Target, DEI and sales
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Opinion: SMU associate law professor Carliss Chatman writes that federal contractors running away from previous diversity, equity, and inclusion agreements could expose themselves to legal risk.
Target is giving itself black eyes on its earnings day. The discount retailer badly missed Wall Street estimates for first quarter earnings on Tuesday morning and slashed its full
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Gay City News on MSNNYC Pride loses sponsors, scales back events amid DEI backlashA report in the Wall Street Journal late last month pointed to many of the warning signs leading up to this year’s main NYC Pride March, which is slated for
The political pressure on American businesses to roll back DEI programs continues unabated but around the world DEI is thriving.
Target will report its fiscal first-quarter earnings Wednesday, as the Minneapolis-based cheap chic retailer tries to get back to growth. Here's what Wall Street is expecting for the discounter, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:
For all the fear that defined the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Kristel Porter had never been less afraid. Government support, from eviction and foreclosure moratoriums to unemployment and stimulus checks,
Many programs at large US companies that have fallen under the diversity, equity and inclusion banner haven’t disappeared, according to interviews with more than two dozen senior staffers from large US companies and corporate advisors.