Forsidebilde av showet What is to be done?

What is to be done?

Podkast av Carolina Sachs, Sasja Beslik och Joel Lindefors

engelsk

Personlige historier og samtaler

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Les mer What is to be done?

We know we can’t stay on the current path. We roughly know what needs to change, but we don’t yet know how.This podcast takes that question as its starting point. We’ll talk with people from business, politics, academia, and activism who can help us see new ways forward, people whose experience, perspective, and courage might help us answer that question. With this podcast, we want to begin mapping out and inspire others to map out, strategies and action plans for greater speed and force in the transition toward sustainable development.We ask ourselves, and our guests, the same question:What is to be done? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Alle episoder

14 Episoder

episode Seduce, Don't Preach with Olly Lawder from Revolt cover

Seduce, Don't Preach with Olly Lawder from Revolt

This week we sit down with Olly Lawder, a strategist and storyteller with extensive experience in sustainability communications. We trace the arc of sustainability communication from its origins in corporate philanthropy and early CSR, through the rise of ambitious net zero targets and "rock star CEOs," to the more cautious and compliance-driven moment we find ourselves in today. Along the way, we ask an uncomfortable question: did the movement win over the corporate world while losing voters and consumers? Olly has spent 20 years helping major global brands figure out how to make sustainable choices genuinely desirable, not as a moral duty, but as something people actually want. The closer sustainability gets to the real reason someone buys something, the more powerful it becomes. Nobody buys a perfume for the recycled packaging. But if the sustainably sourced vanilla makes it smell more complex, more unique, more seductive?  We dig into why terms like "net zero" and "degrowth" leave people cold, what the fossil fuel industry understands about communications that the sustainability movement still doesn't, and why the pendulum will eventually have to swing back, because none of the fundamental problems have gone away. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

13. mai 2026 - 50 min
episode Post Growth Pensions with Steve Rocco cover

Post Growth Pensions with Steve Rocco

In our latest episode of What is to be Done, we sat down with Steve Rocco, co-founder of the Arketa Institute, to talk about one of the most fundamental challenges of our time: the gap between modern science and the economic theories that still govern our financial systems. What makes Steve's perspective particularly striking is where it comes from. He has spent his career inside the financial system, from trading desks at Bank of America and Goldman Sachs to impact investing, green bonds and private placements. It is precisely that experience, he argues, that made the contradictions impossible to ignore. His argument is straightforward but radical. The neoclassical economics that dominates our institutions, business schools and financial markets was built before much of what we now know about the biosphere and planetary boundaries. Ecological economics offers a different framework, one where the economy exists within nature, not alongside it. A central theme in the conversation is the concept of multi-capital, the idea that wealth cannot be reduced to financial capital alone. Social capital, natural capital and community are not soft add-ons but fundamental components of a functioning and sustainable economy. The episode also digs into what a post-growth pension system might look like in practice. Steve makes the case that pension funds are not just a financial instrument but a political one, and potentially a powerful lever for change. Pensioners sit on boards of trustees. They are also voters. That combination, he argues, is deeply underestimated. The episode does not offer easy answers, but it reframes the question in a way that feels both urgent and, oddly, hopeful. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

30. april 2026 - 49 min
episode Business transformation in Japan and migration with Joel & Sasja cover

Business transformation in Japan and migration with Joel & Sasja

While the rest of the world debates whether to take sustainability seriously, Japan is quietly getting on with it. In this episode, your co-host Sasja takes centre stage. Based part-time in Tokyo, where he manages Japan's first domestically-run mid-cap impact fund, Sasja brings four years of on-the-ground experience to one of the world's most underreported sustainability stories. We explore the physical reality of climate change hitting Japan right now, why Japanese companies are building ESG equity stories that outpace Europe, and what a warming world means for the one thing no politician wants to talk about: mass migration. The future won't wait. Neither should you. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

15. april 2026 - 57 min
episode Regenerative Business Models & Growth Potential with Joel & Carolina cover

Regenerative Business Models & Growth Potential with Joel & Carolina

In this episode, Joel and Carolina explore the green transition from a growth perspective. From China's record-breaking solar installations to India's emergence as a global scaling platform for climate technologies, the shift toward a cleaner economy is accelerating, just not where most people are looking. We also dig into why Western economies remain stuck in fossil fuel dependency despite the obvious strategic and economic case for renewables, and what it will take to break free from legacy thinking. At the heart of the conversation is the idea of regenerative business, moving beyond ESG checklists and "doing less harm" toward business models that actively restore ecological, social, and economic systems. We look at real companies already doing this: from flooring to offshore wind to space-based Earth observation. We also discuss the potential of more accurate and precise metrics for impact and fewer but sharper KPI's for business transformation. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

2. april 2026 - 40 min
episode Creating Shared Value with Marc Pfitzer cover

Creating Shared Value with Marc Pfitzer

In this session we explore the idea of Shared Value. It is easy to assume that corporations have always existed exclusively to maximize returns for shareholders. But historically that was not always the case. In the nineteenth century many U.S. states required companies to demonstrate a societal benefit in order to obtain limited liability. Over time this view shifted. A famous turning point came in 1919 when the Dodge brothers sued Henry Ford after he chose to reinvest profits in higher wages and community development rather than maximizing dividends. The court ruled that a corporation should be run primarily for the profit of its shareholders. Decades later this idea became deeply influential through the work of Milton Friedman. But as globalization expanded and environmental and social challenges became more visible, alternative ideas began to re-emerge. In 2006, Michael E. Porter introduced the concept of Creating Shared Value: the idea that companies can strengthen their competitiveness by understanding and expanding the value they create for society. Nearly twenty years later, however, the practical challenge remains. Many companies say sustainability is integrated into their strategy, yet in practice it often sits in a silo. Financial performance and sustainability metrics are reported side by side, but rarely is there a serious attempt to understand how they actually influence one another. If sustainable business development is to become possible, companies need better ways to connect impact with financial performance. To explore how this can be done in practice, we invited Marc Pfitzer, a global strategy advisor since 30 + years, with several articles on todays subject published in the Harvard Business Review and he also lecture at the Stockholm School of Economics.  ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

18. mars 2026 - 53 min
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