In the best of circumstances, when companies establish new agriculture, forestry or extractives ventures in developing countries, the people living there can see enormous benefits – increasing incomes, improved local infrastructure, greater access to services, and more.
Unfortunately, all too often, these operations instead lead to serious conflicts with local communities or workers, creating significant hardship for everyone involved. Currently, there is a serious lack of trained social professionals from the regions in which the companies operate to help them integrate social impacts and engagement into their operations.
CSE trains recent graduates and professionals to implement good social management techniques in their work. Focusing on under-served geographies where there is a higher risk of social conflict, CSE’s goal is to cultivate local expertise in building and embedding holistic social management programmes into company, government and NGO operations.
The Centre of Social Excellence (CSE) is a unique educational Earthworm initiative focused on cultivating the skills and capacities of social practitioners.
CSE is one of Earthworm's core initiatives and a tool we use to further transformation. CSE trains recent graduates and professionals to implement good social management techniques. Focusing on under-served geographies with a higher risk of social conflict, CSE's goal is to cultivate local expertise in building and embedding holistic social management programmes into company, government and NGO operations.
CSE’s mission is to create an enabling environment for social harmony and realised human rights by equipping companies, civil society, and governments with well-trained social practitioners from the regions where they operate.
We mobilise diverse social experts who have real-world experience addressing social issues to design and teach courses to students on the front lines of company-community interactions. CSE offers:
When companies have staff with this kind of training and support, they can more effectively engage with stakeholders, and they are better equipped to avoid community and worker conflicts that can be costly for everyone. Businesses, governments and investors increasingly understand that investing in what it takes to cultivate healthy community and worker relationships not only reduces risk, but it can create value. Constructive social management can lower operational and capital costs, and it can protect the reputations of brands and sectors. Companies and investors that secure and maintain a ‘social license to operate’ from communities and other stakeholders find their core business strengthened. Well-trained staff are key, and CSE’s courses are designed to build the human capital to make this a reality.
CSE Africa was established in 2008 to strategically build local capacity on-the-ground in Central and West Africa .
CSE Brazil is organising best-in-class guidance and training for professionals from multiple sectors on specific methods, including Free…
CSE Indonesia specialises in delivering ‘Short Courses’ lasting 3-10 days that bring together stakeholders from diverse perspectives,…