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The Corporate Finance Institute has two sessions that are useful to the sector. They also offer many other trainings and useful content.
Infrastructure Projects - The Inter-American Development Bank has created a course to train professionals on how to incorporate disaster risk assessment and resilience to climate change in the design of infrastructure projects. The course may be useful to you
Being trained by these programs will take you to the next step of your Sustainable Finance journey.
The CFA Society United Kingdom has developed a certificate for those interested in learning more about ESG Investing. You can register for the class below. The CFA UK also offers a great diversity of events and career resources.
The CFA UK has prepared some resources to help you to study for their ESG Investing certificate. These are below. These are provided only as reference materials and if you decide to take the CFA UK's course you should consider purchasing the most up-to-date materials.
Check out this course on . The course is available on Coursera and is offered CASE at Duke University. The course's instructor is . The is currently $49 USD, about 9 hours long, and provides you with a certificate at the end.
The UN is working on creating an for funds (equity/debt, both private and public), and Duke was commissioned to create a course helping investors and enterprises get certified.
Here are two takeaways had about the course:
1. The industry is trending towards requiring third-party validation. SDG Impact is in the process of building an SDG Seal of assurance (like a fair-trade seal) for all impact investments. The Duke course is the best way, if implemented, to prepare your fund (regardless of asset class) for UN Certification. 2. The real strength of this course is its ability to drive home the spirit of the different impact measurement and management frameworks on the market, and understand their limitations, use cases, and how to apply them coherently together. It's one thing to know about the , and how to write a report that explains the "who what how much, etc.", it's another to understand how to embed that within your impact thesis, diligence process, and incorporate other frameworks (like the IRIS indicators, or the SASB/GRI materiality framework) within that analysis. Long story short - it helps us move away from seeing these frameworks as box-ticking or window dressing, and more towards a holistic and integrated theory of impact.