An Investor's Guide to Ethical Funds
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This volume is a compendium of chapters written by editor John Hancock and other highly regarded experts. Their clear, comprehensive book appears to be targeted to fund managers and corporate investor relations officers, more than to average green-minded investors. Don't expect passionate jeremiads on the health of Mother Earth. Indeed, the authors point to a growing scientific consensus that nuclear power is the safest way to wean the world from fossil fuels, and they insist that investments must generate profits as well as good will. This sound, useful volume will help educate investors regarding the growing significance of the SRI movement. getAbstract.com recommends it strongly, in part thanks to its expansive appendices detailing ethical policies, standards, definitions and performance. Some years ago, a Sesame Street social philosopher named Kermit the Frog observed, "It's not easy being green." That may still be true, but - as this book points out - it is getting a lot more profitable.
Summary
About the Author
An award-winning financial reporter, "consultant editor" John Hancock has more than 20 years experience reporting on financial topics. Hancock edits Investing in Corporate Social Responsibility and Ethical Money. He won the Ethical Investment Journalist of the Year award in 1999. Other experts who contributed chapters include Mark Campanale, head of SRI business development at Henderson Global Investors; Lee Coates, founder of the Ethical Investors Group of independent financial advisers; Julia Dreblow, SRI Manager, Friends Provident Life and Pensions, Ltd; and Helen Harrison, retail investment officer for the U.K. Social Investment Forum.
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