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International Tax Collaboration To Fund Sustainable Globa...

Nicola Grace

Ok so let's discuss! Is the IMF, World Bank and UN conference to discuss international tax collaboration just another scheme to tax everyone more, or a genuine desire to meet the SDG's by 2030? 


Given some governments...

7 Habits That Kill Creativity

Jonathan Acutt

See more: http://www.developgoodhabits.com/habits-that-kill-creativity/ to understand the full picture of habits that kill creativity Our brains like to follow…

The paradox of choice

Rita Juse-Cirkse

Psychologist Barry Schwartz takes aim at a central tenet of western societies: freedom of choice. In Schwartz's estimation, choice has made us not freer but more paralyzed, not happier but more dissatisfied.

The World Game 2018

Tina Jonasen

HUSK  at melde jer til The World Game 2018


World Game 2018

Tina Jonasen

HUSK  at melde jer til The World Game 2018


Genius U

GeniusU Genie

Stephanie Whelan, a marketing manager at the Property Investor’s Network, was struggling to fill up the company’s large annual events: ‘We run two really big events a year. We were struggling to get...

Good Personility

sreenath Goud

You Believe In God But Until You Believe In Ourself........................



Knowledge , Attitude and behaviour creates the extraordinary persons...........                          Extraordinary And good persons...

One woman’s life-long battle with psoriasis and eczema - ...

Jo Formosa

I’ve had skin conditions for as long as I can remember. Right now, it’s on my face – around my eyes and my mouth – and it’s really red, sore and burning. It’s also on my hands, they are dry, red, swollen and cracked. A lot of the time I have to...

Humans just 0.01% of all life but have destroyed 83% of w...

Louise Mosley

Groundbreaking assessment of all life on Earth reveals humanity’s surprisingly tiny part in it as well as our disproportionate impact

Why Sea Otters Are Moving Inshore and Alligators Are Hitt...

Louise Mosley

Coastal predators are increasingly living in habitats beyond their traditional niches – a sign, a new paper argues, that they may be more resilient than thought.