It will conclude by exploring the possible emergence of a new kind of society — a global society, whose cohesion and harmonious life rest upon
the rise of a global culture.
Not exact matches
Palmer tracks the
rise of the
global artificial feeding
culture, and shows what happens when breastfeeding interferes with corporate interests.
In 2011, we launched our Opportunity
Culture initiative to help the U.S. close achievement gaps and meet
rising global standards by extending the reach
of excellent teachers to more students.
He has argued that failed banks should not be bailed out, Lehman's collapse was not a disaster, AIG should be declared bankrupt, that naked short selling is not a problem, that backdating isn't so bad, insider trading should be legal, many corporate CEOs are underpaid,
global solutions are worse than local solutions, Warren Buffett is overrated, Michael Milken is a great American, the collapse
of the hedge fund was not a scandal, hedge funds are over-regulated, education is overrated by the educated, bonuses at successful Wall Street's firms are deserved and possibly undersized, management buyouts are boons to the economy, Enron's management was victimized by an over-zealous prosecution, Sarbanes - Oxley should be repealed, corporate compliance
culture is a disaster, shareholder democracy is overrated, hostile takeovers ought to be revived, the market is permanently moving away from public ownership
of equity in corporations, private partnerships are on the
rise, public ignorance is encouraged and manipulated by governments and corporations, experts overrate expertise, regulatory agencies are controlled by the businesses they supposedly regulate and Wall Street is much more fun than people give it credit for.
Given the
rise of the «anti-vaxxer»
culture, even polio could be poised for a
global surge again.
With the entire world watching the recent Fukushima events and the
rising of radiation levels, reported mutations and increasing numbers
of cancer patients (Kudo himself died
of cancer) his oeuvre can be regarded as a valid political statement
of contemporary
culture on a
global scale.
«Creative Time
Global Residency: Reports From the Field», New York, NY, December 3, 2013 «Urban Imprint: The Art and Science Shaping Our Cities,» hosted by The University
of Chicago, Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P.
Rose Hall, New York, NY, November 14, 2013 «Cultural Investment: Creating a Civic Identity Through the Arts,» CityLab: Urban Solutions for
Global Challenges, NYU Skirball Center for the Performing Arts, New York, NY, October 7, 2013 «One State Together in the Arts» One State Illinois Conference, Quad Cities, IL, June 24, 2013 «Theaster Gates in Conversation with Romi Crawford,» Black Collectivities, Museum
of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Chicago, IL, May 4, 2013 «LINC Legacy and Advancements in the Field,» hosted by the Ford Foundation, May 2013 «Constituency Engagement —
Culture - Initiated Redevelopment: Strategies in Innovative Constituent Engagement,» Association
of Black Foundation Executives, Palmer House Hilton Hotel, Chicago, IL, April 6, 2013 «Creating Heat - The Artist as Catalyst: Theaster Gates at TEDxUNC,» University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, February 9, 2013 «Building CapaCity Session,» World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, Davos, Switzerland, January 26, 2013 «Creative Resilience Session,» World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, Davos, Switzerland, January 25, 2013 «Transformative Art: Theaster Gates,» World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, Davos, Switzerland, January 23, 2013
For example, if unabated climate change results in a famine in Kenya, or the Maldives is lost to
rising sea levels, the loss
of life and
culture won't have much impact on the
global economy, but I think we can all agree that there is a significant non-economic loss associated with these types
of events.
Tagged as: American
culture, Anthony Watts, Bill Nierenberg, California, climate disruption, ClimaTweet, David Lister,
global warming, Greenland, history
of climate change science, innovation, Jason, Jule Charney, National Academy
of Sciences, plague, Reagon, SB375, sea level
rise, urban heat island