Home
Subscribe
Digital Edition
Preview  | Take a tour
Back Copy Sales
Take a Tour
Features
Future Leadership Program
Masters Program
Manage Account
About WSJ Asia
Advertise with Us
Upcoming Events In Asia
E-Alert |  RSS Feeds
Contact Us
Help
  Dow Jones Links
asia.WSJ.com
Chinese WSJ.com
FEER.com
Dow Jones
 
 

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:
Prachish Chakravorty at prachish.chakravorty@dowjones.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
The following articles are available to current subscribers only
  Japan Nuclear Efforts May Have Turned Corner
The battle to bring the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan under control may be turning a corner, a development that could ease a nuclear emergency that has gripped the nation and riveted the world. But difficulties still loom.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 15:36:07 EDT
  Pressure Stays on Yen
Further moves by major central banks to weaken the yen could come as soon as Monday, though the goal will be to ensure market stability rather than push the yen sharply lower.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 09:03:32 EDT
  Japanese Flee Radiation Zones
A week after a massive earthquake and tsunami sent thousands of evacuees fleeing from Japan's northeast coast, the country is seeing a new wave of refugees: those running from radiation.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 03:08:36 EDT
  Bid to 'Protect Assets' Slowed Reactor Fight
Crucial efforts to tame Japan's crippled nuclear plant were delayed by concerns over damaging valuable power assets and by initial passivity on the part of the government.
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 18:22:11 EDT
  Radioactivity Found in Milk, Spinach
Japan said higher-than-normal levels of radiation were detected in milk from the prefecture where the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is located, and in spinach from a neighboring prefecture.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 07:33:25 EDT
  Some Coal-Fired Plants Back Online
A major unit at one of Japan's largest coal-fired power plants was brought back online early Saturday, helping ease power shortages that have crippled Japan's industrial activity and hampered cleanup efforts since the March 11 earthquake.
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 07:31:36 EDT
  GM Halts 'Nonessential' Spending
GM Chairman and CEO Dan Akerson asked to hold off on nonessential spending and travel companywide while the auto maker gets a better handle on the potential impact of Japan's crisis on the company.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 12:13:52 EDT
  Asia Markets Mostly Higher
Tokyo led most Asian markets higher after the Group of Seven industrialized nations agreed to a coordinated intervention to stop the yen's surge; India was an exception, declining on interest-rate and political worries.
Fri, 18 Mar 2011 11:31:55 EDT
  G7 Moves in Sync to Steady Yen
A rare intervention by the world's biggest economies slowed a damaging rise in the value of the Japanese yen even as the economic impact of Japan's quake continued to widen.
Sat, 19 Mar 2011 01:30:34 EDT
  Shortages Stall Auto Makers
GM will stop some work at two European factories and is mulling production cuts in South Korea, amid growing uncertainty over how its plants will be affected by the Japan crisis.
Sun, 20 Mar 2011 09:01:09 EDT






 
  |     |     |     |  
 
DJ_logo      Copyright © 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Wall Street Journal Asia is a trademark of Dow Jones & Company, Inc.