Profile
Lowellyne James
Title: Lecturer
Company: Aberdeen Business School
Points: 388
— Bio —
Lowellyne James is a Lecturer at the Aberdeen Business School with over 15 years experience ranging from Quality and Safety Management in the Manufacturing Sector to Advertising in a consulting firm. He is the Chair of the Chartered Quality Institute North of Scotland, an Ambassador of the Chartered Management Institute, a Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants Scotland Advisory Panel on Sustainability Activities, an alumnus of the Edinburgh Business School MBA programme, Member of the Chartered Quality Institute & Chartered Quality Professional MCQI CQP, Member of the Chartered Management Institute MCMI, Member of the Association of Business Executive, and an Associate Member of the Institute of Environmental Management and Assessment AIEMA Amongst his academic achievements, he has accomplished the following: A Master's Degree in Business Administration (MBA) from the Edinburgh Business School, Scotland, United Kingdom, a Degree in Natural Science, a PhD student at the Napier Business School, where he has recently written an article entitled “The strongest link embedding the environment in company DNA” published in the Environmentalist – the official journal of the Institute of Environmental Management & Assessment. Presently he reviews management and technical books on behalf of both the Chartered Quality Institute and Chartered Management Institute. His personal quality policy statement is: "To pursue excellence in innovation and creative thought. Continuously striving for perfection in both my professional and family life". In his spare time he actively communicates his thoughts on Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) on his blog Sustainability & CSR Insights and is open to discussion and networking requests via the following social networking sites. Twitter Linkedin Facebook
Latest Network Activity
- Posted: Findus - Strategy That Lacks Beef
- Posted: The Four Swans of Sustainability
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Commented on: Social Impact Bonds and the Death of Sweet Charity
Just an extension of my previous comment there is an inherent satisfaction that an act of charity brings that ...
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Commented on: Social Impact Bonds and the Death of Sweet Charity
Sir, Thank you for your comments, in response to your statements the application of financial engineering ...

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