Showing posts with label trendwatching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trendwatching. Show all posts

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Globalization Deniers

Will low-skilled workers in developed countries ever again be able to enter a plant and find a high-paying union job? Even if blocking trade pacts and immigrants provides a temporary fix, reality requires preparing for a much different future. Looking at mass communication, air and space travel, and artificial intelligence, Villanova Professor Ilia Delio suggests we need political structures and public policies that support human socialization in the world's new phase of global life.

     Some jobs always will stay close to home: police officers, firefighters, even food trucks. But using cameras to improve police work in one country (by eliminating bribes and beatings, for example) is an idea that can translate to other countries the same way training practices that improve the performance of firefighters and new spices that jazz up menus can spread benefits around the world. Resisting the changes caused by globalization does no one a favor.

     The trick is to look to the future and to anticipate the needs and wants that men, women, and children everywhere still need and want to fill. I find it useful to enter two keywords: ted talks and trendwatching, into my computer from time to time to check the discoveries of those who think about the future all the time. Before mapping out paths on a college campus, for example, Tom Hulme told how it made sense to watch what paths students and professors actually took. I was reminded of the story of how the construction company hired to build a highway over a mountain in Saudi Arabia pushed a donkey over the edge of the mountain and watched the route it took picking its way down before imitating the donkey's route with a highway.

     Photos provide an excellent way for students around the world to get to know how each other live. Stephen Wilkes used the photos he took day and night at one location, not to map out a design for a road, but to make art. By combining all the photos into composites, he showed day and night life on a river in one photo and daily life at an animals' watering hole in another. Believe it or not, there are lots of people in the world who have no idea of what our home towns look like, just as I didn't know what a town in Syria looked like after it was bombed until  I saw a photo a drone took of the devastation. Students and teachers can go to ePals.com to find classrooms throughout the world that can exchange photos of their cities.

     The International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX) is sponsoring a contest to select digital format photos from around the world that show scenes and individuals that demonstrate four themes:

  • Youth who are active community leaders and informed citizens that provide future opportunities and positive change.
  • Diverse leaders who serve others and change every level of society for the better.
  • Institutions that build just, prosperous societies by engaging communities, accountability, and responsive governance.
  • Quality education, independent media, and new technologies that provide information and foster civic engagement in communities.

There is a $250 prize for the winning photo in each of the four categories. The deadline for submitting photos is April 25, 2016. Additional details are at irex.org/photocontest.

     With predictions that millions of people around the world will be hungry in the future, photos of young people using new farming practices might be a winning way to show the promise of globalization.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

It Takes a World to Raise a Child

When I saw umbrollers in London over 40 years ago, I couldn't wait to get back to the U.S. to tell my sister who just had a baby how easy they were to maneuver and collapse compared to traditional strollers. Since then, many U.S. parents also have adopted the baby slings and wraps that working mothers have worn when they were taking care of babies in Mexico, Peru, Ethiopia, Korea, China, Japan, and elsewhere. And what mother with a new baby wouldn't want to visit one of Japan's cat cafes? There, she and her baby could be among the customers, many who can't have pets at home, who come to talk to, play with, and chill out among cats while they drink tea. Hillary Clinton once wrote that it takes a village to raise a child; perhaps it takes a world.

     As an international marketing student at American University in Washington, D.C., I had a professor who told us one of the benefits multinational corporations enjoy is access to new products and ideas in one country that they can adapt for use in other countries. In these days, even without world travel, mothers have online access to global innovations.  To give just two examples, there is Internet information on international adoption and crowdfunding websites that finance or even find volunteers for their projects.

     On trendwatching.com, I was reminded of how women have expanded the yard sale concept to become sellers on eBay, Amazon, and other platforms. Kids in Nigeria, like they could in other countries, now play local versions of Monopoly. According to trendwatching.com, the "City of Lagos" version has local locations and, to reflect Nigeria's challenges, chance cards that say things like, "Pay a fine for attempting to bribe a law enforcement agent."

     In my earlier blog post, "Hope for the Future," you may have seen how the Grameen Bank and Kiva have helped women start businesses to support their families and finance their children's educations by providing micro-loans. When I read on trendwatching.com that the idea of selling meals through Thuisafgehaald in the Netherlands is spreading to the US, UK, Germany, and Sweden, I realized, with or without a micro loan, that mothers who are good cooks have an opportunity to specialize in selling nutritious home-cooked, peanut- and gluten-free, birthday party, and other types of meals.

     Mothers who do volunteer work for child-centered, not-for-profit organizations, like the March of Dimes, might be able to adopt a version of what trendwatching.com reports "The Exchange" is doing in South Africa. Consumers only are allowed to shop for its clothes and accessories donated by designers if they first sign up with an Organ Donor Foundation.

     T-shirts proclaim the slogan, "Changing More Than Diapers," on mothers who visit momsrising.org. Though mainly focused on the United States, the site promotes activities mothers around the world could adapt to work for fair wages, flexible workplace schedules, maternity and paternity leave, better childcare, and environmental health.

     The site, vitalvoices.org, already identifies women's issues, works toward solutions, fosters connections across international boundaries, and awards progress. On vitalvoices.org, viewers can see how women in Africa increase the continent's economic potential, how Latin American women strive for gender equality, and how female leaders in Eurasia are combating human trafficking. Malala Yousafzai, the young Pakistani woman who recovered from being shot in the head because she wants girls to attend school, currently is featured on the site.

     Making international connections that foster innovation in education is the aim of the WISE (World Innovation Summit for Education) Educational Leadership Program in Qatar. The leaders in education from the more than 100 countries who attend WISE summits discuss ideas about funding, curricula, assessment, and improving the quality of education, ideas that could suggest new directions worth considering by parents, guardians, and teachers around the world.