Huib Wursten, Senior Partner, itim InternationalCarel Jacobs is senior consultant/trainer for itim in The Netherlands, he is also Certification Agent for the Educational Sector of the Hofstede Centre. January 21, 2014 Can we introduce best practices in education across countries? As a result of globalization, many people are becoming interested in ranking systems which show how their own countries compare with others on a variety of measures.
As the economy in emerging countries is improving, their population becomes wealthier. Just as it happened in Western countries during the 20th century.
by Elisabet Sahtouris Holder of the Elisabet Sahtouris Chair in Living Economies at World Business Academy Earth’s atmosphere is 40% moister from already evaporated ice and that very simple measurement alone will tell you that storms will keep increasing in severity. You can look at satellite pics over time to see the lateral shrinkage of ice. Now, the more ice melts the hotter it gets and the hotter it gets the more ice melts. That is called a positive feedback loop, a runaway trend, and we have no means to stop it. If you doubt the science of climate change, consider that climate change denial and science bashing is heavily funded; ask yourself: by whom and why? The fact is, there has never before been so big and so cooperative a global science effort as the one on climate monitoring. It is a first for scientists and a daunting project as we have known so little about our living Earth., in the belief that we can always outsmart Nature. Let us not argue, but believe those things we see with our own eyes if we doubt science. It is clear that we need emergency preparedness in any case, and that we need to live sustainably in any case…even if Earth should suddenly flip into an ice age. Meditate on inner peace and generosity, as Dr. Ariyaratne teaches his wonderfully successful Sarvodaya movement people in Sri Lanka, and then do it with your local community as you hatch plans for healthy survival and, we all pray, thrival.
by Madanmohan Rao One of the most interesting features of the mobile and internet wave in India is not just the connectivity and information they provide, but the spirit of entrepreneurship that has been unleashed for business and social change. A range of experts, including policy professional Deepak Maheshwari, Fleximoms co-founder Sairee Chahal, and National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) innovation head Mahesh Vee, were contacted to seek out their views on key trends in the coming year in the field of ICT4D (information and communication technologies for development); see their profiles at the end of this article. Here are their top dozen takeaways on ICT4D’s key business models, development opportunities, culture changes, and digital services that have emerged in 2013 and should be harnessed in 2014. Bridging the gapICT4D is bridging gaps. It is bringing the ‘city slicker’ closer to villagers, making men look at lives of women differently, bringing industry closer to the government, and helping create informal networks. Knowledge is being freely shared, solutions are being found collaboratively and adding to positive step forward by multiple stakeholders. More and more people are realising the value of operating in context and building solutions closer to local culture and fit. Facilitator-led modelsTechnology continues to be an enabler, and hence there is recognition of physical touch points to facilitate and improve adoption. The emergence of a Business-to-Facilitator-to-Customer (B2F2C) model can be seen where personnel in direct contact with the end customers and beneficiaries (eg. ASHA workers, teachers, Panchayat representatives) are empowered with technology in a structured way. This is adding significant value to decision-making, process enhancement and better measurable outcomes, and also better management of the effort — thus offering scalability. Technology is not complex anymoreThe fearlessness in using more technological solutions to add value is new. Technology historically has been an elitist, closed domain. The first mover advantage was usually the prerogative of the rich. It still is — but the long tail of technology innovation now allows almost everyone to participate. It is a step ladder to change at the personal level for many. Custom built for culture More and more products for ICT are ground up and built in the cultural context from where they come. Whether it is pre-natal SMS reminders or crop delivery management software, many of these solutions are making things more efficient without adding the burden of culture import, something that the urbanisation and industrial cultures missed as a trend. Targeted content developmentThere is a strong recognition and development of issue-based content beyond just a platform or product with a digital front-end. This can be seen through partnerships between technology service providers and development organisations, many times supported by targeted funding from donors. These are not only in areas like education, healthcare and livelihoods, but also in newer areas like skill development, value chain development in agriculture and textiles, entrepreneurship, market and financial linkages. While there is a visible upward trend towards focus on content for targeted groups, it is still quite low given the diversity of the user groups (language, profile of beneficiary, sector). Customised solutions with relevant content depth would be something that can be seen in the coming years, and social businesses are certainly leading these efforts. Built for imperfectMany solutions for ICT4D are built for ‘imperfect’ scenarios and not for the optimum. India is a resource crunched country with a lot of challenges of governance and infrastructure. Any initiative built outside of this reality is not going to serve the people for whom it is designed. Many award-winning applications and services at the Manthan Awards stood out for their ability to turn imperfection into an advantage. Freemium model makes way into ICT4D spaceSeveral ICT4D initiatives are going the freemium model in order to scale and succeed. Grants and endowments can do only that much! One does need some revenue and this revenue may incidentally come from the non-ICT4D activities and offerings but also from users who are relatively better off and can and do pay. However, increasingly, the beneficiaries even at the lower socio-economic strata would start paying for certain products and services as long as the benefits are real, payments are small, easy and simplified, and the gestation period to taste the success or impact not too long. Impact outcomesOver the last many years, many development organisations have started measuring their outcomes either due to supply side demands or guidelines from donors and investors. Organisations that have their internal systems for measurement are using ICTs and mobiles to strengthen the processes, reduce cost of measurement and also ensure availability of real time data. New technology-based solutions, many of which come with a cost-benefit analysis, are also clearly outlining measurable impact outcomes, and this can be seen across multiple areas. Compatibility across different devices and platformsProducts and solutions are being built to be compatible across different devices (computers, mobile phones) and platforms (Android, J2EE, iOS) in line with the larger trends in user preferences, cost, and device diversity. Although much of the initial development begins with the appropriate technology for the immediate user group, many scale up to be compatible across different users. Use of voice-based programs on mobile phones (IVR) and integration into web-based products of such programs is also an emerging area of development. Mobile as a pipe, apps as the driverThe mobile phone, with its increasing reach to rural and urban poor, is being used effectively as a pipe to carry multiple services to the end customer. It is used for a combination of interventions and activities like awareness building through targeted information, an engagement tool with field personnel, a process management tool, and even for monitoring and evaluation through audio and video evidence from the ground. With location-based services and increasing internet penetration, there is also integration with the web — thus increasing real time information availability, transparency and accountability. While extremely functional and jazzy apps are available for smart phones and there is utility for practitioners in some situations, for most beneficiaries these remain out of reach and hence, the need for simple apps or tools that can be used on feature phones. Big Data and CloudWith governments, corporates, multilateral agencies and donor organisations adopting Big Data by the droves and opening up, there are massive opportunities for mashing the data and visualisation tools to identify solutions. ICT4D practitioners also need to open up more and share their data with the broader community. Technology capacity building can get a great fillip if the beneficiaries and facilitators have access to simple and easily customisable standard templates so that they can focus more on development rather than just tools. With cloud based storage as well as processing and access across devices, platforms and formats, things should become easier and brighter. Privacy concernsWith so much of personally sensitive data as well as personally identifiable data out there in the open without proper safeguards — not just by the governments and the corporates but also oftentimes in the NGO space as well — it is all the more important to take privacy seriously. This would require not just legislative and regulatory approaches but, more importantly, increased sensitisation and awareness among people. Deepak Maheshwari is a public policy and regulatory affairs professional in the ICT sector. He co-founded NIXI and ITU-APT Foundation of India, and helped form ISPAI and IAMAI. His views and articles have been widely published in the media. He is an engineering graduate from IIT-BHU.Sairee Chahal is co-founder of Fleximoms. She set up the Russia practice for Heidrick & Struggles and CII. Sairee began as a journalist, and was a finalist for the Cartier Women’s Award Initiative for 2012. She is an industry influencer shaping the future of work conversation, particularly for women.Mahesh Vee leads the Innovation and Engagement practice at the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC). A master’s graduate in engineering with close to 10 years of experience, Mahesh was previously CEO at KGVK Social Enterprises.
by Annie Machon January 2014 We, the citizens of the world, already owe NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden a huge debt of gratitude. Even the limited publication of a few of the documents he disclosed to journalists has to date provoked a political and public debate in countries across the planet — and who knows what other nasties lurk in the cache of documents, yet to be exposed? Thanks to Snowden, millions of people as well as many governments have woken up to the fact that privacy is the vital component of free societies. Without that basic right we are unable to freely read, write, speak, plan and associate without fear of being watched, our every thought and utterance stored up to be potentially used against us at some nebulous future date. Such panoptic global surveillance leads inevitably to self-censorship and is corrosive to our basic freedoms, and individual citizens as well as countries are exploring ways to protect themselves and their privacy. As I and others more eminent have said before, we need free media to have a free society.But even if we can defend these free channels of communication, what if the very information we wish to ingest and communicate is no longer deemed to be free? What if we become criminalised purely for sharing such un-free information? The global military security complex may be brutal, but it is not stupid. These corporatist elites, as I prefer to think of them, have seen the new medium of the internet as a threat to their profits and power since its inception. Which is why they have been fighting a desperate rearguard action to apply US patent and copyright laws globally. They began by going after music sharing sites such as Napster and imposing grotesque legal penalties on those trying to download a few songs they liked for free, then trying to build national firewalls to deny whole countries access to file sharing sites such as The Pirate Bay and persecuting its co-founder Anakata, mercifully failing to extradite Richard O’Dwyer from the UK to the US on trumped up charges for his signposting site to free media, and culminating in the take down of Megaupload and the illegal FBI attack against Kim Dotcom’s home in New Zealand last year. But for all these high-profile cases of attempted deterrence, more and more people are sharing information, culture, and research for free on the internet. Using peer to peer technologies like Bittorrent and anonymising tools like Tor they are hard to detect, which is why the corporatist lobbyists demand the surveillance state develop ever more intrusive ways of detecting them, including the possibility of deep packet inspection. And of course once such invasive technologies are available, we all know that they will not only be used to stop “piracy” but will also be used against the people of the world by the military surveillance complex too. But that is still not enough for the corporatists. Largely US-based, they are now trying to flex their political muscle globally. First the US claims that any site ending with a tier one US domain name (.com, .org, .net and .info) comes under US law — anywhere in the world — and can be taken down without warning or redress by a diktat from the US government. More egregiously still, the US corporatists have been trying to impose their legal dominion globally via a series of secret regional trade agreements: ACTA, TTIP/TAFTA, SOPA, and now in the recently Wikileaked details of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) targeting the countries around the Pacific rim. These agreements, written by corporate lobbyists, are so secret that the democratic representatives of sovereign countries are not even allowed to read the contents or debate the terms — they are just told to sign on the dotted line, effectively rubber-stamping legislation that is antithetical to the vast majority their citizens’ interests, which gives greater sovereign powers to the interests of the corporations than it does to nation states, and which will criminalise and directly harm the people of the world in the interests of the few. One of the proposals is that multinational corporations can sue national governments for future lost profits based on patents not granted or environmental restrictions. This is nothing short of full-on corporatism where international law and global treaties serve a handful of large corporations to the detriment of national sovereignty, environmental health and even human life. For by protecting “intellectual property” (IP), we are not just talking about the creative endeavours of artists. One does not need to be a lawyer to see the fundamental problematic assumptions in the goals as defined in the leaked document:Enhance the role of intellectual property in promoting economic and social development, particularly in relation to the new digital economy, technological innovation, the transfer and dissemination of technology and trade;This statement assumes that IP, a made-up term that confuses three very different areas of law, is by definition beneficial to society as a whole. No evidence for these claimed benefits is provided anywhere. As with “what-is-good-for-General-Motors-is-good-for-America” and the theory of ”trickle down” economics, the benefits are simply assumed and alternative models actively and wilfully ignored. The idea that most societies on the planet might vastly benefit from a relaxation of patent laws or the length of copyright is not even up for debate. This despite the fact that there is plenty of research pointing in that direction. These secret proposed treaties will enforce patents that put the cost of basic pharmaceuticals beyond the reach of billions; that privatise and patentbasic plants and food; and that prevent the sharing of cutting edge academic research, despite the fact that this is usually produced by publicly funded academics at our publicly funded universities. The price, even today, of trying to liberate research for the public good can be high, as Aaron Swartz found out earlier this year. After trying to share research information from MIT, he faced a witch hunt and decades in prison. Instead he chose to take his own life at the age of 26. How much worse will it be if TPP et al are ratified? It is thanks to the high-tech publisher, Wikileaks, that we know the sheer scale of the recent TPP débacle. It is also heartening to see so many Pacific rim countries opposing the overweening demands of the USA. Australia alone seems supportive — but then regionally it benefits most from its membership of the “Five Eyes” spy programme with America.The intellectual property wars are the flip side of the global surveillance network that Snowden disclosed — it is a classic pincer movement. As well as watching everything we communicate, the corporatists are also trying to control exactly what information we are legally able to communicate, and using this control as justification for yet more intrusive spying. It’s the perfect self-perpetuating cycle. By curtailing the powers of the spy agencies, we could restore the internet to its original functionality and openness while maintaining the right to privacy and free speech — but maintaining a 20th century copyright/IP model at the same time is impossible. Or we could give up our privacy and other civil rights to allow specific protected industries to carry on coining it in. A last option would be to switch off the internet. But that is not realistic: modern countries could not survive a day without the internet, any more than they could function without electricity. As a society we’re going through the painful realisation that we can only have two out of the three options. Different corporatist interest groups would no doubt make different choices but, along with the vast majority of the people, I opt for the internet and privacy as both a free channel for communication and the free transfer of useful information. Like any social change (the abolition of slavery, universal suffrage), this is also accompanied by heated arguments, legal threats and repression, and lobbyist propaganda. But historically all this sound and fury will signify.… precisely nothing. Surely at some point basic civil rights will make a comeback, upheld by the legislature and protected by law enforcement. The choice is simple: internet, privacy, copyright. We can only choose two, and I know which I choose. Thanks to Snowden, millions of people as well as many governments have woken up to the fact that privacy is the vital component of free societies. Without that basic right we are unable to freely read, write, speak, plan and associate without fear of being watched, our every thought and utterance stored up to be potentially used against us at some nebulous future date. Such panoptic global surveillance leads inevitably to self-censorship and is corrosive to our basic freedoms, and individual citizens as well as countries are exploring ways to protect themselves and their privacy. As I and others more eminent have said before, we need free media to have a free society.But even if we can defend these free channels of communication, what if the very information we wish to ingest and communicate is no longer deemed to be free? What if we become criminalised purely for sharing such un-free information? The global military security complex may be brutal, but it is not stupid. These corporatist elites, as I prefer to think of them, have seen the new medium of the internet as a threat to their profits and power since its inception. Which is why they have been fighting a desperate rearguard action to apply US patent and copyright laws globally. They began by going after music sharing sites such as Napster and imposing grotesque legal penalties on those trying to download a few songs they liked for free, then trying to build national firewalls to deny whole countries access to file sharing sites such as The Pirate Bay and persecuting its co-founder Anakata, mercifully failing to extradite Richard O’Dwyer from the UK to the US on trumped up charges for his signposting site to free media, and culminating in the take down of Megaupload and the illegal FBI attack against Kim Dotcom’s home in New Zealand last year. But for all these high-profile cases of attempted deterrence, more and more people are sharing information, culture, and research for free on the internet. Using peer to peer technologies like Bittorrent and anonymising tools like Tor they are hard to detect, which is why the corporatist lobbyists demand the surveillance state develop ever more intrusive ways of detecting them, including the possibility of deep packet inspection. And of course once such invasive technologies are available, we all know that they will not only be used to stop “piracy” but will also be used against the people of the world by the military surveillance complex too. But that is still not enough for the corporatists. Largely US-based, they are now trying to flex their political muscle globally. First the US claims that any site ending with a tier one US domain name (.com, .org, .net and .info) comes under US law — anywhere in the world — and can be taken down without warning or redress by a diktat from the US government. More egregiously still, the US corporatists have been trying to impose their legal dominion globally via a series of secret regional trade agreements: ACTA, TTIP/TAFTA, SOPA, and now in the recently Wikileaked details of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) targeting the countries around the Pacific rim. These agreements, written by corporate lobbyists, are so secret that the democratic representatives of sovereign countries are not even allowed to read the contents or debate the terms — they are just told to sign on the dotted line, effectively rubber-stamping legislation that is antithetical to the vast majority their citizens’ interests, which gives greater sovereign powers to the interests of the corporations than it does to nation states, and which will criminalise and directly harm the people of the world in the interests of the few. One of the proposals is that multinational corporations can sue national governments for future lost profits based on patents not granted or environmental restrictions. This is nothing short of full-on corporatism where international law and global treaties serve a handful of large corporations to the detriment of national sovereignty, environmental health and even human life. For by protecting “intellectual property” (IP), we are not just talking about the creative endeavours of artists. One does not need to be a lawyer to see the fundamental problematic assumptions in the goals as defined in the leaked document:Enhance the role of intellectual property in promoting economic and social development, particularly in relation to the new digital economy, technological innovation, the transfer and dissemination of technology and trade;This statement assumes that IP, a made-up term that confuses three very different areas of law, is by definition beneficial to society as a whole. No evidence for these claimed benefits is provided anywhere. As with “what-is-good-for-General-Motors-is-good-for-America” and the theory of ”trickle down” economics, the benefits are simply assumed and alternative models actively and wilfully ignored. The idea that most societies on the planet might vastly benefit from a relaxation of patent laws or the length of copyright is not even up for debate. This despite the fact that there is plenty of research pointing in that direction. These secret proposed treaties will enforce patents that put the cost of basic pharmaceuticals beyond the reach of billions; that privatise and patentbasic plants and food; and that prevent the sharing of cutting edge academic research, despite the fact that this is usually produced by publicly funded academics at our publicly funded universities. The price, even today, of trying to liberate research for the public good can be high, as Aaron Swartz found out earlier this year. After trying to share research information from MIT, he faced a witch hunt and decades in prison. Instead he chose to take his own life at the age of 26. How much worse will it be if TPP et al are ratified? It is thanks to the high-tech publisher, Wikileaks, that we know the sheer scale of the recent TPP débacle. It is also heartening to see so many Pacific rim countries opposing the overweening demands of the USA. Australia alone seems supportive — but then regionally it benefits most from its membership of the “Five Eyes” spy programme with America.The intellectual property wars are the flip side of the global surveillance network that Snowden disclosed — it is a classic pincer movement. As well as watching everything we communicate, the corporatists are also trying to control exactly what information we are legally able to communicate, and using this control as justification for yet more intrusive spying. It’s the perfect self-perpetuating cycle. By curtailing the powers of the spy agencies, we could restore the internet to its original functionality and openness while maintaining the right to privacy and free speech — but maintaining a 20th century copyright/IP model at the same time is impossible. Or we could give up our privacy and other civil rights to allow specific protected industries to carry on coining it in. A last option would be to switch off the internet. But that is not realistic: modern countries could not survive a day without the internet, any more than they could function without electricity. As a society we’re going through the painful realisation that we can only have two out of the three options. Different corporatist interest groups would no doubt make different choices but, along with the vast majority of the people, I opt for the internet and privacy as both a free channel for communication and the free transfer of useful information. Like any social change (the abolition of slavery, universal suffrage), this is also accompanied by heated arguments, legal threats and repression, and lobbyist propaganda. But historically all this sound and fury will signify.… precisely nothing. Surely at some point basic civil rights will make a comeback, upheld by the legislature and protected by law enforcement. The choice is simple: internet, privacy, copyright. We can only choose two, and I know which I choose. This is an example of a WordPress post, you could edit this to put information about yourself so readers know where you are coming from. You can create as many posts as you like in order to share with them what is on your mind. This is an example of a WordPress post, you could edit this to put information about yourself so readers know where you are coming from. You can create as many posts as you like in order to share with them what is on your mind.
with Peter Cochrane All civilisations live or die by the quality of their fundamental truths. Governments, legal systems, commerce, industry, engineering, science and education are built on verifiable and hard won knowledge that is tested and continually honed by new discoveries and revelations based on evidence and accumulated experience. However, truth, facts, knowledge and expertise are now under attack and suffering in accelerating rates of distortion and corruption. In an age of information wars, establishing ‘the truth’ and/or applying verifiable facts and knowledge are no longer easy or straightforward. Modern media, the internet, social networks, has given everyone a voice, and an assumed right to express their opinion even if they may be totally ignorant. So, plagiarism, errors, and deliberate falsifications have become a new tool for some political and commercial operations, and a new form of information warfare! Truth is expensive and hard to comprehend, and it is far easier to unthinkingly accept simple (and often crude) misrepresentations and lies from anonymous sources, bogus media and pernicious sources including criminals, rogue states and corrupt political groups. At the click of a key they can distribute the falsehoods to millions of screens where quantity and not quality define a new truth!
with Glen Hiemstra “At Futurist.com our primary emphasis has always been on creating the “preferred future.” Thus, we have developed methods to push alternative future scenarios toward a preferred scenario for the organization, the community, or whatever enterprise is planning for its future. This approach has been applied to community futures, to transportation, to future libraries, and to information technology organizations.” – Glen Hiemstra
with Anina Net Anina Net is a former international model now based in San Francisco and Beijing with 10 years’ experience creating a bridge between the east and west, fashion and tech.Based on permanent innovation 360Fashion Network, has been supporting fashion designers and companies with disruptive technologies including smart fashion maker kits, e-textiles, mobile apps, augmented reality, virtual reality shopping, 3D printing, among others.