Report The Conference Board – Committee for Economic Development (CED)

The 2024 Election: Rebuilding Trust

This CED report outlines practical steps to strengthen public confidence in U.S. elections ahead of 2024, focusing on voter access, election administration, cybersecurity, and countering mis- and disinformation—including AI-driven threats. It highlights how businesses can serve as trusted messengers and system-supporting partners, helping reinforce institutional integrity while managing political, operational, and reputational risk.

 

Related Topics to Check Out:

Political Risk (A) – The report underscores how contested elections, mis/disinformation, and low trust create systemic instability that directly affects business continuity and strategic planning. 

Reputational Risks (A) – Companies engaging around elections face amplified scrutiny; inconsistent or misleading information can erode stakeholder trust and corporate credibility. 

Corporate Communications (B) – CED highlights the role companies play in delivering accurate, nonpartisan, trusted election information to employees and communities. 

Stakeholder Engagement (B) – The report encourages collaboration with election officials, civic intermediaries, and local institutions to reinforce administrative capacity and public trust.

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ReportAccountAbility, UN Global Compact

This guide provides a framework for companies and NGO's to use to determine whether their lobbying practices are responsible.

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BookBerrett Koehler

The book opens by establishing the minimum expectation that businesses support the right rules of the game—those rewarding long-term value creation rather than destruction—and shows how companies can live their values through cross-sector collaboration, eco-efficiency, and strategies advancing prosperity, planet, and people, supported by real-world cases.

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BookHarvard University Press

Mancur Olson’s classic work explains why individuals often fail to organize effectively around shared interests, even when collective action would benefit all. His “free rider” problem and distinction between small and large groups reshape understanding of labor unions, corporations, and political coalitions. Olson’s framework underlies modern theories of governance, lobbying, and institutional design—key foundations for Corporate Political Responsibility. 

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ArticleMIT Sloan

Presents a framework for when companies should present forceful or tempered political positions based on their publicly stated values and materiality.

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Website

The Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE) listing standards include expectations that companies will take responsibility for long-term decision-making across strategy, governance, executive compensation, stakeholder engagement, and investor relations. These standards are designed to help businesses build sustainable value over time for all stakeholders, rather than focusing on short-term gains, allowing investors to better assess long-term capital investments.

 

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