Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Lupinus polyphyllus: A #RealisticVirtualEarth #RealisticVirtualUniverse - conceptually like Google Street View - e.g. add a photo - w TIME SLIDER / Maps / Earth / TensorFlow / Translate with Avatar Bots - is like a little garden which we can all plant with our own LOCAL seeds (via https://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/search/label/ethno-wiki-virtual-world-graphy) * * * Stanford 'Governance in the Emerging World: Stability in an Age of Disruptions'


A #RealisticVirtualEarth #RealisticVirtualUniverse - conceptually like Google Street View - e.g. add a photo or film - w TIME SLIDER / Maps / Earth / TensorFlow / Translate with Avatar Bots - is like a little garden which we can all plant with our own LOCAL seeds (via https://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/search/label/ethno-wiki-virtual-world-graphy)









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Stanford
'Governance in the Emerging World: Stability in an Age of Disruptions'


https://events.stanford.edu/events/810/81076/

Stanford Governance

'Stability in an Age of Disruption'



Tuesday, May 14, 2019

4:00 pm

Hauck Auditorium, David & Joan Traitel Building, Hoover Institution

Sponsored by:
Hoover Institution

 

George P Shultz's project of Governance in an Emerging New World explores the challenges and opportunities for our democracy, our economy, and our security posed by emerging technologies and societal changes. This year-long research series aims to understand these changes and inform strategies that both address the challenges and take advantage of the opportunities afforded by these dramatic shifts. For more information and panelist essays, see www.hoover.org/governanceproject

Communications technologies, demographics and the movement of peoples, and climate change are combining to place enormous pressure on democracies and the rule of law, both here in the United States and around the world. The panelists will discuss the impact of these disruptive forces on democratic systems, what can be done to strengthen governance, and how we might learn from when technological and social changes have challenged the capacity of democratic governments in the past.

Moderated by Deborah Gordon, executive director of the Stanford University preventive defense project

Panelists:

- Larry Diamond, Hoover Institution and Stanford FSI senior fellow, director of the Stanford global digital policy incubator

- Mo Fiorina, Hoover Institution senior fellow

- Jack Goldstone, professor and director of the center for the study of social change, institutions, and policy at George Mason University

- Judge Alice Hill, Hoover Institution and former member of the US National Security Council and Department of Homeland Security

- Charles Hill, Hoover Institution and Yale University, former US State Department and United Nations special advisor
http://jackson.yale.edu/person/charlies-hill/







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