The Young Leaders Centre of Nice is organizing a conference-debate on the value of work with the inmates of the Nice Remand Centre on January 31, 2011, from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM. Attendees will include the director of the Nice Remand Centre, Mr. Gรฉraud Delorme, officials from the Probation and Reintegration Penitentiary Service of region 06, and managers from the Nice prison administration.
A groundbreaking experience in the PACA region, this meeting between inmates and entrepreneurs centered around work and business embodies the values and spirit of the CJD. Jean-Franรงois Puissรฉgur, the new president of CJD Nice, has placed his term under the banner of solidarity within business. This includes solidarity within and between companies, but also towards individuals on the margins of our society.
This conference will be followed by an evening debate starting at 7:00 PM at the Elysรฉe Palace Hotel in Nice to present a debriefing of discussions with inmates, introduce the CJD’s partnership project with the Remand Centre, and showcase the prison as a business by the director of the Remand Centre, Mr. Delorme.
Young Leaders Centre (CJD)
The CJD is a movement of Activist Entrepreneur Constructors committed for over 72 years to sharing, defending values, and training in the profession of “entrepreneurial leader.” The ambition of the CJD is to promote new ideas to make businesses both more human and more competitive.
Putting the Economy at the Service of Life means integrating elements of the living as inseparable components of our survival and sustainable human development. The CJD is the creator of the concept of Global Performance (economic, social, societal, and environmental). It brings together 3,540 entrepreneurs in France, 300 in our region, and 50 in the Nice branch.
The CJD is an international movement that has spread to 8 countries: Algeria, Benin, Cameroon, Mauritania, Morocco, Quebec, the Czech Republic, and Tunisia. An independent, unconventional, and constantly experimenting movement, the CJD has continually fueled reflections and influenced French economic, political, and social decisions.