News

The World Food Programme has launched a “comprehensive review” of its partnership with Boston Consulting Group as a backlash mounts over the US consultancy’s work on a controversial project in Gaza.
Stephen Foley Well, this particular project began as pro bono work back in October of last year as people were sketching out what grew to become the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a new kind of aid ...
EU negotiators are closing in on a trade deal with Donald Trump that would cement higher tariffs than those granted to the UK ...
Christoph Schweizer says consultancy’s role has been ‘profoundly disappointing’ as Save the Children halts partnership ...
The GHF centres are “death traps”, said Hassan Abdallah, a barber displaced with his family to Al-Mawasi on the southern ...
Your headline and much of your article lead readers to inaccurately conclude that BCG — the firm, its partners and its people — not only endorsed and approved the work you describe on Gaza ...
The Boston Consulting Group (BCG) was paid over $1m for advising a private US maritime aid initiative for Gaza that operated ...
Work with the private US group Fogbow overlapped with the start of a separate effort to help the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation ...
Boston Consulting Group's involvement with Gaza Humanitarian Foundation reportedly provokes outrage from staff and alumni ...
Adam Farber, chief risk officer, and Rich Hutchinson, head of BCG’s social impact practice, will lose those titles following ...