In AI for Good: Applications in Sustainability, Humanitarian Action, and Health, a team of veteran Microsoft AI researchers delivers an insightful and fascinating discussion of how one of the world's most recognizable software companies is tackling intractable social problems with the power of artificial intelligence (AI).
Mikaela Loach offers a fresh and radical perspective for real climate action that could drastically change the world as we know it for the benefit of us all. It's Not That Radical will galvanise readers to take action, offering an accessible and transformative appraisal of our circumstances to help mobilise a majority for the future of our planet.
This book gathers the expertise of over one hundred experts - geophysicists, oceanographers and meteorologists; engineers, economists and mathematicians; historians, philosophers and indigenous leaders to examine the issue for all angles and shares examples of greenwashing and failure to face up to the real and pressing issues.
We need to act five times faster to tackle climate change before it is too late. A policy insider, Simon Sharpe provides compelling ideas on how to rethink our strategies and reorganize our efforts in the fields of science, diplomacy, and economics to speed up progress in addressing climate change.
One of The Observer's `Thirty books to help us understand the world'. In The New Climate War, renowned scientist Michael E. Mann draws the battle lines between the people and the polluters - fossil-fuel companies, right-wing plutocrats, and petro-states - and outlines a plan for forcing our governments and corporations to wake up and make real change.
A shocking but informative, eye-catching and witty book of maps that illustrate the perilous state of our planet. The maps in this book are often shocking, sometimes amusing, and packed with essential information. 99 Maps to Save the Planet doesn't provide practical tips on how to save our planet- it just presents the facts. And the facts speak for themselves.
Almost everyone agrees on the need to transition the global economy to net zero. But how do we do it? And how do we do it faster? If you feel demoralized, depressed or confused about the climate crisis this book will provide answers - and ones that don't involve punishing lifestyle changes, the end of capitalism, or a much higher tax bill.
In Climate Future, Robert Pindyck, an authority on the economics of climate change and global catastrophes, explains what we know and what we don't know about the extent of climate change and its impact, why there is so much uncertainty, and what it means for climate policy.
In 2018 Hayhoe gave a famous TED Talk urging us, “The most important thing you can do to fight climate change is talk about it.” This is an inspiring and practical guide on how to communicate effectively about climate change and how to take action to protect our planet.
Over the past seventy years, McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Unilever and other consumer goods makers have harnessed single-use plastics to turbocharge their profits. They've poured billions of dollars into convincing us we need disposable diapers, cups, bags, bottles, shampoo in sachets and plastic-packaged ultra-processed foods. We were never clamouring for any of these items, but this shift towards disposability has fundamentally transformed our daily habits.
The Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is an annual international climate summit, where world leaders gather to work together on solutions to tackle climate change. Bringing together approximately 300 countries, COP30 will take place from the 10th of November to the 21st of November hosted in Belèm, Pará in Brazil tackling issues such as:
Sustainability at LBS:
Visit LBS's sustainability pages on the Hub to find the latest on what we’re doing, as we embark on a programme to help strengthen our sustainability vision, ambition and strategy.
See LBS article: Regional paths, global stakes: looking ahead to COP30 in a fragmented world | London Business School
Visit the COP30 Website for more information: UN Climate Change Conference - Belém, November 2025 | UNFCCC
LBS: Catch up on the latest content from our Sustainable Business Editorial Campaign
Free Web sources:
SSRN - Web resource
Social Science Research Network is an open access collection of working papers/research paper providing early access to content. It has an:
Some of the books in the catalogue:
Many more books are available via our catalogue under the following subjects:
Climate change | Environmental economics
Place a Click & Collect request or search the Catalogue here:
Libby: Find our COP30 Curated Collection

Download the Libby app to borrow recreational e-books and audiobooks from the library.
View all Libby titles here and visit the guide for more info.
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LBS Think Articles
Sustainability reporting – who's doing what, and why your investors care
Regional paths, global stakes: looking ahead to COP30 in a fragmented world
Inclusion is a key part of future-proofing: ignore it at your peril | London Business School
What the ESG backlash reveals | London Business School
Find more LBS Think articles here: Think | Thought Leadership | London Business School
Financial Times
(You will need an FT account to access the reading. You can register using the FT.com registration link in the A-Z list of databases here.)
Climate Capital | Financial Times
Forbes - LBS authors
Disorderly Transition: When Climate And Finance Collide
The Office Is The Missing Link In The Next Era Of Sustainability
External articles by LBS staff:
Unlocking Trapped Competencies: Dr Ioannis Ioannou on MENA’s Path to Sustainable Advantage
Sustainable Switch: Unpacking Trump’s UN speech | Reuters
See our Library guide for finding News here
| Business Source Premier | This includes numerous business titles. Notably it includes Bloomberg.com which provides useful short business focussed insights. Use the following syntax: JN "Bloomberg.com" and "net zero" |
| Factiva | Our database of global news, newswires and trade and professional titles. Use either keywords or their subject indexing. They have an ESG category which you can combine with geographic or source type indexing. |
| Directory of Open Access Journals | DOAJ is a unique, independent extensive index of diverse open access journals from around the world providing access to over 13,500 fee-free journals. |
| Statista |
Statista covers a wide range of statistics from a range of international sources. Just search by keyword. Here are some examples
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| Project Syndicate | Look at the content area labelled: Sustainability. Project Syndicate's exclusive content come from world wide prominent political leaders, policymakers, scholars, business leaders, and civic activists. |
| IBISWorld |
Covers UK USA Global and some European Countries. ESG industry scores are included in the UK reports. |
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Visit our Climate Crisis and Sustainability guide
Visit our ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) guide
Need to find Journal articles? Find our guidance here
Is ESG helping businesses make better decisions or just adding noise? Professor Alex Edmans argues it's time for a rethink. In this sharp and timely breakdown, he introduces rational sustainability: a practical, evidence-led approach that prioritises long-term value over blanket metrics and ideological extremes.
Bloomberg's Will Kennedy, Natasha White and Sarah Wells share the top climate finance and energy issues they're following and preview what's ahead for the negotiations at COP30 at the Bloomberg Sustainable Business Summit 2025 in London.
Also available on YouTube and Apple Music
As sustainability regulation accelerates across global markets, the real challenge for business leaders is no longer just about ticking boxes but about strategy, transparency, and long-term value creation. Professor Marcel Olbert, Assistant Professor of Accounting, and Katharina Neureiter, Co-Head of Global Sustainability at The Carlyle Group, join host Sergei Guriev, Dean of London Business School, to explore how new rules – from ESG disclosures to tax incentives – are reshaping corporate behaviour and investor expectations.
This episode takes a closer look at the rise of sustainability reporting as both a regulatory requirement and a strategic tool. We examine how disclosure is evolving – from high-level programme reviews to granular, data-driven tracking – and what this means for private equity, portfolio resilience, and operational performance. The conversation also explores the tension between transparency and competitive advantage, the role of fiscal stimulus in shaping corporate responses, and the broader implications of global regulatory divergence. Rather than viewing ESG reporting as a compliance burden, could it be a lever for innovation, accountability, and investor trust?
In an era of geopolitical flux and shifting market expectations, take a forward-looking perspective on how businesses can lead with clarity, adapt with agility, and create value that lasts.
Also available on YouTube and Apple Music
As political backlash against the Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) framework intensifies, the real questions facing corporate leaders are no longer about terminology or disclosure but about strategy, legitimacy, and resilience. Ioannis Ioannou, Associate Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship and Anna Lungley, Head of Sustainability Consulting at Fujitsu, join host Sergei Guriev, Professor of Economics and Dean of London Business School, to explore what the backlash reveals about deeper market failures and the evolving role of business in society. We examine how capital markets remain structurally misaligned with ecological and social realities, why many corporate commitments have proven fragile under pressure, and how sustainability has become a proxy for deeper power struggles within firms. With global standards in flux and investor expectations shifting, the conversation turns to what it means to lead through uncertainty and why silence, hesitation, or superficial rebranding may no longer be viable options. Rather than treating ESG as a compliance issue or communications challenge, this episode explores it as a systemic and strategic fault line – one that tests corporate purpose, governance, and the capacity to act with foresight in an era of disruption.
Find more LBS Think Podcasts here