Collective Intelligence Key result of futures research methodology Key element in the next economics Key strategy for addressing the 15 Global Challenges.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Australias future economic challenges: perspectives from employers ACTU Investment Forum Peter Burn, Director of Public Policy, Ai Group 17 June 2011.
Advertisements

A 2030 framework for climate and energy policies Marten Westrup
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 China and India in the World Economy.
Sherry Farzami Project Manager- Education
Integrating the Three Pillars of Sustainable Development:
1 1 Presented by: Sara L. Johnson Managing Director Global Macroeconomics Group DRI-WEFA August 7, 2001 The U.S. Economic Outlook: Turbulent Times.
1 9 November 2011 Heavy Duty Vehicle GHG emissions Philip Owen – DG Climate Action.
IFC 2009 Creating Opportunity. 2 Our Vision That people should have the opportunity to escape poverty and improve their lives We foster sustainable economic.
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE LENERGIE Energy Technology Policy Progress and Way Forward Fridtjof Unander Energy Technology Policy.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
ESPON Open Seminar June 2012 in Aalborg New European Territorial Evidence for development of Regions and Cities.
FOREST EUROPE Preparing the Sixth Ministerial Conference, including a possible legal instrument on forests EFI Annual Conference 15 September 2010, Dresden,
May ITU-T Workshop ICTs: Building the Green City of the Future Arthur Levin Chief, ITU-TSB ITU-T, ICTs and Climate Change United Nations Pavilion.
1 WATER AUTHORITY Dr. Or Goldfarb CENTRAL BUREAU of STATISTICS Zaur Ibragimov Water Accounts in Israel Vienna January 2009.
Education & Full Employment Garry Jacobs World Academy of Art & Science Dream of a Global Knowledge Society Inter-University Centre, Dubrovnik, Sept 8,
Page 1 Bureau of Economic, Energy and Business AffairsU.S. Department of State Bureau of Economic, Energy and Business Affairs Promoting Free Trade in.
The Millennium Project 2007 Millennium Project Planning Committee Meeting Deloitte & Touche, LLP Minneapolis.
Sustainable Energy for All A focus on efficiency and climate change Kandeh K. Yumkella, Director-General WMO, Geneva,
Experian, 2007 China: Economic Powerhouse Matthew Sherwood Senior Global Economist Experian Business Strategies
Green Growth OECD – CANADA 50 YEARS 3 rd June 2011 Simon Upton, Director, Environment.
 Challenge technofix, scientific economic response  Real issues are about principles and ethics of development and trade  Need a framework of gender.
Some Elements of the Emerging Global Economic System to improve the human condition by 2030 With increasing global interdependence and the speed of change,
Page 1© Siemens Ltd All rights reserved Sustainability as an opportunity.
EVENTS LEADING UP TO AND OUTPUTS OF WCC – 3 Filipe Lúcio.
Joint action towards knowledge management Dr. Inga Jacobs Executive Manager: Business Development, Marketing & Communication Water Research.
10/22/20141 GDP and Economic Growth Chapter /22/20142 Outline Gross Domestic Product Gross Domestic Product Economic Growth Economic Growth.
On 12 December 2013 in Frankfurt/Main VCI‘s Annual Press Conference 1 Development of chemical production in Germany In 2013, the production level of the.
1 Economics and Limits to Growth: What’s Sustainable? Dennis Meadows at The Population Institute Washington, DC October 6, 2009.
China’s Age of Abundance: An Update WANG Feng, Fudan University and University of California, Irvine SHEN Ke, Fudan University LI Ding, Renmin University.
1 School of Oriental & African Studies Reducing Food Price Volatility for Food Security & Development: G20 Action December 2010 Andrew Dorward Centre for.
Macro Chapter 17 Institutions, Policies, and Cross- Country Differences in Income and Growth.
(The Global Programme of Research On Climate Change Vulnerability, Impacts and Adaptation) Adaptation Knowledge Day V: Climate Change Adaptation Gaps BONN,
Trade and Poverty Experiences from Cambodia CUTS Conference on “Trade, Development and Poverty Linkages: Lessons and Future Directions” June 23, 2009,
MENA Development Report On Water Making the Most of Scarcity MNA Water Seminar June 28, 2007 World Bank Tokyo Satoru Ueda.
Chinese – EU cooperation on water - Partnerships on Water Challenges 2014 CEWP High Level Conference, 4 th December 2014 Marta Moren Abat DG ENVIRONMENT,
Alomar_111_81 Economic Growth and Instability. Alomar_111_82 Economic Growth Economic growth can be define as: An increase in real GDP over some time.
1 Capacity Development for Water and Food Security Dr. Jens Liebe UN-Water Decade Programme on Capacity Development (UNW-DPC) GEOSS S+T Stakeholder Workshop.
Trade and Environmentally Sustainable Economic Growth By Rae Kwon Chung Director, Environment and Sustainable Development Division, UNESCAP Regional Workshop.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 Environmental Management: Readings and Cases Edited by Michael V. Russo.
Chapter 3 Economic Activity in a Changing World pp
Section 1: World Population
Long-Run Economic Growth
Energy Efficiency: What the IEA calls “the first fuel” Workshop Session: Knowledge Mobilization Thursday May 14, 11: :30 am Four Seasons Hotel, Vancouver,
Skills and Technology 2010 A Global Overview by Professor Ron Johnston EE-OZ Annual Conference 2005 ‘Skills and Technology 2010’ 8 November 2005 Brisbane.
1 School of Oriental & African Studies MDG1 & food security: critical challenges Andrew Dorward School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
State of the Future and the Global Futures Collective Intelligence System Jerome C. Glenn The Millennium Project.
Chapter 4 Section 1 In 1950 New York was the only metropolitan area in the world with a population over 10 million. By 1994, 14 world cities had populations.
The Challenges World population is projected to grow from 6.5 billion in 2005 to nearly 9.2 billion by Thus global food production must nearly double.
PART TWO: Distribution and Human Resources
Prevention and Remediation in Selected Industrial Sectors, June 2005, Ottawa NATO’s Scientific Programme Thomas Strassburger Ottawa, Canada NATO’s.
Future of the World Economy: What we think we know 1.Collapse of USSR and communism 2.East Asian strategy success 3.Great Recession begins an argument:
Demographics. What is it? Demography is the study of population Why do people settle in certain areas? What lead to changes in settlement patterns? What.
Sustainable Clean Energy. World Nuclear Association 190 Members.
What is Geography?.  More than just map skills!
Living with water shortages To know why water availability and quality is declining To be able to explain the difference between water scarcity and water.
Summary B4. Water and Food Security Session Water-Energy-Food Security Nexus, including capacity building, is the interconnection where many global challenges.
ABOUT THE GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS. Malnutrition around the world is nothing new…what is new is the inability of millions of already undernourished people to.
World Population Chapter 4, Section 1. Population Growth  6.2 billion people now live on Earth, inhabiting about 30% of the planet’s land  Global population.
Presentation CESAER seminar, Trondheim Eva Camerer Policy Officer, Industrial Innovation Policy Development DG Enterprise and Industry 15 October 2010.
Chapter 3 Test Review November 23, Part A: Population Growth 1.Birthrate – the average number of births each year per 1,000 population 2.Death Rate.
SESSION 1: CONTEXT – THE GLOBAL RESOURCE CHALLENGE
Opportunities for Michigan Agricultural Exports Titus Awokuse Department of Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics Michigan State University Presentation.
Ben-Gurion University Honor MBA
Challenges in a Changing World
Some History of Energy and Emissions
Demographics Challenges of Growth Migration
Food Security and Climate Change
Population Concentrations
A Blueprint to safeguard Europe’s Water Resources
Challenges in a Changing World
Presentation transcript:

Collective Intelligence Key result of futures research methodology Key element in the next economics Key strategy for addressing the 15 Global Challenges It is an emergent property from synergies among data/info/knowledge software/hardware experts that continually learns from feedback to produce (nearly) just in time knowledge for better decisions than these elements acting alone.

How the 15 Global Challenges are updated Feedback from our own research – education, energy, collective intelligence, etc. Staff and Interns scanning the Internet Ask experts to review last year’s text The 15 Global Challenges are on-line for public input Regional input form Node Chairs Invite feedback via MP lists Monitoring conferences, seminars, publications Daily news reports from Interns International travel, conversions, audience feedback Then distill for patterns and double check

Some items from the 2009 State of the Future: There are more Internet users in China than people in the USA March 2009 an asteroid missed the Earth by 48,000 miles, 80% closer to the earth than the moon. None knew it was coming. US-China meetings on Global Climate Change collaboration (Apollo-like goal and NASA-line Energy-Climate Change Agency) China could pass US Economy by 2030, assuming it does not break up (water, income gaps, energy, separatist Muslim region). World pop – 6.78 billion (June 2009) and growing at 1.14% per year (1.16% last year); hi, mid, low projections for , 9.2, 8.0 billion, and than falls without longevity breakthroughs; Industrial countries fertility rates UP from 1.35 projected in 2006 to % annual growth in developing countries over past 5 years, to drop to 3% for 2009 – still more than 2 billion people living on $2 or less/day

Some more items from the 2009 State of the Future: World recession lowers State of the Future Index for 10 years US-China 10-year Apollo-like climate change goal with an energy R&D program to achieve it gaining interest (US/China Press Conf) Press freedoms are continuing to decline Half the world continues to be vulnerable to instability and violence World recession Rising prices of food and energy and fertilizer Scarcity of water and food Falling water tables, drying rivers Desertification Climate change Failing states Political, economic, and environmental migrations