#Avanzar en el desarrollo del Artículo 19 con respecto a la responsabilidad jurídica, permite a las Partes responsabilizar legalmente a la industria tabacalera por sus abusos y trabajar en todas las medidas del CMCT de la OMS que ayudan a salvar vidas. Esto tiene el potencial de que los gobiernos recuperen los costos económicos que han invertido en los tratamientos de las enfermedades relacionadas con los productos de la industria del tabaco; y, de utilizar sus sistemas legales para garantizar su derecho a hacerlo.":1,"#Después de las negociaciones, será importante que las Partes, la Mesa, la Secretaría, y los observadores evalúen los puntos fuertes y los desafíos del proceso contemplado en las decisiones de “maximización de la transparencia” y desarrollen los ajustes necesarios para futuras reuniones del tratado.":1,"#También, debido al fuerte precedente que sientan estas decisiones, más de 120 organizaciones de salud pública alrededor del mundo se han reunido para instar a las Partes del CMCT de la OMS a implementar plenamente estas decisiones antes de las COP9/ MOP2. Descargue, tanto la carta a las Partes, como la lista de firmantes, aquí.":1,"#Reuters expone una campaña encubierta de las grandes tabacaleras para socavar el CMCT de la OMS.":1,"#Durante mucho tiempo la industria tabacalera ha utilizado amenazas legales para intimidar a los gobiernos con el fin de que renuncien a la aplicación de las medidas más audaces del tratado. Es momento de trasladar los impactos negativos y letales del consumo de los productos de tabaco a la industria, obligarla a respetar el Estado de derecho y hacerla pagar por los daños que han ocasionado sus productos.":1,"#Mapa de litigios exitosos contra la industria del tabaco alrededor del mundo":1,"#Durante la COP9 y MOP2: monitoreando y desafiando la interferencia":1,"#Texto completo de la decisión del Artículo 19, incluyendo el mandato de la Secretaría.":1,"#2020-2021 Índice global de interferencia de la industria tabacalera":1,"#Antes de la COP9 y la MOP2: protección contra la interferencia de la industria":1,"#Bienvenido al Centro de Recursos de Corporate Accountability para las próximas reuniones del tratado global sobre el control del tabaco en las que participan las delegaciones de las Partes, los representantes de las organizaciones que fungen como observadoras y el público en general.":1,"#Boletín FCA, COP7: “La industria tabacalera y los grupos fachada aumentan su propaganda para la COP7”.":1,"#Después de la COP9 & la MOP2: avanzar en la lucha para que la industria asuma su responsabilidad jurídica":1,"#En la COP8 y la MOP1 las Partes decidieron aumentar la transparencia en las negociaciones y proteger el tratado de la injerencia de la industria tabacalera. Esto se realizó al exigir a las organizaciones observadoras, los medios de comunicación y el público en general que presentaran formularios de declaración de intereses. Las Partes decidieron, además, pedir a las delegaciones gubernamentales cuando designen a sus representantes declaren que han observado el artículo 5.3 del CMCT de la OMS y sus Directrices de aplicación.":1,"#Haga clic aquí para francés.":1,"#Más sobre los intentos de la industria para infiltrarse en las reuniones del CMCT de la OMS haciéndose pasar por miembros del público o de los medios de comunicación.":1,"#Texto completo decisiones “maximización de la transparencia”: COP8 y MOP1. (Desplácese hasta los anexos 5, 6 o 7 para obtener el formulario de declaración de intereses para los observadores, los medios de comunicación y el público en general).":1,"#Además, la Secretaría tiene el mandato de las COP anteriores, con respecto a crear herramientas y recursos para apoyar a las Partes con la implementación el Artículo 19 del CMCT de la OMS que habla sobre la “responsabilidad”, que proporciona otra poderosa vía para promover que la industria tabacalera se haga responsable jurídicamente por los daños ocasionados por el consumo de sus productos y por sus actuaciones frente a la ley. Las Partes pueden apoyar este mandato consiguiendo asignaciones presupuestales en el COP9 y asegurando que se mantengan en la agenda de la COP10.":1,"#Nueva investigación del esquema de pagos cuestionables de British American Tobacco (BAT) en 10 países africanos":1,"#Del mismo modo en 2017, Reuters publicó un reportaje detallado en el que se exponen algunas de las tácticas de la industria tabacalera en la COP7. (Estas revelaciones han ayudado a que las Partes tomaran medidas decisivas a través de promover la “maximización de la transparencia” en las decisiones en la COP8 y MOP1). Todos los asistentes a las negociaciones –Partes, observadores, medios de comunicación y público en general—pueden conocer mejor las tácticas que utilizó esta industria al consultar el reportaje aquí.":1,"#Pueden encontrar el texto completo de las decisiones de “maximización de la transparencia”, aquí: COP8 y MOP1.":1,"#Para más información acerca de la importancia y la naturaleza innovadora de las decisiones de “maximización de la transparencia, descargue nuestra guía de una página aquí.":1,"#Las Partes, la Secretaría, y los expertos han creado una herramienta práctica en línea o “toolkit” que proporciona orientación a las Partes para implementar el Artículo 19. Se insta a las Partes a seguir apoyando a la Secretaría en el cumplimiento de su mandato de las anteriores COP con respecto a crear herramientas y recursos para el desarrollo del Artículo 19, y asegurarse de que se encuentre en la agenda de la COP10.":1,"#Recursos disponibles":1,"#Durante la pandemia detonada por la COVID-19, la interferencia de la industria tabacalera en las políticas de salud pública alrededor del mundo ha persistido. Para obtener más información, consulte: el índice Global de Interferencia de la Industria Tabacalera 2020; así así como el Índice Regional de Interferencia de la Industria Tabacalera en América Latina 2020.":1,"#De hecho, una investigación publicada recientemente revela cómo British American Tobacco (BAT) se involucró en un esquema sistemático de pagos cuestionables en 10 países africanos, con el aparente objetivo de interferir en las delegaciones del CMCT de la OMS y estancar el progreso en la implementación del tratado.":1,"#Las Partes pueden encontrar un ejemplo de formulario de declaración de intereses aquí, en caso de que decidan utilizar este formato. (Descargue el documento y desplácese hasta la página 6). Por favor, considere que el texto de la decisión final (anexos 5, 6 y 7) incluye los formularios para los observadores, los medios de comunicación y el público.":1,"#Aquí encontrarán una gran variedad de recursos sobre temas relacionados con la Novena Conferencia de las Partes (COP9) del Convenio Marco para el Control del Tabaco de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (CMCT de la OMS), que tendrá lugar del 8 al 13 de noviembre de 2021; y la Segunda Reunión de las Partes (MOP2) del Protocolo para la eliminación del Comercio Ilícito de Productos de Tabaco (El Protocolo), que se llevará a cabo del 15 al 18 de noviembre de 2021.":1,"#Control del tabaco: “La ITGA de la industria tabacalera lucha contra la aplicación del CMCT en las negociaciones con Uruguay”.":1,"#Guía para las Partes sobre las decisiones de “maximizar la transparencia”.":1,"#Este año, la COP9 y la MOP2 se realizarán virtualmente, lo que supone nuevos retos para las delegaciones de las Partes y una nueva oportunidad para que la industria tabacalera interfiera. De acuerdo con el historial de las grandes tabacaleras de intentar socavar el CMCT de la OMS y El Protocolo, además de sus intentos actuales y continuos por tener injerencia en las política públicas de control de tabaco, que podrían salvar vidas en todo el mundo. Es fundamental que las Partes tomen todas las medidas necesarias para proteger el tratado –incluyendo la presentación de sus declaraciones lo antes posible–.":1,"#La industria tabacalera tiene un gran y bien documentado historial de cómo ha sido su injerencia en las políticas de salud pública alrededor del mundo para conservar sus beneficios –incluida la infiltración en las reuniones del CMCT de la OMS interfiriendo con las delegaciones y haciéndose pasar por miembros del público o de los medios de comunicación.":1,"#Centro de Recursos COP9 y MOP2:":1,"#Para más información o apoyo, por favor, escriba a TobaccoCampaign@CorporateAccountability.org.":1,"#ES: Bulletin 1, October 2021, Centro Cooperación Internacional de Control de Tobaco (CCICT), Uruguay":1,"#Estas reuniones ofrecen una oportunidad crucial para reforzar el control del tabaco a nivel mundial en el contexto de la pandemia provocada por la COVID-19 y para detener los continuos intentos que realiza la industria tabacalera para interferir, debilitar y retrasar las medidas que se promueven con el CMCT de la OMS, con el fin de salvar vidas.":1,"#Haga clic aquí para inglés.":1,"#Carta de organizaciones de la sociedad civil en apoyo a la implementación de las decisiones de “maximización la transparencia”.":1,"#Mientras tanto, los gobiernos, a todos los niveles, pueden utilizar la herramienta práctica en línea o “toolkit” y otros recursos para empezar a implementar el Artículo 19 y hacer que la industria tabacalera asuma su responsabilidad jurídica a nivel global. De hecho, los gobiernos alrededor del mundo han emprendido litigios, con éxito, contra la industria tabacalera, y muchos más pueden hacerlo. Si está interesado en promover la responsabilidad jurídica en su país y necesita apoyo, póngase en contacto con Art19Liability@CorporateAccountability.org":1,"#Además, las Partes deberían aprovechar el impulso de la COP8 para seguir avanzando en el Artículo 19, una medida visionaria del CMCT de la OMS que señala un importante camino a seguir para que la industria asuma su responsabilidad jurídica.":1,"#Corporate Accountability y nuestros aliados estarán monitoreando los intentos que realice la industria tabacalera por intervenir durante las negociaciones que se realicen en la COP9 y la MOP2. Y estarán atentos en caso de advertir que existe alguna posibilidad de injerencia antes o durante estas reuniones. Si conoce o presencia algún intento de la industria tabacalera por intervenir antes o durante estas reuniones, por favor, escriba a COP9@CorporateAccountability.org así como a la Secretaría del CMCT de la OMS.":1,"#Por supuesto que estas estrategias de injerencia no son nuevas. Lea más sobre el uso de los grupos de fachada por parte de las grandes tabacaleras utilizados durante las reuniones del CMCT de la OMS.":1,"#Se alienta a todas las delegaciones a presentar estas declaraciones al momento de realizar el proceso de registro.":1,"#“Responsabilidad jurídica de la industria tabacalera en la época de la COVID-19”.":1},"version":5560}]