
Certified Expert in Risk Management
Certified Expert in Risk Management
The Certified Expert in Risk Management course gives you the tools and insights to understand, assess, and manage risks in today’s fast-changing financial landscape. In banking and financial services, risk is everywhere, whether it is borrower defaults, currency swings, market volatility or unexpected operational disruptions. How you handle these challenges is not just about compliance, it is about protecting customers, building resilience and creating long-term success.
This course is also available in French.
Next start date
Duration
Language
Format
Type of education
Early Bird Price
The Certified Expert in Risk Management course gives you the tools and insights to understand, assess, and manage risks in today’s fast-changing financial landscape. In banking and financial services, risk is everywhere, whether it is borrower defaults, currency swings, market volatility or unexpected operational disruptions. How you handle these challenges is not just about compliance, it is about protecting customers, building resilience and creating long-term success.
This course is also available in French.

Your Benefits
The Certified Expert in Risk Management programme equips you with the expertise and practical skills to lead confidently in today’s complex financial landscape. Here’s what makes it stand out:
- Gain a deep understanding of credit, market, liquidity and operational risk, and learn to apply international standards in real-world contexts.
- Develop hands-on skills in stress testing, scenario analysis and portfolio monitoring to strengthen decision-making and resilience.
- Learn how to design and implement integrated risk management frameworks that enhance governance, ensure compliance and build a strong risk culture.
- Prepare to tackle evolving challenges like cybersecurity threats, climate-related risks and global financial disruptions, while turning them into opportunities for sustainable growth.
- Gain an accredited certification (6 ECTS credits)
Target group

DISCOUNTS
Register by 15 January 2026 and secure the early bird discount. Regular price after this date: EUR 1,900.
DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
- Early bird discount (by January 15)
- 10% group discount
- 10% alumni discount
Contact us for combinable discounts
Register by 15 January 2026 and secure the early bird discount. Regular price after this date: EUR 1,900.
DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
- Early bird discount (by January 15)
- 10% group discount
- 10% alumni discount
Contact us for combinable discounts
REGISTRATION
REGISTRATION
01 March 2026 - 31 August 2026
METHODOLOGY
Our self-paced, asynchronous online courses are built for professionals who want to upskill on their own time, without putting work on hold. Our courses deliver international expertise and hands-on tools you can apply immediately.
- Flexible, study anytime, anywhere
- Practical learning, real-world examples
- Expert support when you need it
- Optional live sessions (also recorded, of course)
CONTENTS
COURSE OUTLINE
General Introduction into Risk Management
There is a whole science of risk out there. Armies of risk professionals are making a good living on the simple idea that life in general, and outcomes in business in particular, are uncertain and things might go differently from what we have budgeted and planned for. So, before we delve deeply into the details of models and quantitative analytics, it should be helpful to first get a big-picture overview of the fundamental concepts of risk, of the main schools of thought in risk analysis and of the stakeholders who shape the framework within which financial institutions must manage their exposures.
We will discuss the general principles of risk management as defined by ISO 31000 (2009/2018), look at risk specific terminology in mathematics, industry and in the financial sector and even consider the content and reference framework of other risk management credentials. You are going to spend six months studying hard for this Risk Management Certificate. We want you to be certain that you are taking the right class for your needs!
Governance of Risk in Financial Institutions
Conscious and well-controlled risk-taking is the natural role of financial institutions and the way they add value to modern society. Therefore, risk management should be job number one for the owners. From there, the governance of risk should cascade down via the Board of Directors to the executive management level. Since financial institutions typically intermediate multiples of other people's money relative to equity, the self-preservation instinct of owners may not be enough to keep risk taking at reasonable levels. Central banks, national supervisory authorities and self-regulatory organizations thus intervene with consumer protection rules, prudential regulation and best practice standards and try to constrain risky positioning and limit external effects on depositors and the wider economy.
The unit introduces the regulatory framework and various sources of guidance on risk management best practices in financial institutions including the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, central banks, national regulators, as well as cooperative and other self-regulatory mechanisms. We will also look at specific microfinance industry guidance from sector associations and international microfinance networks, donor associations, CGAP etc.
This unit will also discuss in detail how retail banks and microfinance institutions may implement these governance principles from an organizational perspective, i.e. how to practically ensure appropriate board-level risk oversight, how to define the roles and responsibilities of internal audit, compliance and the executive-level risk committee, and how to position a chief risk officer and the risk management unit etc.
Risk Landscape and Taxonomy
As a first step, one must try to bring some conceptual order to the many different dimensions of risk that we hear about in connection to financial services. The worst is to be blindsided by unknown unknowns, i.e. by potential losses arising from categories of uncertain events that we do not even have on our radar. This would mean that we also do not have processes and tools in place to measure and mitigate these exposures. Therefore, it is critical to set up a high-level risk map that is as broad and all-inclusive as possible and provides a terminological anchor for any and all possible risk exposures: Have you thought about the risk of loan officers using physical intimidation to collect from micro-borrowers and a journalist picking up on this and turning it into a national news story on the abuses of microfinance and many more clients now refusing to pay these microcredit bandits as a consequence? Yes, that's covered. It is called the reputational dimension of operational risk and it relates to the adherence of staff to documented policies and procedures. This should be picked up during internal control site inspections or through the client complaint hotline. With a view to establishing such a high-level risk map, this unit will guide us through an initial review of the financial services risk landscape including credit transaction and credit portfolio risk, liquidity, interest rate risk, foreign exchange rate risk, currency induced credit risk, operational risk (including reputational risk, compliance, AML/CFT), as well as capital adequacy and covenant risks.
Credit Risk Management
We will talk about credit transaction versus credit portfolio risk and about organizational principles of credit risk management in SME lending, micro-enterprise finance and consumer credit. Portfolio risk management always starts with a keen eye on concentrations and the need for effective ex-ante diversification and some macro-exposure budgeting. From there, we will study traditional portfolio performance diagnostics: such as arrears aging schedules, vintage curves and the transition matrix. We will also spend much time on the data requirements for predictive credit modelling and the development of a comprehensive client data strategy that will enable targeted marketing and credible development impact reporting.
Operational Risk Management
Many aspects of operational risk in MSME Finance are closely related to credit risk and also manifest in unrecoverable loans. We will deal with this type of operational risk in the credit process in great detail in the course.
Further, we will study the operational risks associated with the scope of Compliance in retail banking. Business continuity planning is another critical operational risk topic that is sometimes neglected in MSME Finance. We will then take a detailed look at how to best organize the control of such a vast field of potential loss events as may arise from operational risk. A loss event database with some internal audit / internal control workflow functionality can be a great tool for organizing the many operational risk anecdotes and for identifying and tracking key risk drivers.
Interest Rate Risk Management
Interest rate risk (in the banking book) is essentially about differences in the timing and degree by which unexpected changes in the level of wholesale market interest rates will be absorbed into the product rates charged to clients and paid on the funding instruments raised by the institution. We will do some finger exercises in financial math as we revisit time-value-of-money concepts that are at the heart of the interest rate risk "problem". We then take some conventional interest rate risk measurements, i.e. re-pricing gap reports by currency, basis-weighted repricing gaps, duration weighted gaps, and net interest income simulation. Once we can quantify the interest rate risk exposure, one can proceed to determining interest rate risk limits and discussing rate risk actions that can manage interest rate risk back within acceptable limits. These actions will include alignments on treasury assets and liabilities, changes to the origination of client contracts and some simple overlay transactions using financial derivatives.
Foreign Exchange Rate Risk Management
It will also touch on related convertibility and transfer risks which are particularly relevant in developing and emerging markets. You will learn how to measure basic forex exposure by determining current and future open positions. When we combine an open position with an estimate of how much a currency might realistically fluctuate over a certain period of time, we can obtain a confidence interval of maximum losses from forex risk, the so-called value-at-risk. We will also study the implications of using a foreign functional currency (e.g. the USD in Cambodia) and of dealing with currency risk more broadly in the context of partial or full dollarisation. This will lead us to structural forex positions, currency-hedged equity and the issue of managing currency-induced credit risk at the client level. As always, we will work through the full risk cycle from identifying the different types of risks associated with the use of multiple currencies, quantifying these exposures, establishing acceptable limits for each and understanding the instruments at our disposal to manage exposures back into compliance with those limits.
Liquidity Risk Management
We will then discuss the organization of liquidity management and define the roles and responsibilities of a treasury manager or finance director vis-à-vis that of the risk manager as it relates to liquidity and the short-term investing and borrowing activities of the institution. We will measure liquidity on the balance sheet using various ratios and develop detailed cash flow forecasts. The single biggest challenge in liquidity is the study of depositor behavior under normal and under stressed market circumstances. This type of core deposit analysis requires some statistical analysis and modeling, which we will develop in detail in the course.
Risk Management Policy Framework
Here, we propose templates for the definition of roles and responsibilities and policy drafts that document best practice risk management. These templates can easily be scaled and customized to the size and complexity of your institution. Risk management really only works if it is itself a disciplined, documented and audited procedure that is woven right into the fabric of all business activities of the institution. In short, these policies describe the organization of risk management, specify the analyses and tools used to quantify risk, summarize prudential, internal and covenant limits that apply to exposures and describe the allowable actions and instruments to manage exposures within the limits.
Wrap up, Systems and Outlook
Here, we will look at the strategic and competitive implications of good risk management practice and the latest developments in the science of risk and its regulatory environment. As always, the focus is on what this all means for small banks and non-bank financial institutions in emerging markets and developing countries. We will also look at the merits of various software solutions for Enterprise-wide Risk Management and other opportunities for further refining risk governance and reporting, and for managing the cost of compliance.
COURSE OUTLINE
General Introduction into Risk Management
There is a whole science of risk out there. Armies of risk professionals are making a good living on the simple idea that life in general, and outcomes in business in particular, are uncertain and things might go differently from what we have budgeted and planned for. So, before we delve deeply into the details of models and quantitative analytics, it should be helpful to first get a big-picture overview of the fundamental concepts of risk, of the main schools of thought in risk analysis and of the stakeholders who shape the framework within which financial institutions must manage their exposures.
We will discuss the general principles of risk management as defined by ISO 31000 (2009/2018), look at risk specific terminology in mathematics, industry and in the financial sector and even consider the content and reference framework of other risk management credentials. You are going to spend six months studying hard for this Risk Management Certificate. We want you to be certain that you are taking the right class for your needs!
Governance of Risk in Financial Institutions
Conscious and well-controlled risk-taking is the natural role of financial institutions and the way they add value to modern society. Therefore, risk management should be job number one for the owners. From there, the governance of risk should cascade down via the Board of Directors to the executive management level. Since financial institutions typically intermediate multiples of other people's money relative to equity, the self-preservation instinct of owners may not be enough to keep risk taking at reasonable levels. Central banks, national supervisory authorities and self-regulatory organizations thus intervene with consumer protection rules, prudential regulation and best practice standards and try to constrain risky positioning and limit external effects on depositors and the wider economy.
The unit introduces the regulatory framework and various sources of guidance on risk management best practices in financial institutions including the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, central banks, national regulators, as well as cooperative and other self-regulatory mechanisms. We will also look at specific microfinance industry guidance from sector associations and international microfinance networks, donor associations, CGAP etc.
This unit will also discuss in detail how retail banks and microfinance institutions may implement these governance principles from an organizational perspective, i.e. how to practically ensure appropriate board-level risk oversight, how to define the roles and responsibilities of internal audit, compliance and the executive-level risk committee, and how to position a chief risk officer and the risk management unit etc.
Risk Landscape and Taxonomy
As a first step, one must try to bring some conceptual order to the many different dimensions of risk that we hear about in connection to financial services. The worst is to be blindsided by unknown unknowns, i.e. by potential losses arising from categories of uncertain events that we do not even have on our radar. This would mean that we also do not have processes and tools in place to measure and mitigate these exposures. Therefore, it is critical to set up a high-level risk map that is as broad and all-inclusive as possible and provides a terminological anchor for any and all possible risk exposures: Have you thought about the risk of loan officers using physical intimidation to collect from micro-borrowers and a journalist picking up on this and turning it into a national news story on the abuses of microfinance and many more clients now refusing to pay these microcredit bandits as a consequence? Yes, that's covered. It is called the reputational dimension of operational risk and it relates to the adherence of staff to documented policies and procedures. This should be picked up during internal control site inspections or through the client complaint hotline. With a view to establishing such a high-level risk map, this unit will guide us through an initial review of the financial services risk landscape including credit transaction and credit portfolio risk, liquidity, interest rate risk, foreign exchange rate risk, currency induced credit risk, operational risk (including reputational risk, compliance, AML/CFT), as well as capital adequacy and covenant risks.
Credit Risk Management
We will talk about credit transaction versus credit portfolio risk and about organizational principles of credit risk management in SME lending, micro-enterprise finance and consumer credit. Portfolio risk management always starts with a keen eye on concentrations and the need for effective ex-ante diversification and some macro-exposure budgeting. From there, we will study traditional portfolio performance diagnostics: such as arrears aging schedules, vintage curves and the transition matrix. We will also spend much time on the data requirements for predictive credit modelling and the development of a comprehensive client data strategy that will enable targeted marketing and credible development impact reporting.
Operational Risk Management
Many aspects of operational risk in MSME Finance are closely related to credit risk and also manifest in unrecoverable loans. We will deal with this type of operational risk in the credit process in great detail in the course.
Further, we will study the operational risks associated with the scope of Compliance in retail banking. Business continuity planning is another critical operational risk topic that is sometimes neglected in MSME Finance. We will then take a detailed look at how to best organize the control of such a vast field of potential loss events as may arise from operational risk. A loss event database with some internal audit / internal control workflow functionality can be a great tool for organizing the many operational risk anecdotes and for identifying and tracking key risk drivers.
Interest Rate Risk Management
Interest rate risk (in the banking book) is essentially about differences in the timing and degree by which unexpected changes in the level of wholesale market interest rates will be absorbed into the product rates charged to clients and paid on the funding instruments raised by the institution. We will do some finger exercises in financial math as we revisit time-value-of-money concepts that are at the heart of the interest rate risk "problem". We then take some conventional interest rate risk measurements, i.e. re-pricing gap reports by currency, basis-weighted repricing gaps, duration weighted gaps, and net interest income simulation. Once we can quantify the interest rate risk exposure, one can proceed to determining interest rate risk limits and discussing rate risk actions that can manage interest rate risk back within acceptable limits. These actions will include alignments on treasury assets and liabilities, changes to the origination of client contracts and some simple overlay transactions using financial derivatives.
Foreign Exchange Rate Risk Management
It will also touch on related convertibility and transfer risks which are particularly relevant in developing and emerging markets. You will learn how to measure basic forex exposure by determining current and future open positions. When we combine an open position with an estimate of how much a currency might realistically fluctuate over a certain period of time, we can obtain a confidence interval of maximum losses from forex risk, the so-called value-at-risk. We will also study the implications of using a foreign functional currency (e.g. the USD in Cambodia) and of dealing with currency risk more broadly in the context of partial or full dollarisation. This will lead us to structural forex positions, currency-hedged equity and the issue of managing currency-induced credit risk at the client level. As always, we will work through the full risk cycle from identifying the different types of risks associated with the use of multiple currencies, quantifying these exposures, establishing acceptable limits for each and understanding the instruments at our disposal to manage exposures back into compliance with those limits.
Liquidity Risk Management
We will then discuss the organization of liquidity management and define the roles and responsibilities of a treasury manager or finance director vis-à-vis that of the risk manager as it relates to liquidity and the short-term investing and borrowing activities of the institution. We will measure liquidity on the balance sheet using various ratios and develop detailed cash flow forecasts. The single biggest challenge in liquidity is the study of depositor behavior under normal and under stressed market circumstances. This type of core deposit analysis requires some statistical analysis and modeling, which we will develop in detail in the course.
Risk Management Policy Framework
Here, we propose templates for the definition of roles and responsibilities and policy drafts that document best practice risk management. These templates can easily be scaled and customized to the size and complexity of your institution. Risk management really only works if it is itself a disciplined, documented and audited procedure that is woven right into the fabric of all business activities of the institution. In short, these policies describe the organization of risk management, specify the analyses and tools used to quantify risk, summarize prudential, internal and covenant limits that apply to exposures and describe the allowable actions and instruments to manage exposures within the limits.
Wrap up, Systems and Outlook
Here, we will look at the strategic and competitive implications of good risk management practice and the latest developments in the science of risk and its regulatory environment. As always, the focus is on what this all means for small banks and non-bank financial institutions in emerging markets and developing countries. We will also look at the merits of various software solutions for Enterprise-wide Risk Management and other opportunities for further refining risk governance and reporting, and for managing the cost of compliance.
COURSE OUTLINE
General Introduction into Risk Management
There is a whole science of risk out there. Armies of risk professionals are making a good living on the simple idea that life in general, and outcomes in business in particular, are uncertain and things might go differently from what we have budgeted and planned for. So, before we delve deeply into the details of models and quantitative analytics, it should be helpful to first get a big-picture overview of the fundamental concepts of risk, of the main schools of thought in risk analysis and of the stakeholders who shape the framework within which financial institutions must manage their exposures.
We will discuss the general principles of risk management as defined by ISO 31000 (2009/2018), look at risk specific terminology in mathematics, industry and in the financial sector and even consider the content and reference framework of other risk management credentials. You are going to spend six months studying hard for this Risk Management Certificate. We want you to be certain that you are taking the right class for your needs!
Governance of Risk in Financial Institutions
Conscious and well-controlled risk-taking is the natural role of financial institutions and the way they add value to modern society. Therefore, risk management should be job number one for the owners. From there, the governance of risk should cascade down via the Board of Directors to the executive management level. Since financial institutions typically intermediate multiples of other people's money relative to equity, the self-preservation instinct of owners may not be enough to keep risk taking at reasonable levels. Central banks, national supervisory authorities and self-regulatory organizations thus intervene with consumer protection rules, prudential regulation and best practice standards and try to constrain risky positioning and limit external effects on depositors and the wider economy.
The unit introduces the regulatory framework and various sources of guidance on risk management best practices in financial institutions including the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, central banks, national regulators, as well as cooperative and other self-regulatory mechanisms. We will also look at specific microfinance industry guidance from sector associations and international microfinance networks, donor associations, CGAP etc.
This unit will also discuss in detail how retail banks and microfinance institutions may implement these governance principles from an organizational perspective, i.e. how to practically ensure appropriate board-level risk oversight, how to define the roles and responsibilities of internal audit, compliance and the executive-level risk committee, and how to position a chief risk officer and the risk management unit etc.
Risk Landscape and Taxonomy
As a first step, one must try to bring some conceptual order to the many different dimensions of risk that we hear about in connection to financial services. The worst is to be blindsided by unknown unknowns, i.e. by potential losses arising from categories of uncertain events that we do not even have on our radar. This would mean that we also do not have processes and tools in place to measure and mitigate these exposures. Therefore, it is critical to set up a high-level risk map that is as broad and all-inclusive as possible and provides a terminological anchor for any and all possible risk exposures: Have you thought about the risk of loan officers using physical intimidation to collect from micro-borrowers and a journalist picking up on this and turning it into a national news story on the abuses of microfinance and many more clients now refusing to pay these microcredit bandits as a consequence? Yes, that's covered. It is called the reputational dimension of operational risk and it relates to the adherence of staff to documented policies and procedures. This should be picked up during internal control site inspections or through the client complaint hotline. With a view to establishing such a high-level risk map, this unit will guide us through an initial review of the financial services risk landscape including credit transaction and credit portfolio risk, liquidity, interest rate risk, foreign exchange rate risk, currency induced credit risk, operational risk (including reputational risk, compliance, AML/CFT), as well as capital adequacy and covenant risks.
Credit Risk Management
We will talk about credit transaction versus credit portfolio risk and about organizational principles of credit risk management in SME lending, micro-enterprise finance and consumer credit. Portfolio risk management always starts with a keen eye on concentrations and the need for effective ex-ante diversification and some macro-exposure budgeting. From there, we will study traditional portfolio performance diagnostics: such as arrears aging schedules, vintage curves and the transition matrix. We will also spend much time on the data requirements for predictive credit modelling and the development of a comprehensive client data strategy that will enable targeted marketing and credible development impact reporting.
Operational Risk Management
Many aspects of operational risk in MSME Finance are closely related to credit risk and also manifest in unrecoverable loans. We will deal with this type of operational risk in the credit process in great detail in the course.
Further, we will study the operational risks associated with the scope of Compliance in retail banking. Business continuity planning is another critical operational risk topic that is sometimes neglected in MSME Finance. We will then take a detailed look at how to best organize the control of such a vast field of potential loss events as may arise from operational risk. A loss event database with some internal audit / internal control workflow functionality can be a great tool for organizing the many operational risk anecdotes and for identifying and tracking key risk drivers.
Interest Rate Risk Management
Interest rate risk (in the banking book) is essentially about differences in the timing and degree by which unexpected changes in the level of wholesale market interest rates will be absorbed into the product rates charged to clients and paid on the funding instruments raised by the institution. We will do some finger exercises in financial math as we revisit time-value-of-money concepts that are at the heart of the interest rate risk "problem". We then take some conventional interest rate risk measurements, i.e. re-pricing gap reports by currency, basis-weighted repricing gaps, duration weighted gaps, and net interest income simulation. Once we can quantify the interest rate risk exposure, one can proceed to determining interest rate risk limits and discussing rate risk actions that can manage interest rate risk back within acceptable limits. These actions will include alignments on treasury assets and liabilities, changes to the origination of client contracts and some simple overlay transactions using financial derivatives.
Foreign Exchange Rate Risk Management
It will also touch on related convertibility and transfer risks which are particularly relevant in developing and emerging markets. You will learn how to measure basic forex exposure by determining current and future open positions. When we combine an open position with an estimate of how much a currency might realistically fluctuate over a certain period of time, we can obtain a confidence interval of maximum losses from forex risk, the so-called value-at-risk. We will also study the implications of using a foreign functional currency (e.g. the USD in Cambodia) and of dealing with currency risk more broadly in the context of partial or full dollarisation. This will lead us to structural forex positions, currency-hedged equity and the issue of managing currency-induced credit risk at the client level. As always, we will work through the full risk cycle from identifying the different types of risks associated with the use of multiple currencies, quantifying these exposures, establishing acceptable limits for each and understanding the instruments at our disposal to manage exposures back into compliance with those limits.
Liquidity Risk Management
We will then discuss the organization of liquidity management and define the roles and responsibilities of a treasury manager or finance director vis-à-vis that of the risk manager as it relates to liquidity and the short-term investing and borrowing activities of the institution. We will measure liquidity on the balance sheet using various ratios and develop detailed cash flow forecasts. The single biggest challenge in liquidity is the study of depositor behavior under normal and under stressed market circumstances. This type of core deposit analysis requires some statistical analysis and modeling, which we will develop in detail in the course.
Risk Management Policy Framework
Here, we propose templates for the definition of roles and responsibilities and policy drafts that document best practice risk management. These templates can easily be scaled and customized to the size and complexity of your institution. Risk management really only works if it is itself a disciplined, documented and audited procedure that is woven right into the fabric of all business activities of the institution. In short, these policies describe the organization of risk management, specify the analyses and tools used to quantify risk, summarize prudential, internal and covenant limits that apply to exposures and describe the allowable actions and instruments to manage exposures within the limits.
Wrap up, Systems and Outlook
Here, we will look at the strategic and competitive implications of good risk management practice and the latest developments in the science of risk and its regulatory environment. As always, the focus is on what this all means for small banks and non-bank financial institutions in emerging markets and developing countries. We will also look at the merits of various software solutions for Enterprise-wide Risk Management and other opportunities for further refining risk governance and reporting, and for managing the cost of compliance.
STUDY JOURNEY
Register
Particiapte
Pass the Exam
Get Certified
MODULE OF
Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance.
Diploma in Risk Management
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Risk Management.
Diploma in Financial Inclusion
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Financial Inclusion.
Diploma in Green Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Green Finance.
MODULE OF
Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance.
Diploma in Risk Management
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Risk Management.
Diploma in Financial Inclusion
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Financial Inclusion.
Diploma in Green Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Green Finance.
MODULE OF
Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Master of Leadership in Sustainable Finance.
Diploma in Risk Management
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Risk Management.
Diploma in Financial Inclusion
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Financial Inclusion.
Diploma in Green Finance
Benefit from an Alumni discount and have the course credited when you continue to the Diploma in Green Finance.

