A guide to the people and activist organizations who paved the way for Donald Trump's attacks on diversity practices in corporate America.
Christian Sewing, the CEO of Deutsche Bank, is the latest to express support for his company's DEI initiatives.
The tournament involves amateur players — a roster of celebrities, sports stars and business leaders — playing alongside the professional golfers as part of the competition.
Backed by top financial firms and billionaire philanthropists, including Bain Capital, Bank of America, Barry Sternlicht, ...
The bank’s board credited the CEO for returning $25 billion to shareholders last year and keeping a focus on risk and control ...
President Vladimir Putin has authorised Armenian investment fund Balchug Capital's purchase of Goldman Sachs' unit in Russia, ...
The Hospital for Special Surgery, a New York City-based musculoskeletal health organization that dates back to 1863, has received a $7.5 million gift that will support construction of a new orthopedic ...
More than a dozen major U.S. companies have made headlines for rolling back their diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs over the past year, but many are still standing firm.
Following Trump's lead, organizations including Walmart, Lowe’s and Meta, have announced they would scale back their commitments to diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
SoftBank is in talks to inject up to $25 billion directly into OpenAI, positioning the Japanese tech conglomerate to become ...
Peter Oppenheimer, the chief of global equity strategy and the head of macro research for Goldman Sachs in Europe, opined ...
What does President Donald Trump's executive order directing federal agencies to "encourage" private companies to abandon DEI ...