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Sustainable Finance and Ethics

People

Seele P.

Course director

Conti L. G.

Assistant

Description

Corporations – and in this master’s course particularly corporations from the financial sector – are challenged increasingly with the question of their social responsibilities regarding society and the environment. In addition to legal compliance a corporation’s social responsibilities have two dimensions: reducing harm previously produced through externalities of the corporation’s activities. And secondly. sustainability as business opportunity for developing new products, reinventing the corporation’s mission or political contribution to transnational agendas such as the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

 

In the financial sector, not only sustainability is of increasing relevance, but as a consequence also the development of financial products, that are in line with social responsibility (also sustainable or responsible finance). Socially responsible investment (SRI) or mission or impact investment covering secular ethical norms as well as religiously framed normative claims as in ‘islamic finance’ for example.

Objectives

Finance is part of society and financial transactions have an impact not only on the economic sphere, but also on environmental and societal issues. The course presents normative underpinnings, controversies and implications of finance and offers by way of theoretically informed ethical reasoning concepts, standards, indicators and communication strategies of sustainable finance. The course ends with hands-on and state of the art concepts such as ESG (environment, society, governance) ratings, non-financial reporting KPIs, digital currencies or ethical investment guidelines. Best and worst cases allow for individual assessment of the ethicality of selected financial transactions. 

The course starts with a general introduction into corporate sustainability with a special focus on communication covering issues as main theories of CSR, the temptation of misleading communication (aka Greenwashing) and as a core topic sustainability reporting and performance measurement. A second chapter of the course sheds light more specifically on sustainable finance and socially responsible investment providing an overview of the existing concepts. A core question is the possible conflict between a financial corporation’s fiduciary duty and the recognition of normative demands, partly in breach with a corporation’s fiduciary duty.

Teaching mode

In presence

Learning methods

The course builds on lectures, case studies and scholarly research on institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds and here particularly their ethical investment guidelines as communication tools to internally and externally promote sustainable finance. Furthermore, the existing soft-law standards and norms in the industry are discussed to guide companies the way into the world of CSR and SRI.

Examination information

100 % exam

Education