Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

Seven revolutions

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CSIS ongoing research effort to identify and analyze the most important trends shaping our world out to the year 2035.

Have you considered how a global population of 9 billion people by the middle of the century will impact your life? What are the challenges for the availability of food, water, and energy resources? How will society balance the benefits of technological innovation and advanced communication with the threat of cyber security? How will global economic integration and governance affect trade, markets, and commerce overall?

To answer questions like these, the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS) embarked on an initiative in 1992 to address and analyze the key policy challenges that policymakers, business figures, and other leaders will face out to the year 2035 & beyond. It is an effort to promote strategic thinking about the long-term trends that too few take the time to consider. Though our research is constantly evolving, we created this guide as a snapshot for what we call the Seven Revolutions.

The key points of this research have been captured in an exciting, fast-paced, multimedia presentation that has been given around the world—from governments to private corporations to academia to nongovernmental organizations. Seven Revolutions is constantly updated to reflect the latest data analysis and available technologies. It is an effective tool for pushing audiences to think outside of their areas of expertise and beyond their familiar planning parameters.

In exploring the world of 2035, the seven areas of change we have identified are:

What effects will population growth/decline, aging, migration and urbanization have on our future world?

What changes will we see in food, water & energy consumption/production?

What changes are we going to see in computation, robotics, biotechnology & nanotechnology?

How does the vast amount of data change how we learn and govern in the future?

Revolution 5: Economics

How is our economic landscape changing?

How do we balance state competition/conflict with the increased pressures of transnational threats? 

What is the role of leaders, corporations and NGO’s in this new enviornment?

 

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