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Rethinking
Development by
Leveraging Global
Knowledge

Alex Dehgan
S&T Adviser to the
Administrator of the US Agency
for International Development
6 Concerns
5 Trends
5 Opportunities
Redefining National Security

      Global > Local
Meta-analysis of Biological Impacts
                                      • Correlated 90% changes in 28,800
                                          biological processes against
                                          observed temperature increases.
                                       • Looked at alternative causation due
                                          to landuse changes.
                                       • In biological systems, changes
                                          include shifts in spring events (for
                                          example, leaf unfolding, blooming
                                          date, migration and time of
                                          reproduction), species distributions
                                          and community structure.
                                          Additionally, studies have
                                          demonstrated changes in marine-
                                          ecosystem
                                       • In a few hundred years, people have
                                          released amounts of fossil carbon
                                          that took the planet hundreds of
(Rosenzweig et al., Nature, May 15, 2008) millions of years to store.
Increased Variability of Climate Responses

• Increases in flood risk due to
    intensification of the global
    water cycle.
•   Milly et al, Nature (2002) found
    that during the 20th century,
    “great floods”, increased
    substantially.
•   Great floods were 1:100 year
    floods with basins > 200,000
    km2.
•   Consistent with climate model.
H1: Climate + Environment = Nonlinear Impacts



 Habitat loss can cause some
 extinctions directly by removing
 all the individuals over a short
 period of time.
 Alternatively, it can be
 indirectly responsible for lagged
 extinction by facilitating
 invasions, improving hunter
 access, eliminating prey,
 altering biophysical conditions,
 and increasing inbreeding.
Loss of Biodiversity




•Loss of Pollinators, Increased invasive
species, increased disease risk, loss of
economically important species.
•Only 2.7% of the approximately 1.9
million named, extant species have been
formally evaluated for extinction by the
IUCN.
Emerging Infectious Diseases

•New diseases are emerging at a
"historically unprecedented" rate of
one per year. In the last five years
alone, WHO has documented more
than 1,100 epidemics including bird
flu, polio and cholera.
•60% of recent EIDs are zoonotic, of
those, 71.8% originate in wildlife.
Global Agriculture
9 Billion people by 2050, 70-100% More Food,
    New Growing Middle Class in Brazil, India, China,
    Indonesia. 70% of harvested crops are fed to livestock
    in developed countries.
109 ha of Natural Systems will be converted to global
agriculture. Loss of Natural Ecosystems equal to the US
total Area. Losses from Latin American (Cerado, Amazon)
and Sub-Saharan Central Africa.
Loss of 1/3 Remaining tropical and temporate forms,
savannahs, etc.
2.7x Phosphorus added, 2.4x Nitrogen, 2.7x Pesticides,
Eutrophication has huge impacts on coast waters.
Irrigated Area increased by 1.9x
Water Challenges
2.8 billion of the world’s poor – half the developing world’s
total population continue to live without access to an
improved source of drinking water (0.9 billion) or basic
sanitation facility (1.9 billion) as of 2008.

Unsafe drinking water and poor sanitation account for
nearly 10 % of the global burden of disease. In developing
countries, about 1.6 million children under the age of five
die annual from diarrheal diseases caused by unsafe water.

Agriculture. 60-70%+ of water use goes to Agriculture.
Problems of salinity. Worldwide, some 17 percent of
agricultural lands are irrigated, producing 40 percent of
total cereal production
Energy
 2.6 billion people in the world, roughly 40%, don’t have
 access to reliable electricity.

 Challenge that many of these are present within groups
 of small communities with low population densities.
 Challenge of economic viability of operating a utility grid.


 Question: What happens when
 the bottom billions connect to
 the grid and want air
 conditioning?
Shifts to Developing
World
Less Developed Countries will have changed from 2x the
population of Developed Countries in 1950, to 6x by 2050.

Virtually all the population growth in the next 45 years
will be in less developed regions. Half of the Global
Increase will be in 9 Countries: India, Pakistan, Nigeria,
DRC, Bangladesh, China, Uganda, Ethiopia, and the US.

51 countries or areas, most in the economically more
developed world, will lose population between now and
2050.
2. Democratization of Science
Cost of Whole Genome Sequencing

                       •Cost of sequencing the
                       human genome, 13
                       years, 2.7 billion 1991
                       dollars.
                       •Cost of sequencing a
                       single genome soon,
                       <$1,000
                       •Complete Genomics is
                       developing a sequencing
                       system that will increase
                       its throughput to 80
                       genomes per day.
Computing Power (increased power,
decreased cost, exponential)
The power of computing is increasing exponentially, while
the cost is decreasing exponentially

 Moore’s Law: The number of transistors that can be
 placed inexpensively on an integrated circuit doubles
 approximately every two years.

 Cheap Storage

 Computing power of the internet – parallel processing
Connectivity: Mobile

 5 Billion Cell phones around the world – they are now gateways to
 human knowledge, tools to create music and artwork, the are sensors.

    In Africa:
        It took nearly 20 years to attract the first 100 million
        subscribers
        It took less than 3 years to attract the next 200 million
        subscribers. Leapfroging.
        2012: 13 Million fixed Landlines, 500 M+ mobile phone
        subscriptions.

    Developing Countries.
       In 2000 the developing countries accounted for around one-
       quarter of the world’s 700m or so mobile phones.
       By the beginning of 2009 their share had grown to three-
       quarters of a total which by then had risen to over 4 billion.
Connectivity: Internet




   Increase in Africa: 2,968%, Penetration: 13%
   World Average: 528%, Penetration: 32%
Crisis Camp Haiti: Random Hacks of Kindness

 Base layer map for Port Au Prince: This
    project would create a new collection of
    imagery and a new base map for NGOs and
    relief agencies. Post available imagery to
    share with the public for open source
    applications.
   Family Locators for Quake Victims
   Faster relief information and data sharing
   CrisisCamp will brought together domain
    experts, developers, and first responders
    around improving technology and practice
    for humanitarian crisis management and
    disaster relief.
The Age of Big Data
New York Times, Feb. 12, 2012




   •Knowledge and the form of knowledge are expanding
   exponentially
      •Increase in sensors and opportunities for input.
      •Genomics
      •Remote Sensing
   •Amount of Data may be now doubling every 2 years
   •Understand process from patterns
Data.Worldbank.org
Potential for Decentralization of Manufacturing



  3D Printers

  Maker’s Fairs and DIY
Rethinking Development by Leveraging
          Global Knowledge
Premises

• Development has become a living condition where billions
    of people have access to a few centuries of human
    technological progress, but where another few billion
    people do not.
•   There is an accelerating gulf between those who are
    connected and those who are not.
•   Challenges are increasingly global, and require global
    partnership to address. They are also opportunities.
•   Challenges are multidisciplinary and fluid
•   There are great ideas in the developing world. We need
    to jointly define the problems and the solutions together.
    This is required for our own economic growth.
Crowd-Sourcing the World
• How do we bring new solvers into
  development? How do we find new
  technological solutions that may exist
  in other fields.

• How do we better capture existing
  knowledge and solutions and apply
  them to development? How can we
  capture indigenous innovation?
Saving Lives at Birth
                                                                        A woman dies
                                                                       from childbirth
                                                                       every 2 minutes




•   The onset of labor marks start of high-risk period for mother and baby until at least 48 hours
    after birth. Each year –
       150,000 maternal deaths
       1.6 million neonatal deaths
       1.2 million stillbirths

•   Majority of deaths in low and middle income countries – less than half of these mothers
    deliver in hospitals
We seek groundbreaking ideas
The Challenge                             that can LEAPFROG conventional
                                             approaches in three areas…

                      technologies.
                      Roadblock: lack of medical technologies
                      appropriate for the community or clinic setting
                      Target: bold ideas for science and technology
                      advances that prevent, detect or treat
                      maternal and newborn problems at the time of
                      birth.


service delivery.                                                              demand.
Roadblock: too few trained,                     Roadblock: mothers in resource-poor settings
motivated, equipped and                            often lack information about services they
properly located health staff and                 need, what they can do, and benefits from
caregivers                                         accessing health care or adopting healthy
                                                                                   behaviors.
Target: bold ideas for new
approaches to high-quality care                      Target: bold ideas for empowering and
at the time of birth                            engaging pregnant women and their families
DevelopmentXChange – Overview
Three Day Event



   Key components

   Competition: 75 finalists compete for funding by
   displaying and explaining project to selection
   committees (“interview”) (CLOSED)

   Innovator Workshops/Networking: Structured
   discussions/workshops to engage finalists on key
   challenges (business plan support, M&E, capacity
   building for scale, BCC, accessing financing,        Agenda at a Glance
   etc.) (CLOSED)

   Development Exchange: Innovations displayed in
   open marketplace; opportunity to network and
   exchange ideas with finalists, innovators, funders
   and development experts (OPEN TO PUBLIC)

   Award Ceremony/XChange Talks: Series of “TED-
   like” talks combined with select innovator
   presentations (INVITATION ONLY)




                                                                             27
Open Source Collaboration

• Saturday: Innovating Innovation: Open Source
  Successes for Neglected Diseases and Beyond.

• Give away everything you know, and more will come
  back to you.

• Using Open Source Collaboration, Journals, Research
  design to create opportunities for participation in
  resource-poor environment. Clear advantages to allow
  for faster advancement of fields.

• How can we use this for promoting knowledge based
  collaborations with the developing world?
Connecting the Unconnected

•   Digital Science Libraries (CRDF Global, State, USAID)
•   Open Access Journals.
•   Open Data Bases (genetics, biodiversity, remote sensing)
•   Real-time Google Earth.
•   I-Tunes U
•   MIT Open Courseware
•   Stanford AI Class (Sebastian Thun & Peter Norvig) –
    now through Udacity
•   Grand Challenge for Development: Education &
    Agriculture
•   Khan Academy: Free world-class education to anyone
122,383, 239 lessons delivered
Opportunities Global for Scientific Partnerships


 • Nature of Science is increasing collaborative as the
   problems require crossing more disciplines and bringing
   together more data.

 • PEER (www.nas.edu/peer). NSF-USAID. Scaling the
   Bilateral S&T model to 79 developing countries around
   the world. (Drs. Annica Wayman, Frederico Prado, Mark
   Doyle). Almost 500 applications, from >50 countries.

 • Bilateral S&T Programs: India, Egypt, Pakistan
Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in Research
(PEER)
 A grants program to enhance partnerships between NSF-funded
 Scientists and their Developing Country Collaborators.


US Scientist receives an NSF                       NSF Award supports the
  award to do research in                          research and training of
          country X                               US Scientists and Students

                                                     USAID Award supports
    Partner scientist in country X               in-country scientists, students,
    applies to USAID for support                        and institutions.
     to facilitate collaboration.

 - PEER will align with areas of joint USAID and NSF priorities.

 - USAID leverages NSF investment and merit review.

 - Will build research capacity at local institutions.
Current Models of Universities (and Science)
Next Generation CGIAR




• Creative, Open, Multidisciplinary, Entrepreneurial.
• Universities as laboratories for applying science,
    technology, and creativity to development.
•   Universities as incubators.


Go to: www.usaid.gov/universities
Thank you.

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Dehgan innovations in reducing international knowledge isolation final_aaas_021912

  • 1. Rethinking Development by Leveraging Global Knowledge Alex Dehgan S&T Adviser to the Administrator of the US Agency for International Development
  • 2. 6 Concerns 5 Trends 5 Opportunities
  • 4. Meta-analysis of Biological Impacts • Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. • Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. • In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine- ecosystem • In a few hundred years, people have released amounts of fossil carbon that took the planet hundreds of (Rosenzweig et al., Nature, May 15, 2008) millions of years to store.
  • 5. Increased Variability of Climate Responses • Increases in flood risk due to intensification of the global water cycle. • Milly et al, Nature (2002) found that during the 20th century, “great floods”, increased substantially. • Great floods were 1:100 year floods with basins > 200,000 km2. • Consistent with climate model.
  • 6. H1: Climate + Environment = Nonlinear Impacts Habitat loss can cause some extinctions directly by removing all the individuals over a short period of time. Alternatively, it can be indirectly responsible for lagged extinction by facilitating invasions, improving hunter access, eliminating prey, altering biophysical conditions, and increasing inbreeding.
  • 7. Loss of Biodiversity •Loss of Pollinators, Increased invasive species, increased disease risk, loss of economically important species. •Only 2.7% of the approximately 1.9 million named, extant species have been formally evaluated for extinction by the IUCN.
  • 8. Emerging Infectious Diseases •New diseases are emerging at a "historically unprecedented" rate of one per year. In the last five years alone, WHO has documented more than 1,100 epidemics including bird flu, polio and cholera. •60% of recent EIDs are zoonotic, of those, 71.8% originate in wildlife.
  • 9. Global Agriculture 9 Billion people by 2050, 70-100% More Food, New Growing Middle Class in Brazil, India, China, Indonesia. 70% of harvested crops are fed to livestock in developed countries. 109 ha of Natural Systems will be converted to global agriculture. Loss of Natural Ecosystems equal to the US total Area. Losses from Latin American (Cerado, Amazon) and Sub-Saharan Central Africa. Loss of 1/3 Remaining tropical and temporate forms, savannahs, etc. 2.7x Phosphorus added, 2.4x Nitrogen, 2.7x Pesticides, Eutrophication has huge impacts on coast waters. Irrigated Area increased by 1.9x
  • 10. Water Challenges 2.8 billion of the world’s poor – half the developing world’s total population continue to live without access to an improved source of drinking water (0.9 billion) or basic sanitation facility (1.9 billion) as of 2008. Unsafe drinking water and poor sanitation account for nearly 10 % of the global burden of disease. In developing countries, about 1.6 million children under the age of five die annual from diarrheal diseases caused by unsafe water. Agriculture. 60-70%+ of water use goes to Agriculture. Problems of salinity. Worldwide, some 17 percent of agricultural lands are irrigated, producing 40 percent of total cereal production
  • 11. Energy 2.6 billion people in the world, roughly 40%, don’t have access to reliable electricity. Challenge that many of these are present within groups of small communities with low population densities. Challenge of economic viability of operating a utility grid. Question: What happens when the bottom billions connect to the grid and want air conditioning?
  • 12. Shifts to Developing World Less Developed Countries will have changed from 2x the population of Developed Countries in 1950, to 6x by 2050. Virtually all the population growth in the next 45 years will be in less developed regions. Half of the Global Increase will be in 9 Countries: India, Pakistan, Nigeria, DRC, Bangladesh, China, Uganda, Ethiopia, and the US. 51 countries or areas, most in the economically more developed world, will lose population between now and 2050.
  • 14. Cost of Whole Genome Sequencing •Cost of sequencing the human genome, 13 years, 2.7 billion 1991 dollars. •Cost of sequencing a single genome soon, <$1,000 •Complete Genomics is developing a sequencing system that will increase its throughput to 80 genomes per day.
  • 15. Computing Power (increased power, decreased cost, exponential) The power of computing is increasing exponentially, while the cost is decreasing exponentially Moore’s Law: The number of transistors that can be placed inexpensively on an integrated circuit doubles approximately every two years. Cheap Storage Computing power of the internet – parallel processing
  • 16. Connectivity: Mobile 5 Billion Cell phones around the world – they are now gateways to human knowledge, tools to create music and artwork, the are sensors. In Africa: It took nearly 20 years to attract the first 100 million subscribers It took less than 3 years to attract the next 200 million subscribers. Leapfroging. 2012: 13 Million fixed Landlines, 500 M+ mobile phone subscriptions. Developing Countries. In 2000 the developing countries accounted for around one- quarter of the world’s 700m or so mobile phones. By the beginning of 2009 their share had grown to three- quarters of a total which by then had risen to over 4 billion.
  • 17. Connectivity: Internet Increase in Africa: 2,968%, Penetration: 13% World Average: 528%, Penetration: 32%
  • 18. Crisis Camp Haiti: Random Hacks of Kindness  Base layer map for Port Au Prince: This project would create a new collection of imagery and a new base map for NGOs and relief agencies. Post available imagery to share with the public for open source applications.  Family Locators for Quake Victims  Faster relief information and data sharing  CrisisCamp will brought together domain experts, developers, and first responders around improving technology and practice for humanitarian crisis management and disaster relief.
  • 19. The Age of Big Data New York Times, Feb. 12, 2012 •Knowledge and the form of knowledge are expanding exponentially •Increase in sensors and opportunities for input. •Genomics •Remote Sensing •Amount of Data may be now doubling every 2 years •Understand process from patterns
  • 21. Potential for Decentralization of Manufacturing 3D Printers Maker’s Fairs and DIY
  • 22. Rethinking Development by Leveraging Global Knowledge
  • 23. Premises • Development has become a living condition where billions of people have access to a few centuries of human technological progress, but where another few billion people do not. • There is an accelerating gulf between those who are connected and those who are not. • Challenges are increasingly global, and require global partnership to address. They are also opportunities. • Challenges are multidisciplinary and fluid • There are great ideas in the developing world. We need to jointly define the problems and the solutions together. This is required for our own economic growth.
  • 24. Crowd-Sourcing the World • How do we bring new solvers into development? How do we find new technological solutions that may exist in other fields. • How do we better capture existing knowledge and solutions and apply them to development? How can we capture indigenous innovation?
  • 25. Saving Lives at Birth A woman dies from childbirth every 2 minutes • The onset of labor marks start of high-risk period for mother and baby until at least 48 hours after birth. Each year –  150,000 maternal deaths  1.6 million neonatal deaths  1.2 million stillbirths • Majority of deaths in low and middle income countries – less than half of these mothers deliver in hospitals
  • 26. We seek groundbreaking ideas The Challenge that can LEAPFROG conventional approaches in three areas… technologies. Roadblock: lack of medical technologies appropriate for the community or clinic setting Target: bold ideas for science and technology advances that prevent, detect or treat maternal and newborn problems at the time of birth. service delivery. demand. Roadblock: too few trained, Roadblock: mothers in resource-poor settings motivated, equipped and often lack information about services they properly located health staff and need, what they can do, and benefits from caregivers accessing health care or adopting healthy behaviors. Target: bold ideas for new approaches to high-quality care Target: bold ideas for empowering and at the time of birth engaging pregnant women and their families
  • 27. DevelopmentXChange – Overview Three Day Event Key components Competition: 75 finalists compete for funding by displaying and explaining project to selection committees (“interview”) (CLOSED) Innovator Workshops/Networking: Structured discussions/workshops to engage finalists on key challenges (business plan support, M&E, capacity building for scale, BCC, accessing financing, Agenda at a Glance etc.) (CLOSED) Development Exchange: Innovations displayed in open marketplace; opportunity to network and exchange ideas with finalists, innovators, funders and development experts (OPEN TO PUBLIC) Award Ceremony/XChange Talks: Series of “TED- like” talks combined with select innovator presentations (INVITATION ONLY) 27
  • 28. Open Source Collaboration • Saturday: Innovating Innovation: Open Source Successes for Neglected Diseases and Beyond. • Give away everything you know, and more will come back to you. • Using Open Source Collaboration, Journals, Research design to create opportunities for participation in resource-poor environment. Clear advantages to allow for faster advancement of fields. • How can we use this for promoting knowledge based collaborations with the developing world?
  • 29. Connecting the Unconnected • Digital Science Libraries (CRDF Global, State, USAID) • Open Access Journals. • Open Data Bases (genetics, biodiversity, remote sensing) • Real-time Google Earth. • I-Tunes U • MIT Open Courseware • Stanford AI Class (Sebastian Thun & Peter Norvig) – now through Udacity • Grand Challenge for Development: Education & Agriculture • Khan Academy: Free world-class education to anyone
  • 30. 122,383, 239 lessons delivered
  • 31. Opportunities Global for Scientific Partnerships • Nature of Science is increasing collaborative as the problems require crossing more disciplines and bringing together more data. • PEER (www.nas.edu/peer). NSF-USAID. Scaling the Bilateral S&T model to 79 developing countries around the world. (Drs. Annica Wayman, Frederico Prado, Mark Doyle). Almost 500 applications, from >50 countries. • Bilateral S&T Programs: India, Egypt, Pakistan
  • 32. Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in Research (PEER) A grants program to enhance partnerships between NSF-funded Scientists and their Developing Country Collaborators. US Scientist receives an NSF NSF Award supports the award to do research in research and training of country X US Scientists and Students USAID Award supports Partner scientist in country X in-country scientists, students, applies to USAID for support and institutions. to facilitate collaboration. - PEER will align with areas of joint USAID and NSF priorities. - USAID leverages NSF investment and merit review. - Will build research capacity at local institutions.
  • 33. Current Models of Universities (and Science)
  • 34. Next Generation CGIAR • Creative, Open, Multidisciplinary, Entrepreneurial. • Universities as laboratories for applying science, technology, and creativity to development. • Universities as incubators. Go to: www.usaid.gov/universities

Notas del editor

  1. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  2. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  3. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  4. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  5. Innovative solutions in any of the following areas: Ways that Information and Communication Technology (ICT) can be used to improve health and healthcare delivery in rural areas Health technologies adapted for use in rural, low-resource settings (e.g. low cost devices for emergency newborn care) Incentives aimed at household behaviors or used to recruit/train/retain community healthcare workers Mechanisms to improve referral and transportation of mothers with complications and sick newborns Mass communication methods targeting individual and collective behaviors and attempting to shift social norms
  6. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  7. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  8. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  9. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  10. PEER is the first of hopefully several mechanisms to facilitate USAID/NSF interaction.
  11. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem
  12. Correlated 90% changes in 28,800 biological processes against observed temperature increases. Looked at alternative causation due to landuse changes. In biological systems, changes include shifts in spring events (for example, leaf unfolding, blooming date, migration and time of reproduction), species distributions and community structure. Additionally, studies have demonstrated changes in marine-ecosystem