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world.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ANNUAL REPORT Your support is helping spur deep, transformative change and establish building blocks for the advancement of democracy that equitably and transparently represents the interests of all people. Read more about what you made possible in 2019. CONTACT US - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY We always welcome questions and feedback from our members and the public. To best answer your inquiries and requests we provide a variety of ways to contact us. By email: info@corporateaccountability.org By Telephone: Toll Free: +1 800-688-8797 Office: +1 617-695-2525 By Fax: +1 617-695-2626 By Mail: Corporate Accountability 10 Milk Street Suite 610 Boston, MA 2020 CORPORATE HALL OF SHAME Each year, we ask you to vote for the worst of the worst and induct the “winner” into our Corporate Hall of Shame. Then, we partner with members & allies to mobilize grassroots pressure and turn up the heat on corporations that corrupt the political process and abusehuman rights, the
WATER - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Water should not be for profit. Water is a fundamental human right. It belongs to all of us, and we should all be guaranteed the water we need to survive and live healthy lives. But increasingly, corporations are seeking to control and profit from water at the expense of people’s lives and well-being. In particular, corporations targetGlobal
REJECT BIG POLLUTERS’ “NET ZERO” SCAMMING. First Name: Last Name: Email Address: Lightbox Signup: You’ll receive email action alerts from Corporate Accountability.GIVE MONTHLY
Give monthly. Block the expansion of corporate power. Build a just future for all — become a sustaining member today! Together, Corporate Accountability is building a world rooted in justice where corporations answer to people, not the other way around — a world where every person has access to clean water, healthy food, a safe place to live, and the opportunity to reach their full human DON’T BELIEVE BIG POLLUTERS’ LIES The world is facing an accelerating climate catastrophe. And as more and more people around the world demand climate justice, Big Polluters are attempting to position themselves as part of the solution, trumpeting plans for “net zero” carbon emissions. CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY And climate change is deepening racial and economic inequality around the world. In order to find just and effective solutions to this crisis, Corporate Accountability and our allies are tackling the biggest obstacle to true progress: corporate capture of climate policy. Only by removing the fossil fuel industry and other BigPolluters from
- CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY First Name: Last Name: Email Address: Lightbox Signup: You’ll receive email action alerts from Corporate Accountability. WWW.CORPORATEACCOUNTABILITY.ORG www.corporateaccountability.org CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ANNUAL REPORT Your support is helping spur deep, transformative change and establish building blocks for the advancement of democracy that equitably and transparently represents the interests of all people. Read more about what you made possible in 2019. CONTACT US - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY We always welcome questions and feedback from our members and the public. To best answer your inquiries and requests we provide a variety of ways to contact us. By email: info@corporateaccountability.org By Telephone: Toll Free: +1 800-688-8797 Office: +1 617-695-2525 By Fax: +1 617-695-2626 By Mail: Corporate Accountability 10 Milk Street Suite 610 Boston, MA 2020 CORPORATE HALL OF SHAME Each year, we ask you to vote for the worst of the worst and induct the “winner” into our Corporate Hall of Shame. Then, we partner with members & allies to mobilize grassroots pressure and turn up the heat on corporations that corrupt the political process and abusehuman rights, the
WATER - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Water should not be for profit. Water is a fundamental human right. It belongs to all of us, and we should all be guaranteed the water we need to survive and live healthy lives. But increasingly, corporations are seeking to control and profit from water at the expense of people’s lives and well-being. In particular, corporations targetGlobal
REJECT BIG POLLUTERS’ “NET ZERO” SCAMMING. First Name: Last Name: Email Address: Lightbox Signup: You’ll receive email action alerts from Corporate Accountability.GIVE MONTHLY
Give monthly. Block the expansion of corporate power. Build a just future for all — become a sustaining member today! Together, Corporate Accountability is building a world rooted in justice where corporations answer to people, not the other way around — a world where every person has access to clean water, healthy food, a safe place to live, and the opportunity to reach their full human DON’T BELIEVE BIG POLLUTERS’ LIES The world is facing an accelerating climate catastrophe. And as more and more people around the world demand climate justice, Big Polluters are attempting to position themselves as part of the solution, trumpeting plans for “net zero” carbon emissions. CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY And climate change is deepening racial and economic inequality around the world. In order to find just and effective solutions to this crisis, Corporate Accountability and our allies are tackling the biggest obstacle to true progress: corporate capture of climate policy. Only by removing the fossil fuel industry and other BigPolluters from
- CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY First Name: Last Name: Email Address: Lightbox Signup: You’ll receive email action alerts from Corporate Accountability. WWW.CORPORATEACCOUNTABILITY.ORG www.corporateaccountability.org CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY And climate change is deepening racial and economic inequality around the world. In order to find just and effective solutions to this crisis, Corporate Accountability and our allies are tackling the biggest obstacle to true progress: corporate capture of climate policy. Only by removing the fossil fuel industry and other BigPolluters from
STATEMENT: VEOLIA-SUEZ IMPENDING MERGER THREATENS PEOPLE’S On Friday, the world’s largest private water corporations Veolia and Suez signed an agreement to move forward on a merger.This merger represents the biggest consolidation of corporate control of water in over a decade. The private water industry, especially Veolia and Suez, has a long track record of human rights, labor, and environmentalabuses.
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY And climate change is deepening racial and economic inequality around the world. In order to find just and effective solutions to this crisis, Corporate Accountability and our allies are tackling the biggest obstacle to true progress: corporate capture of climate policy. Only by removing the fossil fuel industry and other BigPolluters from
STATEMENT: VEOLIA-SUEZ IMPENDING MERGER THREATENS PEOPLE’S On Friday, the world’s largest private water corporations Veolia and Suez signed an agreement to move forward on a merger.This merger represents the biggest consolidation of corporate control of water in over a decade. The private water industry, especially Veolia and Suez, has a long track record of human rights, labor, and environmentalabuses.
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter theNAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ANNUAL REPORT Your support is helping spur deep, transformative change and establish building blocks for the advancement of democracy that equitably and transparently represents the interests of all people. Read more about what you made possible in 2019. DON’T BELIEVE BIG POLLUTERS’ LIES The world is facing an accelerating climate catastrophe. And as more and more people around the world demand climate justice, Big Polluters are attempting to position themselves as part of the solution, trumpeting plans for “net zero” carbon emissions.GIVE MONTHLY
Give monthly. Block the expansion of corporate power. Build a just future for all — become a sustaining member today! Together, Corporate Accountability is building a world rooted in justice where corporations answer to people, not the other way around — a world where every person has access to clean water, healthy food, a safe place to live, and the opportunity to reach their full human WATER - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Water should not be for profit. Water is a fundamental human right. It belongs to all of us, and we should all be guaranteed the water we need to survive and live healthy lives. But increasingly, corporations are seeking to control and profit from water at the expense of people’s lives and well-being. In particular, corporations targetGlobal
FOOD - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Approach We are building a sustainable food system. Our food campaign demands that McDonald’s and other giant food corporations end their abuses from seed to plate. We organize to champion children’s health, support workers’ rights, and protect the environment. WATER CAMPAIGN OVERVIEW Water belongs to us all, and everyone should have access to clean, safe water. Our water campaign challenges transnational corporations like Nestlé and Veolia that are WWW.CORPORATEACCOUNTABILITY.ORG www.corporateaccountability.org STATEMENT: RAY ROGERS' AT COCA-COLA ANNUAL MEETING 2020 So Mr. Buffett, Mr. Fink and other large institutional shareholders, show you have a conscience and support this resolution. ###. For Release 8:30 am EST. Contact Pat Clark or Ray Rogers, Director Corporate Campaign/Campaign to Stop Killer Coke. 718-852-2808. CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Our team. Meet some of the staff and board behind the global campaign to build a world where corporations answer to people — not the otherway around.
MARTHA NEWELL
“One of the root causes of much of the dysfunction in our world today is the power of giant corporations,” says Martha. “Once one understands that, it is difficult not to act on it.” Martha has been acting on that understanding since her teenage years, when she picketed with the United Farm Workers. Since then,NAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan and director of Flint Rising, coalition of residents and community groups, labor, and progressive allies that formed in response to the city's emergency declaration. MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. Why did you get involved with Corporate Accountability (which was called Infact at the time)? REPORT: PARTNERSHIP FOR AN UNHEALTHY PLANET Political interference by food and beverage transnationals like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Nestlé, and PepsiCo is pervasive. This report dives into how these corporations have leveraged the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) to cripple progress on nutrition policy across the globe. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity, diabetes and other health issues, primarily in STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlé sells its water in for a huge profit–are up to a fifth of their entire waste stream. STATEMENT: RAY ROGERS' AT COCA-COLA ANNUAL MEETING 2020 Ray Rogers' Statement Introducing Harrington Investments' Shareholder Proposal on Sugar and Public Health & Coronavirus Concerns at The Coca-Cola Company's April 22, 2020 Webcast Annual Meeting ofShareowners
RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Our team. Meet some of the staff and board behind the global campaign to build a world where corporations answer to people — not the otherway around.
MARTHA NEWELL
“One of the root causes of much of the dysfunction in our world today is the power of giant corporations,” says Martha. “Once one understands that, it is difficult not to act on it.” Martha has been acting on that understanding since her teenage years, when she picketed with the United Farm Workers. Since then,NAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan and director of Flint Rising, coalition of residents and community groups, labor, and progressive allies that formed in response to the city's emergency declaration. MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days. Why did you get involved with Corporate Accountability (which was called Infact at the time)? REPORT: PARTNERSHIP FOR AN UNHEALTHY PLANET Political interference by food and beverage transnationals like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Nestlé, and PepsiCo is pervasive. This report dives into how these corporations have leveraged the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) to cripple progress on nutrition policy across the globe. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity, diabetes and other health issues, primarily in STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlé sells its water in for a huge profit–are up to a fifth of their entire waste stream. STATEMENT: RAY ROGERS' AT COCA-COLA ANNUAL MEETING 2020 Ray Rogers' Statement Introducing Harrington Investments' Shareholder Proposal on Sugar and Public Health & Coronavirus Concerns at The Coca-Cola Company's April 22, 2020 Webcast Annual Meeting ofShareowners
RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ANNUAL REPORT Your support is helping spur deep, transformative change and establish building blocks for the advancement of democracy that equitably and transparently represents the interests of all people. Read more about what you made possible in 2019. CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY We are kicking Big Polluters out of climate policy. Our climate campaign demands that the industries most responsible for climate change not be allowed to set the rules. It’s time Exxon Mobil, the fossil fuel industry, and its proxies pay for the destruction they have caused. Photo credit: Dennis Dimick CONFRONTING CORPORATE POWER AT SHAREHOLDERS' MEETINGS Over the past few months, you took action to make sure executives and board members of some of the biggest and most powerful corporations in the world heard your voice during their annual shareholders’ meetings. And, although these events were all held online again this year, giving corporations even more control over whose voices could be heard, you helped make quite a splash. WWW.CORPORATEACCOUNTABILITY.ORG www.corporateaccountability.org STATEMENT: VEOLIA-SUEZ IMPENDING MERGER THREATENS PEOPLE’S On Friday, the world’s largest private water corporations Veolia and Suez signed an agreement to move forward on a merger.This merger represents the biggest consolidation of corporate control of water in over a decade. The private water industry, especially Veolia and Suez, has a long track record of human rights, labor, and environmentalabuses.
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter the second year of the Trump presidency — it’s vitally important to dig deep into this question with you. STATEMENT: RAY ROGERS' AT COCA-COLA ANNUAL MEETING 2020 Ray Rogers' Statement Introducing Harrington Investments' Shareholder Proposal on Sugar and Public Health & Coronavirus Concerns at The Coca-Cola Company's April 22, 2020 Webcast Annual Meeting ofShareowners
THE CORPORATE GREENWASHING OF EARTH DAY On April 22, Big Polluters will roll out a green swath of corporate PR designed to convince us that they are part the solution to the climate crisis. We're not buying it. THE TRUTH ABOUT THE WORLD BANK'S WATER PRIVATIZATION PLANS Photo credit: Kuninori Takahashi. As part of our campaign to challenge corporate control of water, we’re revealing the truth behind “public-private partnerships” (PPPs). The private water industry — and one of its largest supporters, the World Bank — use this term to avoid naming their projects for what they really are: forms of water privatization. CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days.NAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity REPORT: PARTNERSHIP FOR AN UNHEALTHY PLANET Report: Partnership for an unhealthy planet. Download. Political interference by food and beverage transnationals like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Nestlé, and PepsiCo is pervasive. This report dives into how these corporations have leveraged the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) to cripple progress on nutrition policyacross the globe.
STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Activating people power for 40 years. Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
OUR TEAM - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Sriram Madhusoodanan Deputy Campaigns Director. Shayda Naficy Senior Program Director. Ashka Naik Research Director. Ari Rubenstein Managing Campaigns Director. Carolina Santamaria Recruitment Director. John Stewart Director of Strategic Partnerships. Alissa Weinman Associate Campaign Director. Marcia Whitehead Managing Director.Marilyn
MARTHA NEWELL
Martha brings extensive experience as a nonprofit board member and fundraiser to Corporate Accountability’s board. As the director of the nonprofit Garden City Harvest, she led two successful capital campaigns, contributing to its growth into one of the leading organizations in her hometown of Missoula, Montana. She is the formerpresident of
MEMBER SPOTLIGHT: AMELIE RATLIFF Member spotlight: Amelie Ratliff. Amelie Ratliff is a community and donor activist based in Boston. She has been a fan and Corporate Accountability member since the Infact days.NAYYIRAH SHARIFF
Nayyirah Shariff is a grassroots organizer based in Flint, Michigan. Nayyirah was one of the co-founders of the Flint Democracy Defense League, a grassroots group formed to confront Flint’s emergency manager in 2011. She has more than ten years of experience organizing around local, state, and national electoral and issue campaigns. COKE UNDER FIRE AT TODAY’S ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING Advocates Hold Soda Giant Accountable for Hypocrisy on Racial Justice, Voting Rights, Public Health. (April 20, 2021 – Atlanta, GA) – At Coca-Cola’s annual shareholder meeting, held online today, a resolution was presented calling on the company to be more transparent about the role of their sugar-filled products in exacerbating obesity REPORT: PARTNERSHIP FOR AN UNHEALTHY PLANET Report: Partnership for an unhealthy planet. Download. Political interference by food and beverage transnationals like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, Nestlé, and PepsiCo is pervasive. This report dives into how these corporations have leveraged the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) to cripple progress on nutrition policyacross the globe.
STATEMENT: NESTLÉ'S SHADY CSR WON'T CLEAN UP ITS FILTHY STATEMENT: Nestlé’s shady CSR won’t clean up its filthy image. Yesterday, Nestlé Waters North America announced that it is partnering with Keeping America Beautiful (KAB) to do clean-ups at national parks as the government shutdown leaves parks overflowing with trash. Parks have reported that plastic bottles–which Nestlésells its
RELEASE: PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCATES TO COKE: STOP SUGAR Shareholders demand action after new revelations about Coke’s political interference from China to the CDC. ATLANTA, GA—Today, at the corporation’s annual meeting, Coca-Cola executives were on the defensive about the soda giant’s global human rights abuses, labor abuses and the role of sugar in public health, going so far as to deny public health experts from Latin America from raising WHO WE ARE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY Communities that face profound corporate abuse are essential in leading the transformation of our world. To achieve the change we need, we must organize shoulder-to-shoulder with people who bear the brunt of corporate abuse: women, people of color, people in the Global South, indigenous people, youth, and low-income communities around theworld.
CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY ANNUAL REPORT Your support is helping spur deep, transformative change and establish building blocks for the advancement of democracy that equitably and transparently represents the interests of all people. Read more about what you made possible in 2019. CLIMATE - CORPORATE ACCOUNTABILITY And climate change is deepening racial and economic inequality around the world. In order to find just and effective solutions to this crisis, Corporate Accountability and our allies are tackling the biggest obstacle to true progress: corporate capture of climate policy. Only by removing the fossil fuel industry and other BigPolluters from
CONFRONTING CORPORATE POWER AT SHAREHOLDERS' MEETINGS Over the past few months, you took action to make sure executives and board members of some of the biggest and most powerful corporations in the world heard your voice during their annual shareholders’ meetings. And, although these events were all held online again this year, giving corporations even more control over whose voices could be heard, you helped make quite a splash. ABOUT OUR WATER CAMPAIGN Corporate Accountability has a wide range of tools to employ when public water systems are threatened by corporate interests. Partnering with local allies, we help mobilize community resistance, work with public officials, and generate high-profile media coverage to protect public water systems. WWW.CORPORATEACCOUNTABILITY.ORG www.corporateaccountability.org STATEMENT: VEOLIA-SUEZ IMPENDING MERGER THREATENS PEOPLE’S On Friday, the world’s largest private water corporations Veolia and Suez signed an agreement to move forward on a merger.This merger represents the biggest consolidation of corporate control of water in over a decade. The private water industry, especially Veolia and Suez, has a long track record of human rights, labor, and environmentalabuses.
CREATING SOCIAL CHANGE, PERSON TO PERSON Creating social change, person to person. By Kelle Louaillier. I’ve talked with many of you about what it takes to succeed in creating the kind of social change that you and I are committed to. In this moment — after a series of catastrophic climate events, with the ravages of white supremacy and patriarchy laid bare, and as we enter the STATEMENT: RAY ROGERS' AT COCA-COLA ANNUAL MEETING 2020 So Mr. Buffett, Mr. Fink and other large institutional shareholders, show you have a conscience and support this resolution. ###. For Release 8:30 am EST. Contact Pat Clark or Ray Rogers, Director Corporate Campaign/Campaign to Stop Killer Coke. 718-852-2808. THE CORPORATE GREENWASHING OF EARTH DAY Probably not. But as more and more people look for ways to reduce their ecological footprint, Nestlé and other transnational corporations have turned Earth Day into a corporate “greenwashing” bonanza. It’s more than ironic, given how these very same corporations have long lobbied against the environmental protectionscreated following
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2020 financial report YOUR GIFT ADVANCES OUR MISSION & CAMPAIGNS Corporate Accountability spends more than 90 percent of all contributions directly on programs, while less than 10 percent provide essential support services, resulting in the highest marks from rating agencies. Read about what your support made possible this past year in our 2020 Annual Report.
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ACTIVATING PEOPLE POWER FOR 40 YEARS Together with our members, philanthropic partners, and allies, Corporate Accountability has forced some of the most powerful transnational corporations to stop abusive practices — bringing about transformative change. Because of our work, Nestlé made sweeping changes to infant formula promotion that was killing infants across the Global South and General Electric got out of the nuclearweapons business.
In the decades since, we have won victories that save lives and change them for the better by shifting power away from corporations and back to people. We amplify the voices of communities from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Lagos, Nigeria. And we make sure our voices reverberate in the ears of decision-makers from the halls of the U.N. to corporate boardrooms. We are building a world where we all can thrive, and the need for this work is greater than ever.Our history __
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