Sustainable MBA

The following are some of the current business programs explicitly offering MBA degrees in sustainability.

Beyond Grey Pinstripes, a biennial ranking and program survey, published by the Aspen Institute is based on the integration of social, environmental, and ethical stewardship into university curriculum and faculty research.

The guide seeks to provide information about what graduate programs offer their students within the realm of corporate responsibility and sustainability.

[10] Many MBA programs which offer sustainability degrees or concentrations also appear in general business school rankings.

U.S. News & World Report, Business Week, Financial Times, The Economist, and The Wall Street Journal all publish rankings of selected MBA programs.

While the methodologies of each differ, most weight ranks heavily by employment and salary statistics, standardized test scores, and surveys of corporate recruiters.

The debate must then turn to the question of what laws may properly be placed on corporate behavior to prevent fraud and other forms of malfeasance, and to ensure open and free competition, with what enforcement mechanisms.

Also, whether corporate lobbying for subsidies and other legally-mandated advantages is fair, given that it is economically inefficient and indeed harmful.

This question turns in part on the honesty and effectiveness of governments, where results are decidedly mixed.