Harvard Chan School hosts a diverse array of speakers, invited to share both scholarly research and personal perspectives. They do not speak for the School, and hosting them does not imply endorsement of their views, organizations, or employers.

Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

SHINE Summit 2021

November 8th, 2021 - November 10th, 2021

Humanity has never before been faced with more rapid change in the workplace.  With this unprecedented transformation comes an incredible opportunity to re-imagine the meaning of work and to re-design the workplace in greater support of human health and well-being. We look forward to gathering in person November 8-10 here on campus, following Harvard University health and safety guidelines, to explore these critical issues of our time.

SHINE Summit 2021 features renowned scholars from across Harvard Business School, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard Law School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, taking a cross-disciplinary, research-focused approach to understanding the future of work. A high-level gathering for senior executives and policymakers across Sustainability, Human Resources, ESG, Social Impact, Health and Well-being, Supply Chain, Corporate Social Responsibility and Philanthropy, the Summit offers transformative thinking, authentic connection and creative collaboration in an intimate, on-campus setting.

Join us for deep explorations, provocative conversations, and evidence-based strategy sessions on humane work and employment, the human impacts of work, the power of caring for employees, the importance of trust and transparency, the meaning of human flourishing, how to cultivate compassion and happiness, how to redefine the people and health strategy for business, and what it means to be a healing organization today.

Details

Start: November 8th, 2021
End: November 10th, 2021
Calendars: Public Events, School-wide Events, University-wide Events
Event types: Conferences and Symposia

Venue

Cambridge campus
Knafel Center, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study