Words matter. These are the best Social Responsibility Quotes from famous people such as Maya Soetoro-Ng, Javier Zanetti, Biz Stone, Vicente del Bosque, Karol G, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
We need to teach our children empathy and care and love and communication and social responsibility in preparation for adulthood.
I am very happy working with Inter, helping them build the club’s international relationship with both Fifa and Uefa, promoting the marketing side, its social responsibility activities as well as being involved with the club’s academy.
For me, I’ve learned about what it means to focus on a culture, to build social responsibility, and the idea of a company as a super-organism.
Football has an important role to play in society. Players should have a sense of social responsibility, have a moral dimension to them which shows up in good conduct.
Diddy and Ciroc are moving culture forward, while communicating the importance of social responsibility.
The duty of the media is to observe truth and social responsibility.
My responsibility is to make a film and find my dramatic language; I don’t have any political or social responsibility.
The kids go to a Quaker school. Their father and I believe a lot in community, social responsibility, making sure you give to people less fortunate than you.
Having born and brought up in Mumbai, I am as urban as urban can be, but my parents ensured that my sister and I understand social responsibility as well.
Filmmaking is not a job but a social responsibility for me.
‘6 Times’ is an attempt to reinvestigate the social responsibility of sculpture. The body in question is a particular body, but it doesn’t really matter whose it is.
In order to exercise the right to freedom of speech conferred by the Constitution, one should fulfill the social responsibility of a Chinese citizen.
I told our employees several times, ‘Let’s focus on the end user, let’s focus on committing to society, and focus on the crisis and doing the right thing, show our corporate social responsibility.’ Don’t focus on marketing and sales. That’s horrible culture.
Football generates a lot of money, but there has to be a social responsibility that goes with that. It can positively affect people’s lives.
Extremism can flourish only in an environment where basic governmental social responsibility for the welfare of the people is neglected. Political dictatorship and social hopelessness create the desperation that fuels religious extremism.
I feel that it is a social responsibility for us who are better educated to give back some to the society in whatever service we can help.
The voluntary approach to corporate social responsibility has failed in many cases.
For me, faith is personal, but the implications are social – as personal and social responsibility are at the heart of the Christian message.
More brands are waking up to their social responsibility and doing good work through cause marketing campaigns. Yet too many still go about it the wrong way. I mean ‘wrong’ in two senses. Firstly, they are marketing ineffectively, and secondly, as a consequence their positive social impact is not maximized.
From 12-year-old girls to 70-year-old matriarchs, I know hundreds of women who have some sort of body image issue. This is sad and seriously worrying, but it’s true, and it’s why I feel some kind of social responsibility to do what I can to show a variety of body types in fashion magazines.
I’ve always believed that our public actions need to take account of our social responsibility.
We combine fiscal responsibility with social responsibility.
One of the things I would love for people to think about is social responsibility. If you are fortunate enough to be someone who owns land, I think you ought to be making the most efficient use of that land possible.
If a brand genuinely wants to make a social contribution, it should start with who they are, not what they do. For only when a brand has defined itself and its core values can it identify causes or social responsibility initiatives that are in alignment with its authentic brand story.
In developed countries, strong rules are in place to restrict sound pollution and curb its deadly effects. As law-abiding citizens with social responsibility, we should all come together against this unhealthy trend.
You can’t be born in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1955 and grow up in South Central near the Black Panthers headquarters and not feel like you’ve got some kind of social responsibility.
I’m never going to be one of those guys who gets on TV and yells and screams. That’s not how I do my business. But I’m very aware of social responsibility.
I have inherited my father’s responsibilities, not privileges. One of the members of his family had to continue his legacy of social responsibility.
My emotional and intellectual response to Hiroshima was that the question of the social responsibility of a journalist was posed with greater urgency than ever.
Actors have a social responsibility.
Through their own actions, customers can hold companies responsible to higher standards of social responsibility. Through collective action, they can leverage their dollars to combat the force of those investors who myopically pursue profits at the expense of the rest of society.
In the coming years, if not sooner, social media will become a powerful tool that consumers will aggressively use to influence business attitudes and force companies into greater social responsibility – and, I suggest, move us towards a more sustainable practice of capitalism.
I feel a social responsibility. We need to open people’s eyes. There is a lack of education in Ethiopia.
Businesses should be focused on business, and social responsibility should be government responsibility.
My father was into politics. After his death things got slow. We were meeting different parties and everywhere I heard people grumbling and cursing politics and the state of the nation. I made an effort and I am trying to fulfill my social responsibility.
Renewables is part of social responsibility, but the information revolution is the only main thing I am interested in.
Our age gives the more receptive among the young such a sense of social responsibility that one is inclined at times to fear that social interests may encroach upon individual development, that a knowledge of all the ills affecting the community may act as too powerful a damper on the joys of youth.
My perspective is that, when you’re a kid, if your audience is a group of children or teenagers, you do have some level of social responsibility. I feel that.
I believe we must go further in redefining what United’s corporate citizenship looks like in our society… and we intend to live up to those higher expectations in the way we embody social responsibility and civic leadership everywhere we operate.
I think you have a social responsibility as the villain, which is pretty different from the hero’s responsibility. If you have any kind of a social or political conscience at all, the first thing you want to do is make malevolence recognizable to people, almost as a kind of teaching aid.