Showing posts with label political futures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label political futures. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Surveying the Landscape of Economic Change

Figure 1: nested political changes
In most of our work, and particularly for our original research and content, there are one or two key frameworks that help us organize and make sense of the dynamics we (and clients) are observing and experiencing.  In the Third Era one such framework is the nested view of political changes (figure 1).  This particular construct helps us separate out the various changes in political life that are often lumped together in everyday discourse while also allowing us to consider how things interact across these domains.

The Third Era also incorporates frameworks like the Three Horizons, but the above nested view is probably the most important overall framing right now.



Figure 2: education as a socio-technical system
Another framework, this time from our most recent work on learning futures, adapts a socio-technical transitions model to viewing and understanding current and likely changes in education in the United States (figure 2).  This framework provides a compelling way of not only understanding education as a system embedded in larger systems and susceptible to developments in the margins, but also for exploring how education will become ever more shaped by technical influences.  This lets us explore the issue of education becoming a more typical socio-technical system than it has ever been before.

While there are some other, more minor models at work in our learning futures content right now, the nested view above is by far the most central to our work.

Figure 3: layered economic changes
And so, in updating the Infinite Economy, one of the new framings that emerged was that of layered views of economic change dynamics (figure 3).  For the Infinite Economy, there are a number of models/theories related to economic change that we like to draw upon, and this layered view, which builds upon the common analogy of the "30,000 foot view," allows us to incorporate multiple models while (hopefully) not muddying the issue too much.  And while Perez's technological revolutions models is also central to the Infinite Economy framing and forecasts, this layered view is almost more important in the bigger picture (ha, ha) because it allows us to capture in one view some many of the different issues and changes people are confronting.

The ability to organize the many conflicting and contending signals we are receiving today about our economic futures is, to us, a critical ability if one wants to usefully talk about the futures of economic life.

Monday, December 2, 2013

15 books for your Christmas list this year

Since it's that time of the year again, we've put together a list of recommended reading that might be helpful if you happen to be shopping around for Christmas gifts for any readers and deep thinkers on your list this year.  The selections below span a range from deep, almost academic treatments to long views of history to works on subjects that are a little more "top of mind."

Thinking About the Future

Economic Futures

Political Futures


Friday, September 20, 2013

The Futures of Constitutional Governance


Today I am releasing the Highlight Booklet from a new work, The Third Era: Reframing the Futures of Constitutional Governance.  It looks at the the various forces that collectively are shaping the futures of governance and it suggests ways of conceptualizing both governance and the processes we use to design our systems of governance.

From an examination of the many forces that drive political change, we can anticipate that the futures of governance will not be determined solely by the experiences and preferences of the West.  While many of our modern patterns of governance emerge out of the West, the new era we have entered is a global one in which the challenges faced by peoples in regions such as Asia and Africa will have as much, if not more, relevance for political innovation as those faced by communities in the West.

Nor will the futures of governance be shaped primarily by a single approach to addressing political and social challenges.  The design of governance systems was once the purview of constitutional lawyers and scholars.  Today, individuals from professions as wide ranging as political science, urban design, and data analytics are attempting to apply their perspectives to understanding and improving governance.  Part of The Third Era’s message is the value and importance of integrating these various perspectives in order to reconceptualize the art of designing constitutional governance systems.

The governance systems that we will come to live in will not emerge in a vacuum. They will emerge as integral parts of a global political landscape and indeed will co-evolve with that landscape. They will be the result of a turbulent confluence of forces: individual  innovation, competitions for power, and the reactions that preserve the status quo. To usefully anticipate the variety of forms that future governance systems might take requires an examination of the many forces driving political change.

The Third Era sits at the intersection of both political science, concerned with issues like government and the state, and futures studies, using different frameworks to understand and anticipate change.  It will be an ever-evolving work, periodically updated with new material and new forecasts as things (and my thinking) continue to evolve.

(cross posted on The Third Era)