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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Genevieve Bouche
سری: Innovation, Enterpreneurship, Management Series: Innovation and Technology Set, 15
ISBN (شابک) : 1786307510, 9781786307514
ناشر: Wiley-ISTE
سال نشر: 2022
تعداد صفحات: 297
[299]
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 11 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Productive Economy, Contributory Economy: Governance Tools for the Third Millennium به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب اقتصاد مولد، اقتصاد مشارکتی: ابزارهای حکمرانی برای هزاره سوم نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
فوریت فزاینده مسائل زیست محیطی نیاز به بازنگری در مدل
اجتماعی ما دارد. این کتاب با بازگشت به گذشته و مشخص کردن نقاط
عطف در تکامل جامعه اروپایی که در حال حاضر در حال تجربه آن
هستیم، این ادعا را بررسی میکند.
اقتصاد تولیدی، اقتصاد مشارکتی<
span> تحلیلی از عوامل مؤثر بر تکامل مدل اجتماعی ما،
برخاسته از بیتحرکی، که در عصر صنعتی به اوج خود رسید، ارائه
میکند. برای پیشبرد این تکامل، ما باید اجازه دهیم که خیر عمومی
پیشرفت کند: خانواده، دانش، نوآوری، دموکراسی و معنویت. این کتاب
یک اقتصاد مشارکتی و مولد دوگانه را ارائه می دهد که باید به کار
گرفته شود، و همچنین هم افزایی که می تواند بین این دو فضای
مشارکت انسانی ایجاد شود. همچنین ابزارهای حکمرانی که ما به آن
نیاز خواهیم داشت، مانند پول هوشمند، و همچنین شرایط موفقیت آنها
را مطالعه می کند.
The increasing urgency of environmental issues
necessitates the rethinking of our societal model. This book
explores this assertion by going back in time and pinpointing
the turning points in the evolution of European society that we
are currently experiencing.
Productive Economy, Contributory
Economy presents an analysis of the factors
affecting the evolution of our societal model, emerging from
sedentarism, which culminated in the industrial age. To further
this evolution, we must allow the common good to prosper:
family, knowledge, innovation, democracy and spirituality. This
book presents a dual contributory and productive economy to be
put into place, as well as the synergy that can be established
between these two spaces of human contribution. It also studies
the instruments of governance that we will need, such as smart
money, as well as the conditions of their success.
Cover Half-Title Page Title Page Copyright Page Contents Foreword by Marc Luyckx Ghisi Foreword by Éric Seulliet Preface Part 1. The Driving Facts of Change Introduction to Part 1 Chapter 1. Adapt or Dare? 1.1. Accepting to evolve 1.1.1. For a shared Europe 1.1.2. For a real respect of Gaia’s internal rules 1.1.3. Saving the planet, jobs or our civilization? 1.1.4. Going through “a good war”? 1.1.5. Expanding our field of certainty 1.2. Change seen from afar to better understand it 1.2.1. Being an actor in our own novel 1.2.2. The cybernetic futurology approach 1.2.3. The temporality of civilizations 1.3. Known risks of our model 1.3.1. No tolerance thresholds 1.3.2. A specific model for each geopolitical zone 1.3.3. From the Anthropocene to the symbiotic, an opportunity for Europe 1.3.4. Solzhenitsyn syndrome 1.4. Better than a revolution Chapter 2. Our Heritage of Experience Tested by New Knowledge 2.1. The common good as a new source of prosperity 2.1.1. “Employment and GDP”: words of the 21st century 2.1.2. An inclusive model by necessity 2.1.3. On the 21st floor, take the cultural elevator 2.1.4. Care of our idiom/logobiota 2.1.5. The economy between cooperation and competitiveness 2.1.6. The consequences of this development 2.1.7. Breaking out of the dictatorship of short term 2.2. Liberating values 2.2.1. No longer possessing, but disposing 2.2.2. From consumerism to the search for cooperation 2.2.3. Complementarity, the wealth of the community 2.2.4. Educating for cooperation 2.2.5. Organization: from the pyramid to the organic structure 2.3. Respect for life course 2.3.1. The continuity of love and knowledge 2.3.2. The times of life from the 20th to the 21st centuries Chapter 3. The Change of Era Beyond Our Will! 3.1. This new era: symbiotic or chaotic? 3.1.1. Overcoming the right/left duality 3.1.2. Revisiting the institutions 3.1.3. The energy of revolt 3.1.4. The time of think tanks 3.1.5. Towards male/female complementarity 3.1.6. Learning transparency in a fuzzy universe 3.2. AI, the eye of Cain and democratic benevolence 3.3. Sovereignty in the 21st century 3.3.1. The layers of power 3.3.2. Power through data Chapter 4. The Traces of Our Future Inscribed in Our Past 4.1. Controlling your destiny 4.1.1. The invention of the image 4.1.2. Smart, but fragile 4.1.3. Not above the laws of nature 4.2. Creative and responsible 4.2.1. The homeostasis of our democracy 4.2.2. Europe: hierarchical with its kings, but organic with its communities 4.2.3. Towards a cooperative democracy 4.2.4. No more ideology 4.2.5. Escaping the clutches of massive influence 4.2.6. Neither colonizer nor colonized, only responsible and competitive 4.3. World view and transmission of knowledge 4.4. Europe, a civilization in reconstruction? 4.4.1. At the forefront of the need for renewal 4.4.2. Taking into account social creatives 4.4.3. Preparing for change with the right tools 4.4.4. The dangers of a collapse of the West 4.5. More technology, therefore more humanity 4.5.1. Towards a new form of governance 4.5.2. Making society now 4.5.3. The end of one model, the beginning of another 4.5.4. No global without local 4.5.5. Demography, a taboo subject 4.6. Digital technology, a weapon but also a tool 4.6.1. Digitized financial warfare 4.6.2. Influencer wars 4.7. Workaholics forever? 4.7.1. Before sedentarization: to each his own tribe 4.7.2. Since sedentarization: a place for submission 4.8. Sedentarization, spiritual at first Chapter 5. “To Make Society” Therefore “To Exchange” 5.1. Exchanges and specializations 5.1.1. The end of the fear of missing out? 5.1.2. Strengths and weaknesses of the concept of ownership 5.1.3. Beginning and end of patriarchy? 5.1.4. Exchanging to prosper 5.2. Financial instruments over time 5.2.1. Symbols to record exchanges 5.2.2. Money and financiers 5.2.3. Church/State and social classes 5.2.4. End of social classes? Part 2. Avenues to be Explored Introduction to Part 2 Chapter 6. The Inevitable Reworking of the Social Pact 6.1. The world of work in revolution 6.1.1. Fewer and better educated citizens 6.1.2. Collapse of the middle class 6.2. Occupation/job and skills/talents/knowledge 6.2.1. Rise of competence 6.2.2. Disappearance of professions and knowledge strategy 6.2.3. Emergence of jobs and networks 6.3. End of the Jules Ferry school of thought 6.3.1. Certification courses 6.3.2. Sloping entry and exit from the labor market, an avenue to be explored 6.3.3. Inspirational heroes 6.3.4. Regulated professions with regulated missions Chapter 7. New Reward Tools 7.1. The end of liberalist doxa in favor of reciprocity 7.2. Shifting the focus between private property and the commons 7.2.1. Dependence on the productive and the common good 7.2.2. The dual economy: productive and contributory 7.2.3. Basic income: yes, but… Chapter 8. Smart Currencies 8.1. Institutional money and contributory money 8.2. Monetary biodiversity 8.2.1. Currency diversity as a source of stability 8.2.2. Incentive money: recurrent and melting 8.2.3. Already smart currencies 8.3. Moving to the sandbox 8.3.1. Responding to the collapse of the middle class 8.3.2. Objectives of the multicurrency experiments 8.3.3. Urgency? 8.4. Do not deny the history of our currency 8.4.1. From melting money⁴ to mortgage credit 8.4.2. Central banks 8.4.3. The financing of industry 8.4.4. Conquering finance 8.4.5. End of a certain finance 8.4.6. Pressure, depression, renewal 8.4.7. The dangers of “helicopter currencies” Chapter 9. The New Priorities 9.1. Return of feminine values 9.2. A different relationship to innovation 9.3. Preparing for the “aftermath” of transnational corporations 9.4. Going digital 0.0 9.5. Data as important as money 9.6. A renewed idea of liberalism Chapter 10. Transition Without Chaos? 10.1. More complicated than sedentarization 10.2. A global but differentiated shift 10.2.1. Alternately at the forefront of human history 10.2.2. Europe at the forefront of the societal shift 10.3. Productive-contributory: Siamese economies 10.3.1. Civilization’s stampede 10.3.2. From the “middle” to the “active” class 10.3.3. Towards higher levels of satisfaction 10.3.4. Economy at the service of people and the common good 10.3.5. Democratic coordination 10.4. Tasks dedicated to the common good 10.4.1. The different contributory tasks 10.4.2. Empathic tasks 10.4.3. Status of contributory and empathic tasks 10.4.4. All citizens and actors of the economic and social life Chapter 11. No Societal Transformation Without Digital Sovereignty 11.1. Protecting land, but also souls and knowledge 11.2. The European opportunity 11.3. Data as important as money 11.4. The European digital age of the 21st century 11.4.1. A place for Rina⁵ 11.4.2. Platforms and the platform State 11.4.3. The time of digital castles 11.4.4. Providing the means Conclusion References Index Other titles from iSTE in Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Management EULA