Club of Amsterdam Journal, March 2024, Issue 262

Club of Amsterdam Journal, March 2024, Issue 262

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CONTENT
Lead Article
Economic lookahead: As we ring in 2024, can the US economy continue to avoid a recession?
by D. Brian Blank, Associate Professor of Finance, Mississippi State University
and Brandy Hadley is an Associate Professor of Finance and the David A.
Thompson Distinguished Scholar of Applied Investments at Appalachian State University

Article 01
The Economy of Tomorrow | AI Revolution | Megacities | Documentary
by Moconomy

The Future Now Show
Futurenomics
with Bronwyn Williams & Katie Schultz

Article 02
Four good news climate stories from 2023
by Will de Freitas, The Conversation

News about the Future
> GOFAR : Global Organization For Agricultural Robotics
> Riding sound waves in the brain

Article 03
4 Hovering Cars 2024-28 | Magnetic Revolution
by Future Lab

Recommended Book
Vista: Life and getting where you want to be
by Elisabet Sahtouris, PhD

Article 04
Designed to move
by TenFold Engineering

Climate Change Success Story
Rewilding

Resources
Rewilding Europe
Rewilding in the Danube Delta
Rewilding A Nation – Britain
Dixie Creek – Nevada/USA
South Africa
Queensland, Australia
Rewilding urban farm – Abandoned Japan
The Extreme Rewilding of Chernobyl
UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

Futurist Portrait
David N. Bengston
Environmental Futurist



Tags:
Africa, Agriculture, ARCHITECTURE, Artificial Intelligence,
Australia, Brain, Britain, Chernobyl, Climate Change, Danube,
Electric cars, Europe, Forest, Futurenomics, Global Economy,
Japan, Magnetic Cars, Megacities, Nature, Nevada, Rewilding,
Robotics, South Africa, TECHNOLOGY, the Netherlands,
Ultrasound, UN, Wildlife


Welcome

Felix B Bopp

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Quotes


David N. Bengston: “There is substantial evidence that we are currently in a period of rapid and significant change in forest values. Some have charged that managing forests in ways that are responsive to diverse and changing forest values is the main challenge faced by public forest managers. To tackle this challenge, we need to address the following questions:
(1) What is the nature of forest values? That is, can all forest values be reduced to a single dimension, as assumed in utilitarian-based traditional forestry and economics, or are these values multidimensional and incommensurate?
(2) What specific values are involved?
(3) What is the structure of forest values? That is, how are they related to each other in value systems?
(4) How and why have forest values changed over time? and
(5) What do changing forest values imply for ecosystem management approaches?”

Bronwyn Williams:
“Join me on my mission to understand the world and create a better future for all of us who live in it.”

Elisabet Sahtouris: “The Globalization of humanity is a natural, biological, evolutionary process. Yet we face an enormous crisis because the most central and important aspect of globalization – its economy – is currently being organized in a manner that so gravely violates the fundamental principles by which healthy living systems are organized that it threatens the demise of our whole civilization.”

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