Sentences with phrase «how human economies»

Not exact matches

But others, like Paul Krugman, who in 1998 predicted that the Internet's impact on the economy would be no greater than the fax machine's, were dead wrong, though for understandable reasons.11 Timelines for the adoption and extension of new technologies are inherently unpredictable, primarily because their ultimate impact will be a result of how humans interact with them.
It pushes questions that will not be pushed back: How do we do all our theological reflection from earth - centered praxis, with «earth» encompassing of the human economy and the economy of [the rest of] nature together?
I wish that those with technical expertise about economic matters would direct much of their energy to finding how the economy could serve sustainable human welfare.
Economy, Environment, Human Dignity, Human Rights... voting is a privilege, we should take more than just 2 minutes to decide on how to spend that vote.
We are not just talking about how fast humans decarbonize the economy (or whether we do this at all!).
LUNGSOD NG MEYCAUAYAN, Enero 9 (PIA)-- Hindi gigibain ng Department of Learn how emissions reductions, advancements in fuels and fuel economy, and working with industry to find solutions to air pollution problems benefit human
How will managerial skill requirements change as a result of major structural changes that are likely, including human replacement by machines and growth of the on - demand economy?
It is a reflection on the postwar bull market and how the pullback of the early 60's merely confirmed, first the natural human tendency to abandon common sense in stock valuation and then the tendency to overreact, the boom and bust cycle, that develops not only in economies but also in markets.
The duo's work span around the complex relationship of materiality, technology, economy, and how technology shapes economy and physical reality, including the human body.
Now the human being's action is pursuing economy growth not how can manage our earth.
This all relates to what has become a recurring theme on Dot Earth: figuring out how to avoid loving special places to death as the human population and economy grow, and ever more people have the wherewithal to go places and see things.
I think they are very right, how to control human being greedy to develop economy depend on fossil fuel is very big issue for us now.
I sent him an e-mail asking if he could elaborate a bit on how a consciously finite, but prosperous, human economy might work.
The team ran a suite of 400 computer simulations incorporating both what is known about how the climate could react to a greenhouse - gas buildup and a wide range of variations in the global economy and other human factors that might affect the outcome.
I've written repeatedly about how there are two utterly divergent human worlds at this remarkable juncture in our history — one in which lives and economies are enabled by technology and ample energy, and a much larger one without those assets (I use that word in a nonjudgmental way).
Remember how we trained a generation for a new, industrial economy by building a nationwide system of public high schools; how we laid down railroad tracks and highways across an entire continent; how we pushed the boundaries of science and technology to unlock the very building blocks of human life.
This book examines how our economy works, how it affects societies and bioregions, and offers a model for redirecting it to enhance both human and non-human communities.
How about 500 million human deaths by starvation from droughts if the economy can still grow, is this a cost?
Because of the role of energy as the «master resource» in the economy (and of Marlo's own extensive expertise in the field), much of our conservation revolved around how important supplies of affordable energy are to human health and well - being.
Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy by Gillian Hadfield.
I'm looking forward to reading Gillian Hadfield's new book, «Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy,» which was released at the beginning of this month.
Gillian Hadfield just came out with a fabulous book: Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy.
Over the holidays, I started reading Gillian Hadfield's book, Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy.
The challenges are named for the person who conceived them, University of Southern California Professor Gillian Hadfield, one of the leading proponents of reform and redesign of legal systems and author of Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy.
Let's start with Gillian Hadfield's 2016 book Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy.
The best example of this increased interest is probably Gillian Hadfield's 2016 book Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It For a Complex Global Economy.
These posts were originally part of an online symposium on Prawfsblawg focused on two books: Richard Susskind & Daniel Susskind, The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts and Gillian Hadfield, Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent it for a Complex Global Economy.
Her recent publications include Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy (Oxford University Press 2016); «How to Regulate Legal Services to Promote Access, Innovation and the Quality of Lawyering» (with Deborah Rhode)(Hastings Law Journal 2016); «The Microfoundations of the Rule of Law» (with Barry Weingast)(Annual Review of Political Science 2015); «Building Legal Order in Ancient Athens» (with Federica Carugati and Barry Weingast)(Journal of Legal Analysis 2015); «Innovating to Improve Access: Changing the Way Courts Regulate Legal Markets» (Daedalus 2014).
This book explores why humans invented the law, and how to reinvent it in our present, complex, global economy.
In two subsequent posts, I'll explore the implications of the predictions for legal education and legal services regulation, when I also hope to touch on Gillian Hadfield's book, Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy.
These developments require a new way of thinking about the regulation of legal services, and Gillian Hadfield's excellent book, Rules for a Flat World: Why Humans Invented Law and How to Reinvent It for a Complex Global Economy, adds an important new conceptual framework for what this approach might look like.
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