Our first issue of 2013 starts with three important topics that are recently receiving much attention,
but whose consequences and dynamics are difficult to grasp. These three topics deserve another
look because the visibility of some events may hinder what are their actual potential in the future.
Our first article is about various countries in the South American region organizing macro-events
in order to attract tourist and promote their service sector —where a great portion of informal jobs
and precariousness exist. Governments are investing heavily in creating infrastructure and giving
all the support that the private sector needs to organize successful events. Nevertheless, these
events are just the tip of the iceberg: governments may be losing the opportunity of having a wave
of tourist in the next ten years in order to extend benefits to a vast group of informal workers that
depend on services that tourist demand, such as retailing, restaurants, and tours, among others.
Climate change is making things worse for vulnerable population in South American countries.
Nevertheless, the rhetoric at negotiation tables still refers to the time when the Kyoto Protocol was
being designed. Such clear division of responsibilities between developed and developing countries
simply cannot hold in a post-Kyoto world. It is now that such divisions are becoming a
insurmountable barrier to reach an agreement. Nevertheless, such divisions of interests, goals and
coalitions has roots in the growing diversity of countries in the region, but they cannot be a pretext
for not reaching a shared criteria to deal with global negotiations about climate change.
Participation was, two decades ago, the flavor of the month in development policies. Giving power
to people in democracies was a correct strategy to improve social services and design public
policies. Nevertheless, the growing gap between the political discourse on what participation can
potentially bring and what actually achieves in most localities is giving ammunition to some
authorities to reverse participatory processes. Again, cities need to be creative, not only by
improving consultations with alternative techniques to reach people that has been reluctant to
participate, but also by improving their internal bureaucratic processes to become more responsive
and open to citizens’ preferences.
When Tom Murphy was Pittsburgh’s Mayor, the City launched an aggressive strategy to leverage its higher education and place-based assets to fuel and sustain its economic recovery. At the Urban Land Institute, Tom has been gathering insights on transformational best practices throughout the world. As Pittsburgh is again about to launch a new vision for the City, Tom will look back and forward on the City’s continued development and the lessons it can share with and learn from others.
• Hon. Tom Murphy, Senior Resident Fellow, Urban Land
Institute and Former Mayor of Pittsburgh
This is follow-up from the IBM Almaden Sept 27th meeting on "Regional Upward Spirals: The Co-Evolution of Future Technologies, Skills, Jobs, and Quality-of-Life"
We are very pleased to share the full report from our Future of Cities project – now available as PDF on SlideShare and as digital print via Amazon.
As previously shared in PPT format (https://www.slideshare.net/futureagenda2/future-of-cities-2017-summary), this is the detailed synthesis of insights gained from multiple discussions around the world. It brings together views on how cities are changing from a wide range of experts from 12 workshops undertaken over the past 2 years in Beirut, Christchurch, Delhi, Dubai, Guayaquil, Mumbai, Singapore, London, Toronto and Vienna.
Cities are where most of us choose to live, work and interact with others. As a result they are where innovation happens, where most ideas form and from which economic growth largely stems. They are also where significant problems can first emerge and where challenges are magnified.
This report explores some of the common challenges found in urban areas such as managing migration, countering inequality and sustainable scaling; highlights shared ambitions of having healthier, accessible and more intelligent cities; and also details some of the emerging concerns around creating cities that are safe, resilient and open to broader collaboration.
As a compilation of thoughts and ideas from a host of experts we would foremost like to thank all of the many workshop participants for their input. Without your views we would not be able to curate this synthesis. In addition we would also like to thank others who have added in extra content, shared reports and reviewed the core document. We hope that this reflects all your varied perspectives.
Going forward, we also hope that this will be of use to those leading cities, designing new districts, developing policy and exploring opportunities for urban innovation. We know that several cities are already using the insights as stimulus for challenging strategy and stimulating innovation. In addition, linking into to another Growth Agenda driven project looking at the Worlds Most Innovative Cities (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/innovation-hot-spots-countries-vs-cities-tim-jones), this is also being used as part of events designed to help future leaders identify how and where they can make most impact.
As with all Future Agenda open foresight projects the output is shared under Creative Commons (Non Commercial) and so we trust that you may find it useful. This PDF on slideshare can be freely downloaded and shared. If you want to print out the report, the easiest way is to order a digital hardcopy via Amazon (for which they unfortunately charge a fee) but this is a quick and high quality print.
Future of Currency - public share July 2016Future Agenda
This is a synthesis of insights from last year's Future Agenda discussions on the future of currency. It builds on the three events hosted by Six capital and adds in further context and implications for business, government and society. It is a global view of the changes taking place and how they may impact finance, trade and wider society and is being shared to help inform, challenge and focus wider action. We hope you find it interesting.
Cities have never been more important for human well-beingand economic prosperity. Half of the world’s population livesin urban areas, while about 80 per cent of the world’s outputis produced in cities. And it is expected that the vast majorityof all new jobs will be urban. These will provide incomes tobillions and raise hundreds of millions of people out of poverty.South Africa’s situation is similar, with economic growthbeing disproportionately generated in the biggest cities, and agrowing proportion of people living in urban areas. However,only 60 per cent of the country is currently urbanised,suggesting more urbanisation is to come. If the next waveof city growth is managed well, it can accelerate economicgrowth and job creation, and improve people’s quality of life.This is what well-managed cities do: they raise incomes bymaking people more productive and creating opportunitiesthat cannot exist anywhere else. Historically, urbanisationhas been linked with industrialisation, which has bothfacilitated cities’ growth and depended on it. Cities have alsomade possible the efficient delivery of all kinds of services —energy, water, health, education, finance, logistics, media,transport, etc.
Our first issue of 2013 starts with three important topics that are recently receiving much attention,
but whose consequences and dynamics are difficult to grasp. These three topics deserve another
look because the visibility of some events may hinder what are their actual potential in the future.
Our first article is about various countries in the South American region organizing macro-events
in order to attract tourist and promote their service sector —where a great portion of informal jobs
and precariousness exist. Governments are investing heavily in creating infrastructure and giving
all the support that the private sector needs to organize successful events. Nevertheless, these
events are just the tip of the iceberg: governments may be losing the opportunity of having a wave
of tourist in the next ten years in order to extend benefits to a vast group of informal workers that
depend on services that tourist demand, such as retailing, restaurants, and tours, among others.
Climate change is making things worse for vulnerable population in South American countries.
Nevertheless, the rhetoric at negotiation tables still refers to the time when the Kyoto Protocol was
being designed. Such clear division of responsibilities between developed and developing countries
simply cannot hold in a post-Kyoto world. It is now that such divisions are becoming a
insurmountable barrier to reach an agreement. Nevertheless, such divisions of interests, goals and
coalitions has roots in the growing diversity of countries in the region, but they cannot be a pretext
for not reaching a shared criteria to deal with global negotiations about climate change.
Participation was, two decades ago, the flavor of the month in development policies. Giving power
to people in democracies was a correct strategy to improve social services and design public
policies. Nevertheless, the growing gap between the political discourse on what participation can
potentially bring and what actually achieves in most localities is giving ammunition to some
authorities to reverse participatory processes. Again, cities need to be creative, not only by
improving consultations with alternative techniques to reach people that has been reluctant to
participate, but also by improving their internal bureaucratic processes to become more responsive
and open to citizens’ preferences.
When Tom Murphy was Pittsburgh’s Mayor, the City launched an aggressive strategy to leverage its higher education and place-based assets to fuel and sustain its economic recovery. At the Urban Land Institute, Tom has been gathering insights on transformational best practices throughout the world. As Pittsburgh is again about to launch a new vision for the City, Tom will look back and forward on the City’s continued development and the lessons it can share with and learn from others.
• Hon. Tom Murphy, Senior Resident Fellow, Urban Land
Institute and Former Mayor of Pittsburgh
This is follow-up from the IBM Almaden Sept 27th meeting on "Regional Upward Spirals: The Co-Evolution of Future Technologies, Skills, Jobs, and Quality-of-Life"
We are very pleased to share the full report from our Future of Cities project – now available as PDF on SlideShare and as digital print via Amazon.
As previously shared in PPT format (https://www.slideshare.net/futureagenda2/future-of-cities-2017-summary), this is the detailed synthesis of insights gained from multiple discussions around the world. It brings together views on how cities are changing from a wide range of experts from 12 workshops undertaken over the past 2 years in Beirut, Christchurch, Delhi, Dubai, Guayaquil, Mumbai, Singapore, London, Toronto and Vienna.
Cities are where most of us choose to live, work and interact with others. As a result they are where innovation happens, where most ideas form and from which economic growth largely stems. They are also where significant problems can first emerge and where challenges are magnified.
This report explores some of the common challenges found in urban areas such as managing migration, countering inequality and sustainable scaling; highlights shared ambitions of having healthier, accessible and more intelligent cities; and also details some of the emerging concerns around creating cities that are safe, resilient and open to broader collaboration.
As a compilation of thoughts and ideas from a host of experts we would foremost like to thank all of the many workshop participants for their input. Without your views we would not be able to curate this synthesis. In addition we would also like to thank others who have added in extra content, shared reports and reviewed the core document. We hope that this reflects all your varied perspectives.
Going forward, we also hope that this will be of use to those leading cities, designing new districts, developing policy and exploring opportunities for urban innovation. We know that several cities are already using the insights as stimulus for challenging strategy and stimulating innovation. In addition, linking into to another Growth Agenda driven project looking at the Worlds Most Innovative Cities (https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/innovation-hot-spots-countries-vs-cities-tim-jones), this is also being used as part of events designed to help future leaders identify how and where they can make most impact.
As with all Future Agenda open foresight projects the output is shared under Creative Commons (Non Commercial) and so we trust that you may find it useful. This PDF on slideshare can be freely downloaded and shared. If you want to print out the report, the easiest way is to order a digital hardcopy via Amazon (for which they unfortunately charge a fee) but this is a quick and high quality print.
Future of Currency - public share July 2016Future Agenda
This is a synthesis of insights from last year's Future Agenda discussions on the future of currency. It builds on the three events hosted by Six capital and adds in further context and implications for business, government and society. It is a global view of the changes taking place and how they may impact finance, trade and wider society and is being shared to help inform, challenge and focus wider action. We hope you find it interesting.
Cities have never been more important for human well-beingand economic prosperity. Half of the world’s population livesin urban areas, while about 80 per cent of the world’s outputis produced in cities. And it is expected that the vast majorityof all new jobs will be urban. These will provide incomes tobillions and raise hundreds of millions of people out of poverty.South Africa’s situation is similar, with economic growthbeing disproportionately generated in the biggest cities, and agrowing proportion of people living in urban areas. However,only 60 per cent of the country is currently urbanised,suggesting more urbanisation is to come. If the next waveof city growth is managed well, it can accelerate economicgrowth and job creation, and improve people’s quality of life.This is what well-managed cities do: they raise incomes bymaking people more productive and creating opportunitiesthat cannot exist anywhere else. Historically, urbanisationhas been linked with industrialisation, which has bothfacilitated cities’ growth and depended on it. Cities have alsomade possible the efficient delivery of all kinds of services —energy, water, health, education, finance, logistics, media,transport, etc.
Nearly every major metro region in America is experiencing great economic stress. Amazingly, stakeholders in every region are disconnected, disjointed and unable to effectively communicate. There exists no common vision, strategy or framework for including and empowering all of the region's residents.
Local innovation ecosystems are fragmented, with leaders operating in their own independent silos. And historically underserved and disconnected peoples and communities are so far behind they are losing ground daily as the explosive growth of innovation hubs and the startup culture threatens to leave them behind permanently.
The Innovation Economy Epiphany Workshop introduces the BIG PICTURE in a way that all audiences can clearly understand. In this workshop, the key issues of a common local vision, common understanding, common strategies, inclusive frameworks and open collaboration are threaded throughout.
But how do we develop a common vision, common understanding, and a strategic approach toward economic inclusion and increased regional competitiveness?
How do we empower those who have fallen far behind to not only participate in the innovation economy but become productive in job growth and wealth creation?
And how can we identify and scale up what's working in each local region?
What role does education play in the "economic future" of each region?
And how do we get local stakeholders to break down the walls of competitive silos to collaborate for the benefit of each generation?
This workshop is an innovative approach to aligning the disjointed, connecting the disconnected and empowering individuals, communities and regions to develop a sustainable pipeline to productivity process that increases job growth and regional economic competitiveness through the framework of local innovation, inclusion and impact.
You will emerge from this workshop with a significantly greater understanding of how your local innovation ecosystem works, your role in it and an understanding of how you can be part of the solution to the challenges your region faces.
This workshop is step one of a process that will open your eyes to a 21st century economic imperative and national vision of Inclusive Competitiveness. It is a must-attend event for anyone concerned about the economic future of their community, region and state.
South Africa ranks in the top four most giving nations, we explore a new platform for social justice and accountability; and a recent survey suggests MOOCs are failing to educate the poor.
http://pwc.to/13MJEh4
Cette étude compare la situation de 27 villes, toutes des capitales de la finance, du commerce et de la culture, selon dix catégories regroupant des critères aussi bien économiques que sociaux.
Cities are fonts of ideas, opportunity, art and political movements. But urban enclaves can also generate inequality, epidemics and pollution. The rapid pace of urbanization in the coming decades brings these and other unprecedented opportunities and challenges to the fore. Will cities lose their vibrant potential if the challenges they face spiral out of control?
Global Future Changes and Millennium ProjectJerome Glenn
Overview of global challenges, strategies, new technologies to improve the prospects for humanity from the Millennium Project and its annual State of the Future report
ISPIM Future Agenda - Six key challenges and major innovation opportunities...Future Agenda
A keynote at ISPIM conference in Porto on 20 June 2016 sharing insights from the latest Future Agenda programme. Focuses initially on the 6 key challenges for for next decade for future of people, place, power, belief, behaviour and business. Then shares some views from global discussions on the world in 2025 before adding in 6 major innovation opportunities for the next decade include food waste, data marketplaces, sanitation, ethical machines and deeper collaboration.
This is shared with the innovation community to hopefully inspire new actions.
The America21 Project is a national nonprofit dedicated to changing the economic narrative across Black and Urban America.
America21 promotes an Inclusive Competitiveness economic strategy in a fast-paced, knowledge-based, tech-driven global innovation economy.
America21 promotes an economic framework from the pipeline of education to the productivity of entrepreneurship based on three core pillars of the Innovation Economy:
STEM Education
(science, technology, engineering and math)
High-Growth Entrepreneurship
Access to Capital and Capital Formation
America21 seeks to connect economically disconnected communities and sectors with regional innovation clusters to strengthen the economic competitiveness of the nation by investing in all of America's talent pools.
The America21-BDPA Innovation Leadership Summit & Dinner is a networking event in concert with the 34th Annual Black Data Processing Associates Conference in Baltimore, Maryland at the Baltimore Hilton Hotel on July 31, 2012.
This unique summit will focus on the challenges and opportunities in developing an innovation ecosystem and infrastructure that nurtures job growth and wealth creation, from the pipeline of STEM education to the productivity of tech entrepreneurship and capital investment.
This event is for serious-minded leaders who want to change the current economic paradigm and build an access channel for Black America to compete in the 21st century innovation economy.
The ideas explored in Connected Cities chart the emergence of a political and economic phenomenon-the city as the new connected republic of the 21st Century. Simon Willis, Global Head of eGovernment for the Internet Business Solutions Group at Cisco Systems, has collated essays that show how different cities, at the cutting edge of the process, are grappling with the various stages of connectivity.
Future of wealth - Insights from Discussions Building on an Initial Perspecti...Future Agenda
The initial perspective on the Future of Wealth kicked off the Future Agenda 2.0 global discussions taking place through 2015. This summary builds on the initial view and is updated as we progress the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
A Creative Manifesto: Why the Place You Choose to Live is the Most Important ...guestca2ed6
By Richard Florida. Published as a ChangeThis manifest.
Increasingly, the place you choose to live will help determine your success in business, in finding a life partner, and in living a fulfilling life. In fact, it may be the most important decision of your life. I believe that we are in the beginnings of a shift as fundamental as the industrial revolution was over a century ago—one that will have as dramatic an impact on how people live and work. Furthermore, it will have a dramatic impact on where they live and work.
"Metro-Economics": Towards a "Unified Field Theory"RWVentures
This presentation was delivered by Bob Weissbourd as part of the Portland Plan -- Inspiring Community Series. The speech begins to tie together the various pieces of economic development -- from neighborhoods to regions, equity to prosperity, human capital to clusters -- into a comprehensive, integrated, practical approach to metropolitan economic growth.
Future of work Insights from discussions building on an initial perspective ...Future Agenda
The initial perspective on the Future of Work byby Andrew Curry of The Futures Company kicked off the Future Agenda 2.0 global discussions taking place through 2015. This summary builds on the initial view and is updated as we progress the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
Nearly every major metro region in America is experiencing great economic stress. Amazingly, stakeholders in every region are disconnected, disjointed and unable to effectively communicate. There exists no common vision, strategy or framework for including and empowering all of the region's residents.
Local innovation ecosystems are fragmented, with leaders operating in their own independent silos. And historically underserved and disconnected peoples and communities are so far behind they are losing ground daily as the explosive growth of innovation hubs and the startup culture threatens to leave them behind permanently.
The Innovation Economy Epiphany Workshop introduces the BIG PICTURE in a way that all audiences can clearly understand. In this workshop, the key issues of a common local vision, common understanding, common strategies, inclusive frameworks and open collaboration are threaded throughout.
But how do we develop a common vision, common understanding, and a strategic approach toward economic inclusion and increased regional competitiveness?
How do we empower those who have fallen far behind to not only participate in the innovation economy but become productive in job growth and wealth creation?
And how can we identify and scale up what's working in each local region?
What role does education play in the "economic future" of each region?
And how do we get local stakeholders to break down the walls of competitive silos to collaborate for the benefit of each generation?
This workshop is an innovative approach to aligning the disjointed, connecting the disconnected and empowering individuals, communities and regions to develop a sustainable pipeline to productivity process that increases job growth and regional economic competitiveness through the framework of local innovation, inclusion and impact.
You will emerge from this workshop with a significantly greater understanding of how your local innovation ecosystem works, your role in it and an understanding of how you can be part of the solution to the challenges your region faces.
This workshop is step one of a process that will open your eyes to a 21st century economic imperative and national vision of Inclusive Competitiveness. It is a must-attend event for anyone concerned about the economic future of their community, region and state.
South Africa ranks in the top four most giving nations, we explore a new platform for social justice and accountability; and a recent survey suggests MOOCs are failing to educate the poor.
http://pwc.to/13MJEh4
Cette étude compare la situation de 27 villes, toutes des capitales de la finance, du commerce et de la culture, selon dix catégories regroupant des critères aussi bien économiques que sociaux.
Cities are fonts of ideas, opportunity, art and political movements. But urban enclaves can also generate inequality, epidemics and pollution. The rapid pace of urbanization in the coming decades brings these and other unprecedented opportunities and challenges to the fore. Will cities lose their vibrant potential if the challenges they face spiral out of control?
Global Future Changes and Millennium ProjectJerome Glenn
Overview of global challenges, strategies, new technologies to improve the prospects for humanity from the Millennium Project and its annual State of the Future report
ISPIM Future Agenda - Six key challenges and major innovation opportunities...Future Agenda
A keynote at ISPIM conference in Porto on 20 June 2016 sharing insights from the latest Future Agenda programme. Focuses initially on the 6 key challenges for for next decade for future of people, place, power, belief, behaviour and business. Then shares some views from global discussions on the world in 2025 before adding in 6 major innovation opportunities for the next decade include food waste, data marketplaces, sanitation, ethical machines and deeper collaboration.
This is shared with the innovation community to hopefully inspire new actions.
The America21 Project is a national nonprofit dedicated to changing the economic narrative across Black and Urban America.
America21 promotes an Inclusive Competitiveness economic strategy in a fast-paced, knowledge-based, tech-driven global innovation economy.
America21 promotes an economic framework from the pipeline of education to the productivity of entrepreneurship based on three core pillars of the Innovation Economy:
STEM Education
(science, technology, engineering and math)
High-Growth Entrepreneurship
Access to Capital and Capital Formation
America21 seeks to connect economically disconnected communities and sectors with regional innovation clusters to strengthen the economic competitiveness of the nation by investing in all of America's talent pools.
The America21-BDPA Innovation Leadership Summit & Dinner is a networking event in concert with the 34th Annual Black Data Processing Associates Conference in Baltimore, Maryland at the Baltimore Hilton Hotel on July 31, 2012.
This unique summit will focus on the challenges and opportunities in developing an innovation ecosystem and infrastructure that nurtures job growth and wealth creation, from the pipeline of STEM education to the productivity of tech entrepreneurship and capital investment.
This event is for serious-minded leaders who want to change the current economic paradigm and build an access channel for Black America to compete in the 21st century innovation economy.
The ideas explored in Connected Cities chart the emergence of a political and economic phenomenon-the city as the new connected republic of the 21st Century. Simon Willis, Global Head of eGovernment for the Internet Business Solutions Group at Cisco Systems, has collated essays that show how different cities, at the cutting edge of the process, are grappling with the various stages of connectivity.
Future of wealth - Insights from Discussions Building on an Initial Perspecti...Future Agenda
The initial perspective on the Future of Wealth kicked off the Future Agenda 2.0 global discussions taking place through 2015. This summary builds on the initial view and is updated as we progress the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
A Creative Manifesto: Why the Place You Choose to Live is the Most Important ...guestca2ed6
By Richard Florida. Published as a ChangeThis manifest.
Increasingly, the place you choose to live will help determine your success in business, in finding a life partner, and in living a fulfilling life. In fact, it may be the most important decision of your life. I believe that we are in the beginnings of a shift as fundamental as the industrial revolution was over a century ago—one that will have as dramatic an impact on how people live and work. Furthermore, it will have a dramatic impact on where they live and work.
"Metro-Economics": Towards a "Unified Field Theory"RWVentures
This presentation was delivered by Bob Weissbourd as part of the Portland Plan -- Inspiring Community Series. The speech begins to tie together the various pieces of economic development -- from neighborhoods to regions, equity to prosperity, human capital to clusters -- into a comprehensive, integrated, practical approach to metropolitan economic growth.
Future of work Insights from discussions building on an initial perspective ...Future Agenda
The initial perspective on the Future of Work byby Andrew Curry of The Futures Company kicked off the Future Agenda 2.0 global discussions taking place through 2015. This summary builds on the initial view and is updated as we progress the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
A Mediterranean Approach to Open AccessLIBER Europe
Presentations from the LIBER 2013 workshop on Scholarly Communication and Research Infrastructures: : 'New Horizons for Open Access Policies in Europe' and 'Ten Recommendations on Research Data Management - What's Next?'
The European Information Landscape
LIBER and Europeana Travel
LIBER and Early European Books
Copyright and IPR
Digital Preservation
European policy on Open Access
EU Consultation on Access to, and Preservation of, Scientific Information
LERU Roadmap Towards Open Access
Future Outlook on Urban CompetitivenessWendy Schultz
The narrative of my 22 June 2010 presentation to the Global Innovation Forum in Seoul, sponsored by the Korea Economic Daily. Please refer to PDF of slidedeck, above.
Cities across the globe are strug-gling today to reinvent th.docxclarebernice
Cities across the globe are strug-
gling today to reinvent themselves
for the postindustrial economy
anticipated by sociologist Daniel Bell
and others in the 1960s.
Many communities have been
adapting their communications
infrastructure to meet the needs of
an age in which information is the
most valuable commodity. Most of
these initiatives, such as the U.S. Na-
tional Information Infrastructure and
Singapore’s Intelligent Island, focus
on the technological aspects of the
postindustrial economy.
San Diego even commissioned a
City of the Future committee in 1993
to make plans to build the first fiber-
optic-wired city in the United States
in the belief that, just as cities of the
past were built along waterways,
railroads, and interstate highways,
the cities of the future will be built
along “information highways”—
wired and wireless information
pathways connecting every home,
office, school, and hospital and,
through the World Wide Web, mil-
lions of other individuals and insti-
tutions around the world.
These new information
infrastructures are un-
doubtedly important. But
creating a twenty-first-
century city is not so much
a question of technology as
it is of jobs, dollars, and
quality of life. A community’s plan
to reinvent itself for the new,
knowledge-based economy and
society therefore requires educating
all its citizens about this new global
revolution in the nature of work. To
succeed, cities must prepare their
citizens to take ownership of their
communities and educate the next
generation of leaders and workers to
meet the new global challenges of
what has now been termed the “Cre-
ative Economy.”
At the heart of such an effort is
recognition of the vital roles that art
and culture play in enhancing eco-
nomic development and, ultimately,
defining a “creative community”—a
community that exploits the vital
linkages among art, culture, and
commerce. Communities that con-
sciously invest in these broader
human and financial resources are at
the very forefront in preparing their
citizens to meet the challenges of the
rapidly evolving, and now global,
knowledge-based economy and
society.
Cyberspace and Cyberplace
The mammoth global network of
computer systems collectively re-
ferred to as the Internet has blos-
somed from an obscure tool used by
government researchers and aca-
18 THE FUTURIST March-April 2006 www.wfs.org
Building Creative
The Role of Art and Culture
A leading authority on information technology argues that cities must
nurture the creative potential and community engagement of their citizens.
By John M. Eger
The Intelligent Community
Forum recently selected the
city of Sunderland, England,
as one of the world’s “top seven
intelligent communities of 2005.”
The Forum’s judging was based
on such factors as the availabil-
ity of broadband infrastructure,
the presence of a knowledge-
based workforce, a communal
focus on innovation, and a pro-
gressive social and political
culture.
ONE NORTHEAST / LONDON PRESS ...
Redefining urban life - Ericsson Business ReviewEricsson France
Adding mobility, broadband and the cloud to connectivity makes ideas affordable and accessible for anyone, anywhere, anytime.
The Networked Society will fuel a creative explosion, and that explosion will start in the cities.
This paper explores the tensions between urban and youth development in the information age so as to critically reflect on the rights of urban youth to reorient their socio-technological surroundings, and with it their own life course. Findings from two case studies of NYC youth are drawn on to consider both a ‘right to the city’ and ‘to research’ as deeply intertwined ontological and epistemological movements that reconfigure the production of space, knowledge and media in the smart city. As NYCs economy becomes oriented toward high-tech and creative industries, public investments are made to recruit and accommodate a highly educated, largely white, and supposedly more creative class of workers. Marginalized and poor youth are meanwhile segregated and largely sorted out of this ‘new’ economy. At a more intimate scale of development, apps like Uber shape public mobility, companies like News Corp equip public schools with educational media, and daily communication is largely facilitated by privately owned platforms and networks. The result is a geography of youth development that increasingly takes place in the proprietary cross-hairs of smart urbanism’s creative destruction. This paper unpacks two youth-based projects intended to shift this dynamic: one that developed an open-source social network and one that maintains a community-based WiFi network. Together, these projects help illustrate how broader calls for rights ‘to the city’ and ‘to research’ play out in the practical yet powerful ways youth are remaking the social, material, and digital configuration of the smart city.
That the world of work as we have always known it is undergoing rapid metamorphosis is honestly an understatement, as the boundaries and worldview of work as currently constituted are being radically redefined at rocket speed level daily by many factors but more importantly by the unfolding Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR). It appears that the ability of organizations, nations and societies to adapt and leverage the 4IR will determine the currency of their global relevance and the degree of sustainable development they can achieve.
The disruptive transformations that the fourth industrial revolution has brought into the contemporary global space are blurring the existing traditional boundaries in all spheres of life, enabling multifaceted convergence of multidisciplinary territories that were hitherto considered conceptually divergent.
This is a call to action for a multi-stakeholder, multidisciplinary approach to how nations particularly Nigeria can start conversations on the impact of the 4IR on work, the workplace and the workforce and how best to prepare for these disruptive impacts.
The widely-held belief that for-profit investments can only maximize financial returns and social purpose can only be pursued through charity—is obsolete. For the next generation, value has to be created and shared across both sectors and by everyone. Creating shared value however, can not happen through silos of social responsibility or philanthropy, it has to be a values-based investment which is why crowdfunding, pay-for-success, venture philanthropy, impact investing and other social finance vehicles are becoming so powerful.
Digital Anarchy: The Bitcoin Effect examines the potential to democratize financial exchanges by providing digital access to capital. Though one-third of humanity remains unbanked, remarkably more than one billion of these people has access to a mobile phone and thus could use bitcoin (or a derivative thereof) to participate financially. Considering the framework of “humanitarian” capitalism, the fact that bitcoin does not require a central authority to qualify or limit the participation of another human being is an important differentiator to fiat and bank-controlled instruments. This presentation argues that the innovation of bitcoin and the blockchain not only has the capacity to build registries of multi-entity contracting, it also offers the potential to create self-enforcing “smart contracts” between free individuals. Ultimately, the transparency of the blockchain has the potential to end corruption and empower a free society.
A common vision for the future of work is that, thanks to digital technology, we will all work remotely, perhaps from our homes. Graham McClements, director of architecture and head of workplace practice at the global architectural firm BDP, has a different view.
Gentrification and its Effects on Minority Communities – A Comparative Case S...Premier Publishers
This paper does a comparative analysis of four global cities and their minority districts which have been experiencing the same structural pressure of gentrification. The main contribution of this paper is providing a detailed comparison of four micro geographies worldwide and the impacts of gentrification on them: Barrio Logan in San Diego, Bo-Kaap in Cape Town, the Mission District in San Francisco, and the Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus District in Vienna. All four cities have been experiencing the displacement of minority communities due to increases in property values. These cities were chosen because their governments enacted different policies to temper the gentrification process. It was found that cities which implemented social housing and cultural inclusionary policies were more successful in maintaining the cultural and demographic make-up of the districts.
Similar to 10 23-09 old town new world presentation v2 (20)
46. “Campus Philly is a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization fueling economic growth by encouraging college students to study, explore, live and work in the Greater Philadelphia tri-state region.”
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50. Can Rock Hill become a center for the knowledge economy?
51. “ Ultimately, the viability of place…relies on the measure of commitment among individuals, especially those who are in a position to lead.” (Joel Kotkin, The New Geography )
Globalization is radically changing how we live, work and spend our money.
Some people are very disturbed about the effects of globalization on local economies.
Globalization is basically a process of eliminating trade and cultural barriers between different parts of the world. Today we buy cars from Korea and clothes from China. Children in Tokyo grow up with Disney characters and visit Disney World. In Russia, they find that things go better with Coke.
Globalization has been aided by the digital revolution in communications, which has made it possible to transmit information around the globe almost instantaneously.
Over the past 30 years, we’ve moved from an industrial economy where wealth was created by the production of goods, to a knowledge economy where wealth is created from the use of information.
Thomas Friedman coined the phrase “The World is Flat” to describe a globalized world economy, a place where products and services can be produced any place in the world and then sold any place in the world. Low cost and efficiency are the primary determinants of economic success.
Place had a special meaning in the industrial economy. Businesses clustered near raw materials, near ports, railroads, rivers, and highways, near large markets, near sources of strategic information. Workers went to where the jobs were located. The new Knowledge Economy fundamentally changes the definitions of how businesses make location decisions. Examples: the US, the largest market for textile products in the world, used to be the largest manufacturer of textile products; New York is the financial center of the US and, to a significant degree, the world. Who could have predicted that the largest bank in the US would be headquartered in Charlotte? Does place matter in the Knowledge Economy? If so, how?
Place has lost its importance in the digital world. It used to be that if you wanted to work in finance, you went to New York. If you wanted to work in movies, you went to Hollywood. These associations of work with place have changed to a significant degree. “ Even such centers of gravity as Wall Street, Hollywood, and Silicon Valley, though possessing functions and allures that are mutually reinforcing, are increasingly not mandantory for the building of a successful firm or career in finance, film, or the computer industry.”
Some experts, like William Mitchell, forecast a world where our “community” won’t be the people who live near us, but rather a group of people in the digital world with whom we share common interests.
Despite clear evidence that the World is Flat and that place doesn’t matter in certain industries, there is also evidence that place has become increasingly important, particularly for businesses requiring a highly educated, technically sophisticated workforce.
Why are some cities growing in income and wealth and others are in serious decline?
What are the attributes of place that are now critical in the knowledge economy?
The evidence is that manufacturing or service work can be performed anywhere in the world where the costs are lowest. Certain higher-lever economic activities don’t follow this pattern. Instead, these activities tend to cluster in a relatively small number of urban locations. Why do higher level economic activities cluster?
Clustering of creative people and companies has powerful effects on productivity and innovation.
According to Richard Florida, the clustering of talented and creative people, “the Creative Class”, is the primary determinant of economic growth. How does this clustering occur?
Earlier this year, Richard Florida published a new book entitled Who’s Your City? In it, Florida emphatically argues that the world is, in fact, anything but flat.
To demonstrate that the world is not flat, Florida begins with a map showing the distribution of the world’s population.
Measured by patents granted worldwide.
Proxy for scientific research and discoveries. Note: Japan leads the world in commercial innovation but is dependent on scientific breakthroughs occurring elsewhere.
Florida defines a mega-region as “a new, natural economic unit that results from city-regions growing upward, becoming denser and growing outward and into one another.” The mega-region, not the city, not state and not the nation is the fundamental economic unit of the knowledge economy.
Not on list: Toronto, San Francisco & Silicon Valley, Dallas-Austin-San Antonio, Houston-New Orleans, Florida, Paris, Shanghai, Taipei, Bejing
A world-wide competition is taking place among mega-regions for income and wealth in the knowledge economy.
Sound familiar? West Bend sounds like a nice community. Why is West Bend losing young talent to Milwaukee?
So, apparently the young knowledge workers would rather live in Milwaukee than West Bend. What if there are no jobs in Milwaukee? Cities with the highest concentrations of young adults 25-34: Austin, Atlanta, Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, Dallas, Charlotte.
This is a fundamental shift in how businesses determine the place they will locate. Attracting a talented workforce will require businesses to locate or relocate to where the talented people want to live.
The competition for young knowledge workers will determine which cities succeed in the knowledge economy.
This does not bode well for cities and regions that seem to believe that they will be able to reattract young people who have moved away for fun and adventure once they hit their thirties and decide to settle down and start families. The numbers simply don’t add up. Places that lose young people will never be able to recoup, since moving slows down with age. The winning places are the ones that establish an edge early on, by attracting residents in their mid-twenties.” I think most people will agree that Rock Hill is a community, like West Bend, that tends to lose its young talent to other communities. In order to be successful in the knowledge economy, we have to change this. What are our resources for doing this?
The presence of Winthrop University in Rock Hill provides a deep resource of talented young people. Few of them choose to stay in Rock Hill after graduation. In fact, few of them even get to know Rock Hill during their 4 (or more) years here. Rock Hill isn’t yet the classic college town.
Despite the importance of young knowledge workers in the knowledge economy, very few communities have consciously focused on creating an environment that is welcoming to recent college graduates.
The presence of Winthrop in Rock Hill offers many other opportunities for success in the knowledge economy. We haven’t done a good job in the past of capitalizing on this opportunity. When was the last time you saw a Winthrop student in having lunch in downtown Rock Hill, or attending a festival or event?
Here’s a summary of what we know about successful places in the knowledge economy. Can Rock Hill be one of these places?
In 2008, Next Generation Consulting surveyed young professionals in eight cities. These interviews and focus groups revealed that they choose where to live based on the following seven indices, listed in order of importance. Can we build economic development strategies for the knowledge economy on these foundations? “ Next Cities™ are places with the assets and amenities that attract and retain a young educated work force. They have bustling city centers, walkable neighborhoods, diverse career opportunities, and vibrant art and music scenes.”
..Even large cities are increasing their efforts to retain students after graduation: Campus Philly, for example, is a leading effort to match Philadelphia’s more than 90,000 college students with local jobs and improve quality of life in line with their particular needs.”
Opportunities for clusters in certain areas: Graphic design, web design (Springs Creative, Lavalla Maddox, Insignia Design, Revenflo, Barry Grant, Winthrop) Financial services (Williams and Fudge, Todd, Bremer & Lawson, ECO Financial, Inc.) Marketing Services (The Start Group, Lavalla Maddox, Revenflo, Titan, Inc., Insignia Design) Visual Arts (Arts Center, Gettys Center, Gallery Up, Pottery Center numerous artist studios, public art) Performing Arts (Community Performance Center, School of Ballet, RH Community Theater, Old Town Amphitheater) High-tech manufacturing and prototyping (3D Systems, others?) Telecommunications (Comporium, others?)
Old Town Rock Hill is listed as the 6 th largest Knowledge Worker Meetup Group in the world . (Ahead of us are groups from Toronto, Japan and New York)
Knowledge workers care more about where they live than where they work. They are attracted to a particular living-working-learning environment. One author speaks of the development of “knowledge cities” in which “the information and knowledge architecture is at least as important as, and possibly more important than, the physical architecture….”