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The Wall Street Journal Asia’s Future Leadership Program reaches out to business and finance students at universities across Asia to better prepare today’s student leaders for tomorrow’s real-life challenges.
Under the program, students receive The Wall Street Journal Asia each business day during the academic year. They gain a real-world understanding of global business competition, economic and business concepts, technology, marketing and the workings of the financial markets, and witness present day case studies as they unfold at companies and industries in their home country and around the world.
As part of the program, The Journal also facilitates a number of academic activities during the year to promote experience-based learning. With support from our Corporate Education Partners, these may include lectures and seminars, business games, contests and competitions, or case-study analysis. These activities provide students with an opportunity to learn from real business leaders and demonstrate their ability to recognize business concepts and theory as applied in the real-world.
For more information on the program, or to
join us as a participating university or corporate partner,
please contact:
Danny Cheung at
danny.cheung@dowjones.com
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| The following articles are available to current subscribers only |
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Immune-System Researchers Win Nobel
Three scientists whose work provided key insights about how the body's immune system helps fight off foreign invaders won the 2011 Nobel prize in physiology or medicine.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 09:14:00 EDT
Japan Panel Says Tepco Needs Restarts
Ensuring the financial stability of Tokyo Electric Power will require the restart of halted nuclear reactors, said a panel advising the Japanese government on restructuring the utility.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 07:21:00 EDT
Wall Street's New Watcher
A 41-year-old former federal prosecutor, who spent the last four years as Andrew Cuomo's confidant and adviser in the New York attorney general's office, plans to "exponentially" increase the criminal division at the Department of Financial Services.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 08:57:19 EDT
For Hourly Jobs, White-Collar Perks
Companies in industries that rely heavily on hourly or low-wage workers, such as manufacturing, retail, food service, hospitality, health care and call centers, are exploring ways to provide more scheduling flexibility and control to a group that has rarely been offered such workplace benefits.
Sun, 02 Oct 2011 20:53:46 EDT
Christie Decision Down to Wire
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is expected to announce within days whether he will join the presidential race.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 07:34:51 EDT
Stock Futures Slip
U.S. stock futures fell as investors treaded cautiously following news that Greece will miss its deficit target.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 08:49:31 EDT
China's Bullet Trains Trip on Technology
China celebrated its high-speed rail as a showcase for Chinese-made high technology. However, a WSJ examination finds that key safety components were built with imported parts that local engineers may not have fully understood.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 07:31:55 EDT
Typhoons Leave 55 Dead in Philippines
Back-to-back typhoons have left at least 55 people dead and rescuers scrambling to deliver food and water to hundreds of villagers marooned on rooftops for four days by floods in the northern Philippines.
Sun, 02 Oct 2011 22:10:03 EDT
New iPhone Risks Same Old Same Old
Apple is widely expected to unveil a fifth-generation iPhone on Tuesday. But Apple has the challenge of wowing consumers in a smartphone market where many alternatives look like Apple's gadget.
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 08:00:57 EDT
Hong Kong Securities Regulator Raps Citi
Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission fined a Citigroup unit $770,000 for missing a 'Ponzi scheme operating under its nose.'
Mon, 03 Oct 2011 06:57:02 EDT
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