Este documento presenta las perspectivas de múltiples expertos sobre el futuro de las ciudades. Explora varios temas clave como la masiva urbanización, el impacto ambiental de las ciudades, la colaboración entre ciudades, y los desafíos del cambio climático y el envejecimiento de la población. El objetivo es generar discusiones que ayuden a diseñar ciudades más sostenibles e inclusivas.
las grandes urbes deben afrontar de una forma holística los retos y amenazas a su sostenibilidad, tanto en la
gestión de infraestructuras críticas como el transporte, el agua, la energía o las comunicaciones, como en la prestación de servicios a empresas y ciudadanos.
Para poder aprovechar las oportunidades y garantizar un crecimiento sostenible,
las ciudades tendrán que aprender a ser "inteligentes"
39. Riesgos y oportunidades globales 2017. | El blog de Albert Vilariño (2017...Albert Vilariño
Post publicado en www.albertvilarino.com el 25/1/2017.
https://albertvilarino.com/2017/01/25/riesgos-y-oportunidades-globales-sostenibilidad-davos-2017/
La globalización es un proceso económico, tecnológico, social y cultural a escala planetaria que consiste en la creciente comunicación e interdependencia entre los distintos países del mundo uniendo sus mercados, sociedades y culturas, a través de una serie de transformaciones sociales, económicas y políticas que les dan un carácter global.
las grandes urbes deben afrontar de una forma holística los retos y amenazas a su sostenibilidad, tanto en la
gestión de infraestructuras críticas como el transporte, el agua, la energía o las comunicaciones, como en la prestación de servicios a empresas y ciudadanos.
Para poder aprovechar las oportunidades y garantizar un crecimiento sostenible,
las ciudades tendrán que aprender a ser "inteligentes"
39. Riesgos y oportunidades globales 2017. | El blog de Albert Vilariño (2017...Albert Vilariño
Post publicado en www.albertvilarino.com el 25/1/2017.
https://albertvilarino.com/2017/01/25/riesgos-y-oportunidades-globales-sostenibilidad-davos-2017/
La globalización es un proceso económico, tecnológico, social y cultural a escala planetaria que consiste en la creciente comunicación e interdependencia entre los distintos países del mundo uniendo sus mercados, sociedades y culturas, a través de una serie de transformaciones sociales, económicas y políticas que les dan un carácter global.
Economía Colaborativa en Argentina - OuiShare Buenos AiresDavid Sucar
Presentación: La Economía del Compartir, el futuro de la Economía Mundial llevada a cabo en Octubre de 2013 en la Universidad de Palermo (Buenos Aires) por el equipo OuiShare: David Sucar, Laura Cerioni, Désirée Maillard-Salins y Gonzalo Martinez Luchinetti.
En estas diapositivas hablamos sobre la Sociedad Actual. Las compartimos con ustedes de nuestra autoría, sin embargo la información utilizada fue sustraida de la Red.
En este breve informe nos concentraremos en 14 áreas en las que estamos llegando al "Crunch Time" (hora de la verdad) y expondremos cómo deberíamos reaccionar.
Presentación en la Primera Jornada Internacional sobre Sustentabilidad: "Curitiba Rosario:en el camino hacia la sustentabilidad" Rosario, 29 de julio de 2011.
La economía colaborativa: ¿Hacia un modelo más humano y sostenible?Esther Val
Estamos asistiendo a un cambio profundo de valores con respecto al consumo, la propiedad y el estatus social facilitado por la tecnología bajo las premisas de un nuevo modelo llamado “economía colaborativa”. En un contexto de descrédito generalizado del capitalismo neoliberal y sus instituciones, este modelo permite a individuos compartir servicios o bienes por medio del intercambio o trueque o bien convirtiéndose en pequeños empresarios que sacan un rendimiento de sus activos infrautilizados. Siguiendo el modelo de internet, el centro de poder migra de las corporaciones e instituciones públicas a las comunidades e individuos que valoran ahora el compartir y tener acceso, la comunidad y la confianza. La economía colaborativa encierra un enorme potencial de transformación social y es una forma de economía más humana y sostenible. Su potencial es muy real, sin embargo, el desarrollo de esta economía se está encontrando con no pocos obstáculos debido a su naturaleza altamente disruptiva. Este cambio de paradigma presenta una oportunidad para que el Estado, que ve reducido actualmente su poder de impacto, se transforme en un Estado-socio y plataforma que colabora, acompaña y facilita en pro del bien común y de la extensión de los métodos colaborativos a todos los sectores.
Future of high impact philanthropy - Initial perspectiveFuture Agenda
We are very pleased to announce a new topic focus for some events and wider discussions during the first half of 2017. Building on to some of the insights gained from previous events, including on the future of wealth and the future of doing good, This new initial perspective explores potential future shifts in the field of High Impact Philanthropy. It is authored by Prof. Cathy Pharoah of Cass Business School London. It highlights some of the issues being raised as the worlds of impact investing and philanthropy increasingly overlap as more organisations and investors seek to help create lasting change. Many are now asking about how donor expectations will evolve, how giving will scale, how best to create and measure impact and where new models within philanthropy will emerge.
To address these and other questions, we are running a series of events over the next few months in London, Mumbai, Singapore, New York and Dubai that will explore the emerging shifts, understand new global and regional priorities and highlight what leaders in the fields of philanthropy and impact investing feel will define success. As with all Future Agenda projects, we will build on THIS initial perspective by bringing together a rich mix of expertise to challenge assumptions, share insights and co-create an enriched, informed future view for all.
If you would like to get involved as participants or hosts, do let us know and we can share more details. Equally if you have any feedback on the initial perspective or other comments do let us know by email, twitter or linked-in and we will make sure these are shared and included in to the mix.
At a time where much is being asked of philanthropy and its ability to successfully direct much-needed investment into key areas of challenge and opportunity, we very much look forward to hosting this important debate and sharing insights.
We are delighted to share our insights to date on the Future of Cities. This is being released before our upcoming event in Singapore on 14 July 2016, to be led by Anupam Yog and Patrick Harris.
Future Agenda would like to thank Haworth for their kind hosting of the event on the 14th and The Partners who are kindly helping us with logistics in advance. Material here is from an initial perspective written by Harry Rich, CEO RIBA and which has been built upon subsequently with conversations in Dubai, Christchurch NZ, Singapore and Beiruit.
More Future of Cities workshops are planned throughout 2016 for Los Angeles, Shanghai, London and Dubai.
Comments very welcome.
El futuro de las ciudades uees - ecuador - 15 november 2016Future Agenda
This is the presentation given at ESAI Business School UEES in Guayaquil Ecuador on 15 November. Following a successful workshop at UEES on the 14th November it shares views on some key issues for the future of cities as seen from multiple discussions around the world
Future Risk - Emerging global and corporate challenges 05 02 17Future Agenda
Over the past few months we have been running a number of workshops focused on helping organisations to identify and develop responses to emerging global and corporate risks. Working with companies, government agencies and advisory groups, we have been interrogating the insights from the Future Agenda programme to highlight those issues that provide the greatest potential challenge and also could have the most significant impact going forward. At a time when growing uncertainty and ambiguity are top of mind for many, we thought a brief summary of the most frequent topics being explored may be of wider interest.
In this summary we have therefore highlighted ten key global risks and ten key corporate risks that multiple organisations are seeing as high priority / impact for the next decade:
Ten Global Risks
• Accelerating displacement and the increase in migration
• Air pollution increasing in many urban environments
• A new world order driven by changing interests and relationships
• Broader cyber terrorism moving from the virtual to physical world
• Closing the inequality gap and balance equity and autonomy
• Flooded cities as the most visible impact of climate change
• Global pandemics stressing public health systems
• Key resource constraints driven by economic and political tensions
• Rising youth unemployment creating a lost generation
• Spiraling debt as a precursor to another major financial crisis
Ten Corporate Risks
• Continuous proof of loyalty to consumers required from brands
• Declining government influence as cities, networks and multinationals lead
• Full cost and having to account and pay for the true impact of activities
• Interconnected systems and the IoT increasing business vulnerability
• Managing data risk driving the need for greater security
• Regulation changing rapidly in its reach, its character and its focus
• Speed to scale accelerating and proving more disruptive impact
• Truth and illusion shifting view of what is credible and why
• The human touch being increasingly important in a digital world
• The rise of machines as AI and automation are both threat and opportunity
While not the same top issues for every organisation, these hopefully help to provide useful insight and context. More detailed information on many of these is available on the future agenda website www.futureagenda.org
Future Agenda The world in 2025 - FinalFuture Agenda
This is the full range of 60 key insights for the next decade as identified by the 2015 Future Agenda programme. After 120 workshops in 45 cities exploring 24 topics, these are the issues that have been seen to be the core drivers of change for the world in 2025. Available in more detail on the future agenda website, this pdf summary is designed to stimulate thinking on how we can address and build on some of the pivotal challenge we face globally. We hope you find it useful stimulus for discussion and debate on the years ahead.
The World in 2025 - Future Agenda (2016)Future Agenda
What are the big issues for next decade? The World in 2025 is the full synthesis of insights from the second Future Agenda programme undertaken in 2016. From 120 discussions with thousands of informed people in 45 cities across 35 countries, we gained over 800 insights on the next decade. From these we identified and detailed over 60 key areas of change - those are all shared feely on the future agenda website (www.futureagenda.org).
This document brings all of these insights together in a single pdf for you to use. It is a free book shared under the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 licence. We hope that you find it a useful view of how people around the world see change occurring over the next decade.
PLEASE NOTE: This book is also available at cost for local digital printing via Amazon and Create Space
https://www.amazon.co.uk/World-2025-Insights-Future-Agenda/dp/0993255426
https://www.amazon.com/World-2025-Insights-Future-Agenda/dp/0993255426
https://www.createspace.com/6656252
Future of Cities: Insights from Multiple Expert Discussions Around the World
Following on from the main 2015 Future Agenda programme, last year we undertook additional Future of Cities events in Singapore, Beirut and Guayaquil. Exploring not only key current challenges and aspirations but also emerging issues, the insights from these and other discussions have all now been synthesized into a single summary. This document brings together views from a wide range of experts from the 2016 workshops as well as previous events in London, Vienna, Dubai, Delhi and Christchurch. Together it provides an overview of three common challenges, three shared ambitions and three emerging concerns that were highlighted in our multiple discussions.
Given the complex, interconnected nature of the drivers of change in cities, it is no surprise that there are hundreds of different reports already published exploring future trends either globally or locally. While this summary may overlap with a number of these reports, it is not intended to be a single answer to the future cities question. Rather it is, we hope, a mapping of the landscape, highlighting the core issues raised for today and tomorrow and pointing to potential areas for further exploration.
As we go forward with further workshops during 2017 planned in London, Toronto, Dubai and Mumbai, we will be delving deeper into some of the key issues, challenging assumptions and hopefully identify new approaches and sources of innovation. We will also be sharing a full report that adds extra context and detail gained from both the insights shared to date and the new ones added during 2017.
If you would like to join in some of the forthcoming events, do let us know. Equally if you have any comments and feedback on the views in this summary, please do feel free add them into the mix via slide-share, linked-in, twitter or email. This is an initial summary that will have gaps and alternative views that may well need modification in order to better represent a global view. We thank all those who have given up time to contribute to the workshops to date and to all those will be adding in their views going forward.
www.futureagenda.org
@futureagenda
este es un trabajo realizado por la ONU donde da unos interesantes lineamientos, de los desafíos que tiene el urbanismos y como seria un desarrollo sostenible en el sigo xxi
Economía Colaborativa en Argentina - OuiShare Buenos AiresDavid Sucar
Presentación: La Economía del Compartir, el futuro de la Economía Mundial llevada a cabo en Octubre de 2013 en la Universidad de Palermo (Buenos Aires) por el equipo OuiShare: David Sucar, Laura Cerioni, Désirée Maillard-Salins y Gonzalo Martinez Luchinetti.
En estas diapositivas hablamos sobre la Sociedad Actual. Las compartimos con ustedes de nuestra autoría, sin embargo la información utilizada fue sustraida de la Red.
En este breve informe nos concentraremos en 14 áreas en las que estamos llegando al "Crunch Time" (hora de la verdad) y expondremos cómo deberíamos reaccionar.
Presentación en la Primera Jornada Internacional sobre Sustentabilidad: "Curitiba Rosario:en el camino hacia la sustentabilidad" Rosario, 29 de julio de 2011.
La economía colaborativa: ¿Hacia un modelo más humano y sostenible?Esther Val
Estamos asistiendo a un cambio profundo de valores con respecto al consumo, la propiedad y el estatus social facilitado por la tecnología bajo las premisas de un nuevo modelo llamado “economía colaborativa”. En un contexto de descrédito generalizado del capitalismo neoliberal y sus instituciones, este modelo permite a individuos compartir servicios o bienes por medio del intercambio o trueque o bien convirtiéndose en pequeños empresarios que sacan un rendimiento de sus activos infrautilizados. Siguiendo el modelo de internet, el centro de poder migra de las corporaciones e instituciones públicas a las comunidades e individuos que valoran ahora el compartir y tener acceso, la comunidad y la confianza. La economía colaborativa encierra un enorme potencial de transformación social y es una forma de economía más humana y sostenible. Su potencial es muy real, sin embargo, el desarrollo de esta economía se está encontrando con no pocos obstáculos debido a su naturaleza altamente disruptiva. Este cambio de paradigma presenta una oportunidad para que el Estado, que ve reducido actualmente su poder de impacto, se transforme en un Estado-socio y plataforma que colabora, acompaña y facilita en pro del bien común y de la extensión de los métodos colaborativos a todos los sectores.
Future of high impact philanthropy - Initial perspectiveFuture Agenda
We are very pleased to announce a new topic focus for some events and wider discussions during the first half of 2017. Building on to some of the insights gained from previous events, including on the future of wealth and the future of doing good, This new initial perspective explores potential future shifts in the field of High Impact Philanthropy. It is authored by Prof. Cathy Pharoah of Cass Business School London. It highlights some of the issues being raised as the worlds of impact investing and philanthropy increasingly overlap as more organisations and investors seek to help create lasting change. Many are now asking about how donor expectations will evolve, how giving will scale, how best to create and measure impact and where new models within philanthropy will emerge.
To address these and other questions, we are running a series of events over the next few months in London, Mumbai, Singapore, New York and Dubai that will explore the emerging shifts, understand new global and regional priorities and highlight what leaders in the fields of philanthropy and impact investing feel will define success. As with all Future Agenda projects, we will build on THIS initial perspective by bringing together a rich mix of expertise to challenge assumptions, share insights and co-create an enriched, informed future view for all.
If you would like to get involved as participants or hosts, do let us know and we can share more details. Equally if you have any feedback on the initial perspective or other comments do let us know by email, twitter or linked-in and we will make sure these are shared and included in to the mix.
At a time where much is being asked of philanthropy and its ability to successfully direct much-needed investment into key areas of challenge and opportunity, we very much look forward to hosting this important debate and sharing insights.
We are delighted to share our insights to date on the Future of Cities. This is being released before our upcoming event in Singapore on 14 July 2016, to be led by Anupam Yog and Patrick Harris.
Future Agenda would like to thank Haworth for their kind hosting of the event on the 14th and The Partners who are kindly helping us with logistics in advance. Material here is from an initial perspective written by Harry Rich, CEO RIBA and which has been built upon subsequently with conversations in Dubai, Christchurch NZ, Singapore and Beiruit.
More Future of Cities workshops are planned throughout 2016 for Los Angeles, Shanghai, London and Dubai.
Comments very welcome.
El futuro de las ciudades uees - ecuador - 15 november 2016Future Agenda
This is the presentation given at ESAI Business School UEES in Guayaquil Ecuador on 15 November. Following a successful workshop at UEES on the 14th November it shares views on some key issues for the future of cities as seen from multiple discussions around the world
Future Risk - Emerging global and corporate challenges 05 02 17Future Agenda
Over the past few months we have been running a number of workshops focused on helping organisations to identify and develop responses to emerging global and corporate risks. Working with companies, government agencies and advisory groups, we have been interrogating the insights from the Future Agenda programme to highlight those issues that provide the greatest potential challenge and also could have the most significant impact going forward. At a time when growing uncertainty and ambiguity are top of mind for many, we thought a brief summary of the most frequent topics being explored may be of wider interest.
In this summary we have therefore highlighted ten key global risks and ten key corporate risks that multiple organisations are seeing as high priority / impact for the next decade:
Ten Global Risks
• Accelerating displacement and the increase in migration
• Air pollution increasing in many urban environments
• A new world order driven by changing interests and relationships
• Broader cyber terrorism moving from the virtual to physical world
• Closing the inequality gap and balance equity and autonomy
• Flooded cities as the most visible impact of climate change
• Global pandemics stressing public health systems
• Key resource constraints driven by economic and political tensions
• Rising youth unemployment creating a lost generation
• Spiraling debt as a precursor to another major financial crisis
Ten Corporate Risks
• Continuous proof of loyalty to consumers required from brands
• Declining government influence as cities, networks and multinationals lead
• Full cost and having to account and pay for the true impact of activities
• Interconnected systems and the IoT increasing business vulnerability
• Managing data risk driving the need for greater security
• Regulation changing rapidly in its reach, its character and its focus
• Speed to scale accelerating and proving more disruptive impact
• Truth and illusion shifting view of what is credible and why
• The human touch being increasingly important in a digital world
• The rise of machines as AI and automation are both threat and opportunity
While not the same top issues for every organisation, these hopefully help to provide useful insight and context. More detailed information on many of these is available on the future agenda website www.futureagenda.org
Future Agenda The world in 2025 - FinalFuture Agenda
This is the full range of 60 key insights for the next decade as identified by the 2015 Future Agenda programme. After 120 workshops in 45 cities exploring 24 topics, these are the issues that have been seen to be the core drivers of change for the world in 2025. Available in more detail on the future agenda website, this pdf summary is designed to stimulate thinking on how we can address and build on some of the pivotal challenge we face globally. We hope you find it useful stimulus for discussion and debate on the years ahead.
The World in 2025 - Future Agenda (2016)Future Agenda
What are the big issues for next decade? The World in 2025 is the full synthesis of insights from the second Future Agenda programme undertaken in 2016. From 120 discussions with thousands of informed people in 45 cities across 35 countries, we gained over 800 insights on the next decade. From these we identified and detailed over 60 key areas of change - those are all shared feely on the future agenda website (www.futureagenda.org).
This document brings all of these insights together in a single pdf for you to use. It is a free book shared under the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 licence. We hope that you find it a useful view of how people around the world see change occurring over the next decade.
PLEASE NOTE: This book is also available at cost for local digital printing via Amazon and Create Space
https://www.amazon.co.uk/World-2025-Insights-Future-Agenda/dp/0993255426
https://www.amazon.com/World-2025-Insights-Future-Agenda/dp/0993255426
https://www.createspace.com/6656252
Future of Cities: Insights from Multiple Expert Discussions Around the World
Following on from the main 2015 Future Agenda programme, last year we undertook additional Future of Cities events in Singapore, Beirut and Guayaquil. Exploring not only key current challenges and aspirations but also emerging issues, the insights from these and other discussions have all now been synthesized into a single summary. This document brings together views from a wide range of experts from the 2016 workshops as well as previous events in London, Vienna, Dubai, Delhi and Christchurch. Together it provides an overview of three common challenges, three shared ambitions and three emerging concerns that were highlighted in our multiple discussions.
Given the complex, interconnected nature of the drivers of change in cities, it is no surprise that there are hundreds of different reports already published exploring future trends either globally or locally. While this summary may overlap with a number of these reports, it is not intended to be a single answer to the future cities question. Rather it is, we hope, a mapping of the landscape, highlighting the core issues raised for today and tomorrow and pointing to potential areas for further exploration.
As we go forward with further workshops during 2017 planned in London, Toronto, Dubai and Mumbai, we will be delving deeper into some of the key issues, challenging assumptions and hopefully identify new approaches and sources of innovation. We will also be sharing a full report that adds extra context and detail gained from both the insights shared to date and the new ones added during 2017.
If you would like to join in some of the forthcoming events, do let us know. Equally if you have any comments and feedback on the views in this summary, please do feel free add them into the mix via slide-share, linked-in, twitter or email. This is an initial summary that will have gaps and alternative views that may well need modification in order to better represent a global view. We thank all those who have given up time to contribute to the workshops to date and to all those will be adding in their views going forward.
www.futureagenda.org
@futureagenda
este es un trabajo realizado por la ONU donde da unos interesantes lineamientos, de los desafíos que tiene el urbanismos y como seria un desarrollo sostenible en el sigo xxi
UNETE A LA WORLD Urban Campaign — MEJOR CIUDAD, MEJOR VIDAGraciela Mariani
La segunda y la tercera década del siglo XXI será una época sin precedentes en la historia de la humanidad cuando la población mundial urbana pasará, a partir de ahora, del 50% actual al 70% en poco más de una generación. Sin duda el mayor desafío al que se enfrenta la humanidad, es conseguir un enfoque colaborativo y sostenible en todos los aspectos que este rápido proceso de urbanización necesita.
La World Urban Campaign proporciona el ambiente necesario para esta colaboración. Coordinado por ONU-Habitat, y con la
colaboración de una larga lista de socios, la campaña es tu oportunidad para convertirte en parte de la solución urbana - sí, únete hoy a la campaña.
Trabajando juntos en un movimiento global y con la participación de los interlocutores del sector público y privado y los actores sociales, las comunidades urbanas - aquellas que viven y trabajan en pueblos y ciudades y que tienen un impacto sobre el desarrollo - podrán desarrollar herramientas y proporcionar soluciones para unas ciudades flexibles y sostenibles.
Las ciudades son el mayor legado de la humanidad. Necesitamos cuidarlas.
www.worldurbancampaign.org
Hacia la Ciudad 4.0: análisis y perspectivas de las smart cities españolasSiemens España
Estudio de KPMG con el patrocinio de Siemens que analiza el estado y las ventajas de la implantación de tecnologías digitales en las ciudades españolas.
Objetivo 11 de Desarrollo Sostenible
Comunidades y ciudades sostenibles en el mundo y en Ecuador
Estadisticas
Temas de Interes urbanisticos
Retos para la ciudades
Ciudades pensandas para el ser humano
sustentabilidad en las zonas urbanas
planificacion y estructuracion de las ciudades
indicadores de ciudad sostenible: Quito
Artículo publicado en la Revista de la Universidad Javeriana de Colombia, en la edición de Abril de 2016, sobre los Territorios Inteligentes o Smart Cities y lo que deberían tener presentes los nuevos gobernantes en los Planes de Desarrollo Departamentales y Municipales en su formulación, frente al Desarrollo Sostenible en el contexto de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible de la ONU
Las ciudades, núcleo duro de la sostenibilidad en el futuroManu Fernández
El objetivo del artículo es presentar las relaciones entre el mundo urbano y el desarrollo sostenible, identificando los retos que afrontarán las ciudades en los próximos años para seguir manteniendo un proyecto colectivo inclusivo, dinámico y sostenible. En un mundo que asiste a un proceso galopante de urbanización protagonizado por los países emergentes, las ciudades representan el principal caballo de batalla para poder garantizar un desarrollo social equilibrado que pueda mantenerse en el tiempo.
como hacer una arquitectura mas sustentable
Desde su aparición en los años noventa del siglo pasado, el concepto «Smart Cities» ha estado fuertemente marcado por la tecnología como el elemento clave para abordar los
grandes retos que preocupaban a las ciudades contemporáneas: mejorar la eficiencia energética, disminuir las emisiones contaminantes y reconducir el cambio climático
Este concepto ha ido ganando progresivamente popularidad hasta concitar hoy en día la atención de los
medios de comunicación, las redes sociales y los foros políticos de forma intensiva y recurrente.
Las ciudades, como centros de atracción de talento y capital, deben desarrollar sus propias ventajas competitivas. La innovación, entendida en el sentido amplio en que se describe en este artículo, es el instrumento para crear y mantener dichas ventajas competitivas. En el futuro, gran parte de capacidad de una ciudad para diferenciarse estará centrada más en los valores intangibles que sea capaz de desarrollar a través de sus ciudadanos que en sus infraestructuras, que pasarán a ser condición necesaria, pero no suficiente, para posicionarse en un entorno globalizado.
En este contexto las ciudades no deben conformase en innovar de forma puntual. Deben aceptar el reto de trasformase en ciudades innovadoras que buscan, de forma sistemática y deliberada, hacer cosas nuevas o hacer las mismas cosas de formas nuevas, planteándose retos significativos y desafíos que aporten valor a los ciudadanos y a la sociedad en su conjunto.
Future of Off-Premise Dining - Emerging View.pdfFuture Agenda
From ‘dark kitchens’ to ubiquitous delivery brands and grocery on-demand, where, what and how we all eat is undergoing significant and rapid change.
In a collaborative project, put together in partnership with McCain, we have been looking out to 2030 to explore and define how Off-Premise Dining might further evolve, and which of the multiple current trends are likely to stick? The emerging view is a first step toward answering the question. It reflects the key insights gathered from interviews and in-depth workshops with key industry stakeholders in Europe, the Americas and Asia, as well as the Future Agenda database and synthesised desk research.
The fight for future market share is already well underway, and significant bets are being placed on a wide range of future opportunities; from health-focused vending machines, through increasingly sophisticated mobile apps, to personalisation of food flavours. With so many significant shifts taking place simultaneously across the entire off-premise dining value chain, there will inevitably be winners and losers. We hope our insights can serve as a jumping off point for further discussion as to where the winners might emerge.
As with all Future Agenda projects, the aim is to challenge assumptions, identify emerging trends, and build an informed assessment of the changes ahead and their implications for strategy, policy, innovation and action.
If you’d like to be involved and add your views into the mix please do get in touch james.alexander@futureagenda.org
As companies and governments around the world grapple with accommodating changes in the workplace, the workforce and the nature of work itself, we are pleased to be continuing our Future of Work foresight programme. Building on previous global research undertaken over the past few years, we are now looking in depth at six pivotal issues that have been prioritised as areas of major potential change. These are digital skills, soft skills, reinventing roles, the blurring of work, green jobs and digital productivity. Initially taking a European focus, with the support of Amazon, over the next couple of months a series of expert digital workshops are exploring the core shifts ahead and their implications for organisations and wider policy.
This PDF sets the scene for the dialogue both within the workshops and more widely. If you would like to be involved or have comments on the potential changes ahead, do let us know and we can accommodate. As always all discussions are under the Chatham House Rule and so there is no attribution and, as we progress with each area, we will be sharing a synthesis of all new insights and recommendations over the rest of the year.
Future of asthma care a global expert view - summary - august 2021Future Agenda
Future of Asthma Care in 2030
Often hidden by many, asthma is a set of chronic conditions that will, some believe, impact around 1bn of us by the end of the decade. It will see new diagnostics, new treatments as well as gain new social and economic perspectives in many nations. As part of a global Open Foresight programme to bring together an informed outlook for all to use, this is a draft synthesis based on dialogue with 100 experts worldwide. At a time when lung health is front of mind for many, this is an important topic for our future health.
We are keen to understand your view on this. What do you agree with, what is missing and what may need an alternative perspective? Please do share any comments and feedback to douglas.jones@futureagenda.org and we will include everything in the final report that will made available later this year.
Future of work employability and digital skills march 2021Future Agenda
The Future of Work, Employability and Digital Skills
This interim summary identifies 50 key insights for the next decade on this critical topic. These open foresight findings are based on the results of 20 workshops and 150 interviews with over 400 informed experts from across academia, business and government conduced in the last 12 months. These were primarily across Europe, but also include views from US and SE Asia.
The varied discussions identified multiple key shifts that expected to have greatest impact over the next decade. The top 3 of these are seen as pivotal for society, for government, for employers and for future workers.
Building Digital Skills
Reinventing Roles
Developing Soft Skills
To build a richer, deeper view, we would very much welcome your feedback – especially on which shifts may deliver most benefit in the next ten years, and what is missing that ought to be included in the mix.
The UK in 2030 - An expert informed view on some key trendsFuture Agenda
At a time when there is much speculation on what the next twelve months may bring, some are also looking ahead to prepare for the longer term. What will the UK be like in 2030 when the nation is post-Covid, post-Brexit and post-Johnson? Now that vaccines are being rolled out and the initial outline hard Brexit deal has been done, how will the UK fair over the decade – economically, socially and demographically? What changes are already locked-in and what is open to future variation? Based on numerous discussions with a wide range of experts across the UK in late 2020, this document explores some of the key potential trends for the next decade and highlights where the UK may be heading.
Having a well-defined future view is never easy – particularly in times of uncertainty. However, if we can differentiate between the certain, the probable and the possible we can build a clearer picture of the future which may help to challenge assumptions. Since 2010, Future Agenda has been using open foresight to explore decade-long trends with a high degree of accuracy. The World in 2020, written in 2010 for example, accurately anticipated a range of developments such as a global pandemic, the challenges around data privacy, the scaling up of electric and autonomous vehicles, the widespread use of drones and the building impact of solar energy. All of these were anticipated through extensive expert dialogue across multiple disciplines to curate an integrated, informed perspectives which can be accessed by everyone.
We used a similar approach to explore the pivotal shifts ahead for the UK. Following multiple expert discussions including academics, regional and central government, social and business leaders, as well as the military, this document summarises eight areas of alignment about UK 2030 but also highlights three fields where there is substantial difference of opinion.
Our conversations identified eight core areas where we can have confidence that changes will take place. These trends are:
1. A Changing Demographic Mix
2. Accelerating to Zero Carbon
3. Improved Digital Connectivity
4. Declining Economic Influence
5. More Devolved Power
6. Rising Inequality
7. Emphasis on the Local
8. UK Leadership
Future of retail - Five key future trends - 9 Dec 2020Future Agenda
Future of Retail – Five Key Trends
The pandemic has accelerated change across many sectors – and especially retail. More online, less physical and empty malls have been evident globally. So what about the next ten years? What changes will continue to accelerate, which will rebalance, and which new ones will emerge?
Based on extensive dialogue with retail, tech and city leaders globally, this new point of view brings together the major shifts in the mix collated under five key trends – Reemphasis on the Local, Identity Insights, Automated Retail, Continuous Interaction and Informed Consumers.
Now being used to stimulate new thinking, innovation and strategy development in multiple projects around the world, this is being shared to continue dialogue on changes and impact.
We welcome your views @futureagenda
The third programme has taken place during 2020, engaging more experts on the pivotal shifts via virtual workshops and wider community debate.Here are ten issues that will provide future challenge and opportunity.
E7 Not G7
As global GDP rises, the seven largest emerging economies (E7) have increasing economic power. The relative influence of the old G7 Western powers declines.
Data Sovereignty
Large-population emerging economies see the protection of their data as a national priority. Wider data sharing is restricted to within national borders.
The Race to Net Zero
Cities, countries and companies compete to set the standards for the planet.Fully reducing emissions is central for energy, health and economic targets.
Electric Aviation
As the pressure to decarbonise aviation builds and technology challenges are addressed, using electric planes for short / medium-haul flights gathers support.
The Stakeholder Society
The shift from maximising shareholder value to a stakeholder focus accelerates. Organisations’ purpose, action and performance measurement realign.
Migrating Diseases
Health systems struggle to address the impact of climate change. The increased spread of ‘old’ vector-borne diseases challenge nations for whom they are ‘new’.
Peak Soil
After water and air quality, attention shifts to soil. It impacts everything from food and health to conflict and migration. Action follows deeper understanding.
True Personalisation
Ubiquitous facial recognition and digital identity combine with wider AI adoption to enable the creation and delivery of truly individualised experiences.
Resilience by Design
Global supply chains evolve to be more flexible, shared regional supply webs. Competitors access shared, not proprietary, networks and systems.
Proof of Immunity
Public concerns about health security override worries about privacy. Governments integrate immunity and health data with national identities.
More details on www.futureagenda.org
Future of work employability and digital skills nov 2020Future Agenda
Future of Work, Employability and Digital Skills
As the world of work changes, how will organisations, society and individuals adapt to ensure that the current and the next generation will be able to acquire the skills necessary for future jobs? Building on previous Future Agenda research that focussed on key policy areas primarily in the Asian market and, more recently, an updated outlook on the future of work and skills development developed in partnership with the University of Bristol, School of Management, we are very pleased to be starting a new phase of research. As well as an analysis of the future of work, this will specifically explore the shifting nature of employability and how and where digital skills will have impact.
Over the next few months, expert views from across Europe will be shared in order to develop a richer understanding of key issues and how they vary across different jurisdictions. As with all Future Agenda projects, the aim is to challenge assumptions, identify emerging trends and build an informed assessment of the changes ahead and their implications for policy and action.
If you would like to be involved and add your views into the mix, please get in touch.
Future of retail global trends summary nov 2020Future Agenda
This is an updated summary of 60 global trends that may impact the world of retail over the next decade. Multiple expert discussions across Asia, Europe, MENA and North America have developed and shared these insights that have been curated into ten key shifts.
As we finalise the future views before wider public sharing, we very much welcome your feedback on these and which may have greatest future impact.
douglas.jones@futureagenda.org
@futureagenda
The UK in 2030
In the midst of all the current uncertainty, many people are seeking greater clarity around how the future may unfold – both globally and locally. Therefore, as part of the World in 2030 project, we have curated a specific perspective on the UK in 2030.
As with all our Open Foresight projects, UK 2030 is built through dialogue with informed individuals holding alternative outlooks on how things may unfold. This PDF provides an initial collation of some of their views on what is certain, probable and possible. We will use it to initiate further period of consultation over the next month.
With this in mind we would very much welcome your thoughts – especially around the areas that you agree with, those you disagree with and your suggestions about what is missing. Your knowledge will add both richness and depth to this point of view. We will share an updated and more detailed summary before Christmas. The ambition is that this can then be used to both inform and challenge assumptions so we can all gain a clearer perspective on the future of the UK.
@futureagenda
london@futureagenda.org
The world's most innovative cities past present future - oct 2020Future Agenda
Cities are where innovation happens, where most ideas form and economic growth largely stems. For centuries, the world’s most innovative cities have been acting as global catalysts for change, and will continue to do so. As more cities seek to have impact over the next decades, we need to better understand what drives success and so identify those that may have greatest lasting impact.
APPROACH – Getting Clarity
Future Agenda has been conducting multiple discussions around the world on the future of cities (www.futureofcities.city). Our aim is to explore the range of views about what makes one city more successful, more influential and more innovative than other, and also consider key related issues such as the future of work, health, trade, trust, transport and data.
In addition, we have applied a similar modelling technique to those applied to Innovation Leaders which, for twenty years, has identified the companies that have been the best and most sustained innovators, in order to assess what potentially makes one city more innovative than another. Exploring multiple criteria, we have highlighted some core global catalysts for change.
To accompany a speech at the WRLDCTY event, this presentation shares some of the salient insights: It profiles some of most innovative cities of the past, identifying the key elements that contributed to their success, highlights some of the pivotal cities having greatest impact today, and, lastly, suggests ten cities for future global innovation leadership.
https://www.futureofcities.city
https://www.wrldcty.com
https://www.futureagenda.org/the-world-in-2030/
Data as an Asset – A Top Risk?
The concept of data being accounted for as an 'asset' is increasingly considered to be a top future risk. The fifth of our 2030 digital workshops in collaboration with The Conference Board explored varied potential data risks (Many thanks to Ellen Hexter and Sara Murray for organising).
Rated top by 50 business leaders for future impact, and second for likely change, was a foresight that “organisations will be obliged to account for what data they own or access. As such they will be required to regularly report on their full data portfolio.” (See attached PDF)
Particular concerns were raised on; how organisations will best assign value to their data; how it will be treated as an asset; who will audit this; whether ownership will be transferred with use and how, if valued, data will be taxed.
Some felt that by 2030 there will be guidelines, standards and frameworks in place – other were less convinced. Most however agreed that many business models will change.
To explore this topic more see section 4.6 in the global report on https://www.deliveringvaluethroughdata.org
Add your view via @futureagenda on twitter or via LinkedIn on https://www.linkedin.com/posts/innovationstrategy_future-data-risk-workshop-stimulus-activity-6714470359971700736-MunM
While some regions gain from better water management, much of the world’s population increasingly depend on water moved from one river basin to another. New options are explored to achieve this economically and with reduced socio-environmental damage.
As part of the World in 2030 global open foresight project, this point of view shares some perspective on changes ahead.
With climate change, increasing urbanisation, growing contamination, higher water consumption, more intensive farming and rising industrial use in many economies all having significant and combined impact, as the global population approaches 10 billion, but the net amount of water on the planet stays constant, concerns over water stress have been building. With 70% of water used for agriculture, a quarter of humanity is now facing a looming water crisis. A broadening range of urban areas need multiple innovations to provide water to cities throughout the year.
Although better water management and the decreasing cost of desalination are having impact in some regions, in many others, and especially for fast-growing inland cities, the task of ensuring continued water access is mounting. Simply moving water from one river basin to another is not straightforward. It is fraught with technological, environmental, economic and socio-political challenge. There are however several developments underway to enable more effective long-distance movement of water – some focused on building new infrastructure at scale and others looking to imaginatively repurpose existing assets to help meet the inevitable future demand.
Share your views @futureagenda
Future of hospital design initial perspective - sept 2020Future Agenda
Hospitals of the Future
In partnership with Mott MacDonald we are exploring how hospital design will change in the next decade. Building on insights gained from multiple healthcare expert workshops around the world, this is an initial perspective that share some key thoughts on how and where we may see most change. Starting with context on shifts in healthcare more generally, from slide 28 onwards it includes 22 proposals for future design focus. These range from hub and spoke ecosystems and post-Covid reconfiguration to more flexible spaces and the impact of digital theatres.
As part of a global Open Foresight programme, we are now sharing these views to gain feedback for inclusion in a more detailed point of view that will be published later in the year. If you would like to add in your opinions on which issues will be driving most change in hospitals of the future, we would welcome input either directly to us by email (tim.jones@futureagenda.rg) or via this short survey: https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/J9S8SB6
Many thanks in advance for your collaboration on another key topic for future change.
Future Risk: 12 Key Issues for Insurance in the Next DecadeFuture Agenda
The insurance sector is facing major change - from both within and outside. What will be the major shifts over the next decade that have greatest impact? As part of the World in 2030 project, this is an initial view of 12 major trends that will influence insurance globally - looking across data shifts, market trends and in-sector innovations.
What do you think? Which will have greatest impact? Will it be automatic insurance? or N=1 personalisation?
Let us know your views and we can include them in an updated foresight in the next month or so.
Get in touch via douglas.jones@futureagenda.org
For more on The World in 2030 see: https://www.futureagenda.org/the-world-in-2030/
Porous Organisations
Here is our latest 2030 foresight.
This time we focus on the challenges for the future of work. Increasing competition for talent forces organisations to open their doors to a growing number of independent workers. This makes it difficult to maintain corporate knowledge and becomes a challenge for business big and small. In a highly volatile and increasingly complex landscape, many must learn how to manage a seamless flow of knowledge and ideas so they can adapt to changing customer demands, ensure capabilities are maintained and keep the doors to innovation open. Looking ahead, it seems that only the wealthiest and most attractive organisations (in the main technology companies) will be able to retain the loyalty of their employees. For everyone else, building and preserving corporate know-how within increasingly porous organisational boundaries will become a priority. As ever your thoughts and provocations are very welcome.
To access via website https://www.futureagenda.org/foresights/porous-organisations/
New solid-state batteries offer safer, higher performance than existing options and become viable options for use across multiple sectors. Competitive pricing and proactive policymaking accelerate global uptake.
This foresight is part of the World in 2030 project exploring the key global shifts for the next decade - https://www.futureagenda.org/the-world-in-2030/
Battery development has become a priority area for a broadening range of companies in recent years. Significant investment is underway as a number of new technologies compete for fast-growing markets. Five years ago, we identified that energy storage was the missing piece of the renewables jigsaw: “If solved, it can enable truly distributed solar energy as well as accelerate the electrification of the transport industry.” Today, as economies focus on faster decarbonisation and increasing electrification, particularly in transportation, the speed of new battery development has become a central issue for many researchers, policy makers, investors and companies.
Why is this? If we can get significantly more energy from a lighter, more compact, but affordable battery then the implications are enormous. Not only will this accelerate the adoption of electric vehicles by extending their range and providing a cheap way to store renewable, particularly low cost solar, energy, but it will also release a host of new developments in other areas from wearable electronics to electric planes, drones and scooters.
Given the demand for high performing batteries is building, it is hardly surprising that there is as much focus today on creating the batteries of tomorrow as there was when the first rechargeable battery was invented 160 years ago: according to a USPTO search in the past decade or so over 200,000 battery related patents have been issued. The rush to deliver the next generation technology is bringing together a host of new partnerships and foremost in many discussions is the potential impact of solid-state batteries. Within the next decade these could become the catalysts for substantial and lasting change across many sectors.
Soil is fundamental, fragile and finite. It impacts everything from food and health to conflict and migration. Deeper understanding of its degradation raises the significance of soil to equal that of climate change and biodiversity loss.
We know that the quality of our soil is the key to the food we grow, the clothes we wear and the water we drink. It recycles nutrients, sequesters carbon, is fundamental to biodiversity, helps keep our ecosystems in balance and is an essential part of our general wellbeing. But, although soil represents the difference between survival and extinction for most terrestrial life, human activities have caused it harm leading to compaction, loss of structure, nutrient degradation, increasing salinity and denuding landscapes. Furthermore, the urgent need to preserve soil receives relatively little attention from governments. An unsung hero of our planet, it is fragile, infinitely important and finite. Why do we treat it with such disregard?
As part of the World in 2030 programme, this foresight explores the future of soil and the stresses ahead https://www.futureagenda.org/foresights/peaksoil/
Inclusión y transparencia como clave del éxito para el mecanismo de transfere...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Lauren Cooper and Rowenn Kalman (Michigan State University) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
E&EP2. Naturaleza de la ecología (introducción)VinicioUday
Naturaleza de la ecología
Se revisan varios conceptos utilizados en ecología como organismo, especie, población, comunidad, ecosistema, la interacción entre organismos y medio ambiente, rápidamente se da a conocer las raices de la ecología (historia).
Avances de Perú con relación al marco de transparencia del Acuerdo de ParísCIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Berioska Quispe Estrada (Directora General de Cambio Climático y Desertificación) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
Presentación de Inés Aguilar, de IITG Instituto Tecnológico de Galicia, en la píldora del jueves 30 de mayo de 2024, titulada "La Píldora de los Jueves: Performance Verification WELL".
Mejorando la estimación de emisiones GEI conversión bosque degradado a planta...CIFOR-ICRAF
Presented by Kristell Hergoualc'h (Scientist, CIFOR-ICRAF) at Workshop “Lecciones para el monitoreo transparente: Experiencias de la Amazonia peruana” on 7 Mei 2024 in Lima, Peru.
Mejorando la estimación de emisiones GEI conversión bosque degradado a planta...
El futuro de las ciudades 2016 lr
1. El
futuro
de
las
ciudades
Puntos
de
vista
de
múl0ples
expertos
alrededor
del
mundo
2015/16
2. Contexto
Future
Agenda
comenzó
con
una
perspec0va
inicial
sobre
el
futuro
de
las
ciudades,
desarrollando
discusiones
globales
las
cuales
están
siendo
constantemente
alimentadas
y
enriquecidas
por
múl0ples
talleres
en
los
cinco
con0nentes
,sumando
nuevos
puntos
de
vista.
Ini0al
Perspec0ve
Q4
2014
2015
Discussions
Q1/3
2015
Insight
Synthesis
Q4
2015
Further
Discussions
2016
3. Insights
hasta
la
fecha
Hasta
la
fecha
hemos
obtenido
puntos
de
vista
de
muchas
discusiones
en
todo
el
mundo.
Estos
han
incluido
varios
eventos
centrados
en
el
tema
de
las
ciudades
que
han
tenido
lugar
en
Singapur,
Dubai,
Beirut,
Delhi,
Londres
y
Wellington.
4. La
urbanización
de
masas
En
el
año
2050
más
del
70%
de
la
gente
vivirá
en
una
ciudad.
El
crecimiento
de
las
megaciudades
se
ha
dado
por
una
nueva
ola
de
urbanización.
Tal
urbanización
masiva
nos
obliga
a
reconsiderar
la
forma
en
que
diseñamos
ciudades.
5. El
consumo
de
las
ciudades
Las
ciudades
consumen
el
75%
de
los
recursos
naturales
del
mundo,
y
producen
más
del
60%
de
las
emisiones
de
gases
de
efecto
invernadero.
Así,
mientras
que
el
poder
económico
de
las
ciudades
sigue
creciendo,
estas
siguen
siendo
vulnerables
al
producto
de
su
éxito.
6. Calidad
del
aire
El
incremento
de
la
contaminación
del
aire
en
muchas
ciudades
está
matando
gente.
La
calidad
del
aire
debería
cambiar
la
mentalidad
de
la
gente
y
las
polí0cas
de
salud,
energía,
transporte
y
diseño
urbano.
7. La
colaboración
entre
ciudades
El
aumento
de
la
competencia
entre
ciudades
se
ex0ende
más
allá
de
las
fronteras
nacionales
y
provoca
un
cambio
posi0vo.
Las
ciudades
compiten
para
atraer
lo
mejor,
pero
también
colaboran
para
evitar
el
hacinamiento,
la
insuficiencia
de
recursos
y
la
contaminación.
8. La
flexibilidad
integrada
La
ruta
de
acceso
a
una
infraestructura
conectada,
accesible
y
bien
distribuida
es
compleja,
costosa
y
arriesgada.
Esto
incluye
mejorar
el
sistema
para
hacerlo
más
abierto
y
asignar
los
recursos
necesarios
para
un
mantenimiento
con0nuo.
9. Desplazamiento
acelerado
El
cambio
climá0co,
los
conflictos,
la
escasez
de
recursos,
la
desigualdad
y
la
falta
de
acción
de
las
élites
polí0cas
han
provocado
una
migración
hacia
el
Norte
sin
precedentes.
Durante
los
próximos
50
años,
mil
millones
de
personas
podrían
desplazarse.
10. Ciudades
enfocadas
en
los
ciudadanos
Las
ciudades
exitosas
son
diseñadas
en
torno
a
las
necesidades
y
deseos
de
ciudadanos
cada
vez
más
empoderados
que
esperan
servicios
personalizados
de
las
compañías
que
los
prestan.
11. Ciudades
inundadas
La
gran
mayoría
de
nuestras
ciudades
no
están
preparados
para
las
inundaciones.
En
muchos
distritos,
las
familias
ya
no
pueden
obtener
un
seguro
contra
inundaciones
dejándolas
vulnerables.
Esta
situación
podría
empeorar.
12. El
cuidado
de
los
más
vulnerables
Si
bien
se
han
hecho
progresos
significa0vos,
millones
de
personas
siguen
quedándose
atrás
en
la
corriente
del
progreso
-‐
especialmente
los
jóvenes,
los
pobres
y
los
discapacitados.
13. Las
ciudades
flotantes
El
cambio
climá0co
plantea
un
desa^o
preocupante
para
las
ciudades.
El
50%
de
las
ciudades
están
lidiando
con
sus
efectos,
y
casi
todas
están
en
riesgo.
Más
del
90%
de
todas
las
áreas
urbanas
son
costeras,
poniendo
la
mayoría
de
las
ciudades
en
la
0erra
en
riesgo
de
inundación.
14. La
adaptación
al
envejecimiento
de
la
población
En
el
2050,
el
80%
de
las
personas
mayores
de
edad
en
los
países
desarrollados
vivirán
en
ciudades,
mientras
que
las
ciudades
de
los
países
en
desarrollo
albergarán
25%
de
la
población
de
más
edad.
Los
planificadores
están
adaptando
los
entornos
urbanos
para
apoyar
el
envejecimiento
saludable
de
la
población.
15. Ejes
crea@vos
Las
ciudades
0enen
una
larga
historia
de
fomento
de
la
innovación
social
y
pragmá0ca.
La
nueva
tecnología
ha
permi0do
a
las
ciudades
evolucionar
y
reinventarse
a
sí
mismas
frente
a
una
gran
agitación
social,
medioambiental
y
tecnológica.
16. Ciudades
que
dan
vida
A
medida
que
la
tecnología
se
vuelve
más
sofis0cada,
las
ciudades
se
centran
en
el
diseño
de
lugares
que
se
ocupan
de
los
impactos
ambientales
y
de
salud.
Esto
da
lugar
a
espacios
más
compactos
que
son
más
atrac0vos
para
potenciales
residentes.
17. Compromiso
digital
Las
ciudades
están
usando
plataformas
digitales
para
mejorar
la
planificación
del
futuro
y
alentar
el
compromiso
del
público.
El
uso
de
las
nuevas
tecnologías
y
grandes
volúmenes
de
datos
para
apoyar
la
planificación
estratégica
de
una
ciudad
puede
ayudar
a
mejorar
la
par0cipación
pública
en
el
proceso.
18. Nuevos
modelos
y
medidas
Necesitamos
medidas
para
ayudar
a
la
tecnología
a
desempeñar
un
papel
que
cruce
fronteras.
A
nivel
mundial,
se
requerirá
un
fuerte
cambio
cultural,
con
modelos
que
permitan
a
las
economías
prosperar
en
medio
de
las
limitaciones
de
recursos.
19. Planificación
y
gente
empoderada
En
una
época
en
la
que
la
voz
pública
0ene
fácil
acceso
y
es
di^cil
su
represión,
es
casi
imposible
generar
apoyo
a
nuevas
inicia0vas
sin
tomar
en
cuenta
la
opinión
pública.
Los
líderes
necesitan
mantener
el
apoyo
público
y
polí0co.
20. Diseño
duradero
Necesitamos
un
cambio
hacia
una
economía
circular
y
restauradora,
tanto
de
forma
natural
como
técnica.
Los
edificios
0enen
que
ser
construidos
para
an0cipar
cambios
en
el
futuro,
en
lugar
de
u0lizar
normas
de
diseño
basadas
en
condiciones
existentes.
21. Ciudades
saludables
Los
enfoques
que
fomentan
habitantes
urbanos
más
saludables
mejoran
el
diseño
de
las
ciudades
con
menores
costos
de
asistencia
sanitaria,
mayor
produc0vidad,
mayor
resistencia
a
las
enfermedades,
mejora
de
la
esperanza
de
vida
y
menor
demanda
de
servicios
sanitarios.
22. Cooperación
que
atraviesa
fronteras
Las
ciudades
necesitan
un
gobierno
coopera0vo
que
incluya
un
enfoque
de
beneficios
a
largo
plazo
para
la
sociedad.
En
par0cular,
con
respecto
a
la
planificación
y
la
inversión.
23. Ciudades
densas
A
medida
que
aumenta
la
migración
urbana,
más
ciudades
densamente
pobladas
y
eficientes
como
París
y
Hong
Kong
se
hacen
lugares
sostenibles
para
vivir,
a
diferencia
de
las
irregularmente
distribuidas
como
Los
Ángeles
y
Ciudad
de
México.
24. Ciudades
con
asociaciones
público-‐privadas
Para
hacer
frente
a
grandes
retos
urbanos,
como
se
muestra
en
Medellín
-‐
Colombia,
los
gobiernos
colaboran
cada
vez
más
abiertamente
con
las
empresas
para
mejorar
el
tejido
ins0tucional
de
las
ciudades,
así
como
la
infraestructura
central.
25. Ciudades
seguras
Los
habitantes
urbanos
esperan
que
sus
ciudades
sean
seguras.
El
aumento
de
la
vigilancia
de
la
conducta
humana
mejora
la
sensación
de
seguridad
^sica,
pero
a
costa
de
un
aumento
de
temores
sobre
los
datos
personales
y
la
pérdida
de
privacidad.
26. Economías
emergentes
El
crowdsourcing
o
colaboración
masiva
permite
a
las
economías
en
las
cuales
las
comunidades
0enen
recursos
en
común,
reducir
la
necesidad
de
la
intervención
del
gobierno.
La
desventaja
es
que
las
comunidades
crean
su
propia
iden0dad
haciendo
el
"ellos
y
nosotros"
bastante
obvio.
27. Espacios
públicos
Los
gobiernos
se
ven
presionados
para
asegurar
que
se
creen
y
mantengan
espacios
públicos
donde
la
gente
puede
reunirse,
congregarse
y
relajarse,
incluso
en
zonas
donde
la
0erra
0ene
mayor
plusvalía.
Estos
lugares
son
muy
apreciados
y
representan
puntos
focales
para
la
sociedad.
28. Ciudades
satélite
El
crecimiento
de
las
ciudades
satélites
en
muchas
regiones
es
visto
como
una
vía
a
un
mayor
desarrollo
de
mega-‐ciudad.
Conectadas
por
infraestructura
rápida,
las
ciudades
y
ciudades
satélites
actúan
colec0vamente
para
crecer
económicamente
y
de
forma
sostenible.
29. Ges@ón
de
desechos
A
medida
que
las
ciudades
se
vuelven
cada
vez
más
densamente
pobladas,
se
debe
fortalecer
la
ges0ón
de
desechos.
Especialmente
en
mega-‐ciudades
de
rápido
crecimiento,
los
desechos
pueden
verse
como
un
recurso
y
una
fuente
de
energía.
30. Actualización
de
las
zonas
rurales
En
ciertas
regiones
se
da
menos
atención
a
las
ciudades
y
más
énfasis
a
la
mejora
de
la
infraestructura
rural
y
su
conec0vidad.
Esto
ayuda
a
frenar
el
empuje
de
la
migración
y
la
urbanización
y
a
rejuvenecer
la
vida
en
los
pueblos.
31. El
balance
del
transporte
El
aumento
de
la
conges0ón
y
las
poblaciones
crecientes
han
conducido
a
la
reintroducción
de
los
sistemas
de
transporte
público
en
las
ciudades
donde
el
coche
se
había
vuelto
dominante.
La
mejora
de
la
salud,
la
produc0vidad
y
la
movilidad
son
ahora
prioridades.
32. Liderazgo
cruzado
En
las
ciudades
donde
las
diferencias
locales
han
llevado
a
la
inacción,
se
hacen
mayores
esfuerzos
por
la
siguiente
generación
para
impulsar
el
progreso,
y
así
aumentar
la
colaboración
en
torno
a
las
necesidades
comunes.
33. Ciudades
transitables
Los
espacios
compactos
y
reducidos
se
hacen
cada
vez
más
atrac0vos
para
los
habitantes
de
las
ciudades
con
un
enfoque
a
favor
de
la
salud,
el
medio
ambiente
y
la
sostenibilidad.
Trabajar,
vivir
y
agruparse
en
las
ciudades
permiten
a
los
residentes
acceder
a
diferentes
ac0vidades
integradas
en
un
área.
34. Diseño
inclusivo
Se
reemplazan
las
formas
tradicionales
de
es0lo
de
vida,
empleo
y
educación.
El
ver
el
0empo
como
un
recurso
finito
hace
que
las
ciudades
estén
mejor
conectadas
y
los
espacios
estén
mejor
integrados
para
proporcionar
más
equidad
para
todos.
35. Santuarios
de
bienestar
El
éxito
de
las
ciudades
no
sólo
se
mide
por
su
producción
sino
por
su
longevidad
y
felicidad
de
los
habitantes.
Conectar
a
la
gente
entre
sí
y
con
su
ciudad
trae
un
mayor
y
mejor
acceso
a
servicios
de
salud,
espacios
verdes
y
movilidad.
36. Comida
local
Las
ciudades
son
más
'comes0bles'.
Una
mayor
transparencia
en
torno
a
la
disponibilidad
de
alimentos
y
el
uso
de
la
0erra
hace
que
las
ciudades
incorporen
más
espacios
de
agricultura
urbana.
Sistemas
produc0vos
innovadores
permiten
a
los
residentes
un
mejor
acceso
a
alimentos
locales
frescos.
37. Responsabilidades
más
allá
de
los
límites
de
la
ciudad
Las
ciudades
reconocen
que
no
pueden
exis0r
en
un
mundo
desurbanizado.
Hong
Kong,
por
ejemplo,
importa
el
90%
de
sus
alimentos.
Las
ciudades
0enen
la
responsabilidad
más
allá
de
sus
fronteras
y
están
más
involucrados
en
los
ecosistemas
circundantes
y
globales.
38. Construcción
polí@ca
de
las
ciudades
Las
ciudades
se
diseñan
cada
vez
más
para
reflejar
una
ciudadanía
par0cipa0va.
El
creciente
poder
de
los
ciudadanos
y
las
marcas
significa
que
los
gobiernos
deben
cooperar
con
el
sector
privado
y
las
masas
para
abordar
el
desarrollo
urbano
y
sus
desa^os.
39. Future
Agenda
84
Brook
Street
London
W1K
5EH
+44
203
0088
141
futureagenda.org
Que
conduce
programa
de
prospec0va
abierta
del
mundo
¿Qué
piensas?
Par@cipar|
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sus
puntos
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en
la
mezcla
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