2015/12/12

The Climate Path Ahead By ANDREW C. REVKIN NY Times Opinion, DEC. 12, 2015

The Climate Path Ahead
By  NY Times Opinion,
DEC. 12, 2015




PhotoThe slogan "For the Planet" was projected on the Eiffel Tower on Friday as part of the COP 21, the climate conference in Paris. Credit Francois Mori/Associated Press 

At the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 23 years ago, the world’s nations adopted a treaty that pledged, but ultimately failed, to cut the emissions driving global warming. In Paris over the last two weeks, negotiators from around the world met for the 21st time since then in an effort to move from aspiration to action.

As legions of bleary-eyed diplomats, environmentalists and lobbyists make their way home across the planet, you’ll hear proclamations that COP 21, as the meeting was called, was a historic turning point, and a profound failure.
Both will be right, depending on the scale of reference.

For the first time, even before the opening gavel, more than 180 nations, large and small, submitted plans — yes, voluntary ones — to divert from their carbon-based business as usual. The United States and China guaranteed progress by stepping together a year ago in Beijing after more than a decade of “you first” fights, laying out detailed domestic plans to curb emissions.

Pope Francis has made it clear that the decisions ahead, while informed by data, will be shaped by values.
Francis was variously embraced and attacked for his critique of consumptive capitalism in his encyclical. But what was missed was his important call for accepting a diversity of approaches to addressing the climate problem.
“[T]here is no one path to a solution,” Francis wrote. “This makes a variety of proposals possible, all capable of entering into dialogue with a view to developing comprehensive solutions.”

That is precisely how the Paris outcome has been framed and how the world will, with urgency and patience, success and failure, forge ahead.

2015/12/08

Open disagreement may be seen as positive if it’s expressed calmly and factually.


La Maison des chercheurs : un écosystème innovant. Université Ctholique de Lille.


2015 11 16_18 The Opportunity of Immersive Virtual Reality for Higher Education meeting at Institute for Future Studies, Lille Catholic University

La radio et la télévision, de nouveaux outils numériques pour innover sa pédagogie à l’université. Silence,… on tourne !

2015 12 08 Lunch in UCL with Charles van der Haegen, Future Society Entrepreneur

Apprendre et oser Bernard Ramanantsoa Ancien directeur général du groupe HEC Paris

BÂTIR UNE STRATÉGIE : COMMENT LA PROSPECTIVE RENOUVELLE LES PRATIQUES STRATÉGIQUES


Ce que faire de la recherche en gestion veut dire


What's On at the Findhorn Foundation

Creepy, Beautiful, Helpful, Badass: Here Come Futuristic Robots From Japan

2015/12/05

Entretien avec Laurie Segall (CNN) : ce que pensent les Américains de l’écosystème français

2015/12/04

QUAND L'ENTREPRISE SE DÉFINIT EN TANT QU'ÉCOSYSTÈME : DU BIOMIMÉTISME DE L’INNOVATION À L’ENTREPRISE BIO-INSPIRÉE

This is one of the biggest, most complicated scientific challenges of our time.

“The scenario you seen in a Hollywood movie, in which some isolated guy in Alaska comes up with a fully-functional AI system that nobody else is anywhere close to is completely impossible,” LeCun said, “This is one of the biggest, most complicated scientific challenges of our time, and not any single entity, even a big company can solve it by itself. It has to be a collaborative effort between the entire research and development community.”

BY DAVE GERSHGORN


2015/12/03

La COP21, versant artistique Le Monde.fr | 02.12.2015 à 15h42 • Mis à jour le 03.12.2015 à 15h08 |

La tenue de la COP21 à Paris a fédéré les envies dans le champ artistique : les initiatives se sont multipliées du côté des artistes comme des institutions pour mettre en résonance les problématiques climatiques ou pour s’engager plus directement sur les enjeux environnementaux. Voici une sélection de douze projets, expositions, initiatives à découvrir au cours du sommet.

2015/12/01

L'éducation, levier majeur et point aveugle de la transition vers des sociétés durables. Pierre Calame.

Dans les travaux de prospective présentés dans le livre 2100, Récit du prochain siècle (1990), Thierry Gaudin pressent l'émergence d'une ère de « sauvages urbains », face à une société incapable de leur proposer sens et insertion sociale, dont nous ne sortirions que par un énorme effort mondial d'éducation. Nous y voilà.