海角大神

Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman urge fans to help Africa

In a show of corporate social responsibility, DC Comics unleashes its superheroes on the problems in the Horn of Africa

|
Mario Anzuoni/Reuters/File
Visitors dressed as DC Comics characters (left to right) the Hourman, Atom, and Flash stroll the sidewalk during the annual Comic Con Convention in San Diego in 2009. DC Comics is offering its iconic comic book heroes as champions in the effort to support humanitarian aid to the Horn of Africa.

On January 23, DC Comics announced a new campaign to support humanitarian work in the Horn of Africa, a confluence of drought, famine, and Islamist militia rule have led some 13 million people to starvation.

The campaign, called 鈥,鈥 is a partnership with Time Warner and Warner Bros. and features iconic characters from DC Comics鈥 鈥淛ustice League.鈥 These familiar faces, including Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, The Flash, Aquaman, and Cyborg, will be broadcast widely on television, inviting viewers to go to the campaign , where they can donate directly to aid humanitarian efforts in the Horn of Africa, or purchase goods like mugs or t-shirts whose proceeds partly (50 percent) will go to the campaign.

鈥淲hile many individuals may feel powerless to effect change on their own, as part of a global campaign such as this, their efforts, combined with those of other donors, can create a world of change,鈥 stated the campaign鈥檚 press release last week.

IN PICTURES: Monitor photographers in Africa

Alongside the advertising campaign, $2 million in cash donations, employee matching funds, and consumer matching funds will be donated to Save the Children, International Rescue Committee, and Mercy Corps over the next two years for their work in the Horn of Africa.

鈥淲e're launching 鈥榃e Can Be Heroes鈥 now because the situation in the Horn of Africa is dire, and the people there are suffering the worst drought and famine in 60 years. There is urgency to the crisis, and we want and need to help now,鈥 Diane Nelson, the president of DC Comics, told Dowser. 鈥淲e feel fundamentally that the more people know about what's happening in the Horn of Africa, the more they will want to help. DC Comics' Justice League characters are the perfect heroes to motivate awareness and action for this urgent crisis,鈥 she added.

Critics of Western aid programs, like Dambisa Moyo, have that ongoing flows of aid to African countries have done nothing to reduce poverty there. The famine in the East Horn is a crisis of a deep, structural nature; it rests on pre-existing, interlocking problems such as the of Al-Shabaab, , and agricultural-production that lack resilience.

What can 2 million dollars do to alleviate a crisis like that?

鈥淚 hope the campaign will draw more attention, more public awareness, and donations,鈥 Michael Kocher, vice president of international programs at the told Dowser. 鈥淚t is difficult in situations where the onset of an emergency is slow, unlike the tsunami in Japan or the earthquake in Haiti, which got peoples鈥 attention very quickly,鈥 he added. 鈥Ethiopia was pre-provisioning livestock before the drought, which helped to avert crisis there. But without good governance and security, these preventative measures only do so much.鈥

The idea of 鈥渃orporate social responsibility鈥 (CSR) 鈥 and the DC Comics initiative is a good example of CSR 鈥 was birthed in the last few decades as companies began to envision their stakeholders 鈥 and not just their shareholders 鈥 as important beneficiaries of their services.

But CSR has not gone uncriticized. A few years ago, Forbes Magazine ran a debating the idea: 鈥淧roponents insist that companies should take into account the interests of society as a whole while conducting business and claim they can do so profitably. Critics say only people can have moral obligations, and that companies are already helping the world by providing jobs for workers and goods for consumers. Others dismiss CSR as cynical marketing by rapacious, profit-maximizing multinationals,鈥 Forbes explained in the series overview.

A study by Forbes suggests that CSR may be evolving 鈥 perhaps, it could be argued, due to some criticism that it is no more than 鈥渨indow dressing鈥 or greenwashing. The study looked at CSR in the cases of Eli Lilly, MasterCard, and Hewlett-Packard, and also surveyed a wide array of companies worldwide, and observed a few trends. One of them is that volunteerism has become more important in recent years, indicating that companies seek to engage in social impact projects beyond philanthropy alone. Another is that philanthropy can be most helpful to business goals when the CEO is actively involved in the program.

Janine Schooley, senior vice president of programs at , a California-based organization dedicated to supporting sustainable development efforts worldwide, shared with Dowser her views on the potential impact of corporate social responsibility campaigns.

"Here at PCI we have found partnering with corporations or corporate foundations to be聽quite strategic and helpful in addressing the needs of the vulnerable communities we serve in Sub-Saharan Africa. Corporate Social Responsibility provides us with yet another tool, another set of much needed resources, whether they be cash, in-kind, or human resources.聽 It聽takes聽effort聽to find the right intersection between a particular CSR focus and PCI's mission, but once we find聽it, the partnership can be very beneficial to all concerned,鈥 she said.

How effective will DC Comic's CSR initiative be? Stay tuned. In the coming months we'll be monitoring the implementation of the initiative, tracking what happens from the idea of the aid program to the execution 鈥 in the US and in the Horn of Africa.

鈥 was first published by .

鈥 Sign-up to receive a weekly selection of practical and inspiring Change Agent articles by .

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman urge fans to help Africa
Read this article in
/World/Making-a-difference/Change-Agent/2012/0202/Superman-Batman-Wonder-Woman-urge-fans-to-help-Africa
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe