Many of the luminaries of the systems sciences spent a year at the #CASBS (e.g. Kenneth Boulding wrote _The Image_ in a burst of inspiration, with his participation). In the current day, the CASBS continues to encourage inquiries worth following.
> Capitalist democracy needs rethinking and renewal. Our current political economic framework is fixated on GDP, individual achievement, and short-term profit, all the while heightening barriers to widespread prosperity. Faced with mounting climate crises and systemic discrimination, we must reimagine ways to ensure ethical flourishing for all. In response, the Winter 2023 issue of Dædalus focuses on “Creating a New Moral Political Economy,” and addresses these long-standing problems and how to combat the resultant unequal footing across the polity, marketplace, and workplace. In eleven main essays and twenty-two responses, the authors raise questions about how to create supportive social movements that prioritize collective, equitable, and respectful responsibility for care of the earth and its people.
https://www.amacad.org/daedalus/creating-new-moral-political-economy
Web video recording of relaxed conversation on Sensemaking and Theory-Building led by #GarySMetcalf for #SystemsThinking Ontario.
"Study: Over 50% of academics admit to pirating research papers
A majority of the survey respondents say they used websites like Sci-Hub to avoid paywalls by accessing illegal copies of research. "
wow. sound like a healthy ecosystem?
https://www.fastcompany.com/90845744/study-over-50-of-academics-admit-to-pirating-research-papers
In #SystemsThinking associated with scientific pluralism, the treatments of world theories as (i) analytic or synthetic have generally received more attention than (ii) dispersive or integrative.
Systems groups can be organismic (incorporated as wholes), or contextualist (strands woven into textures), if we use the #SystemsThinking evolved from Stephen C. Pepper https://coevolving.com/blogs/index.php/archive/world-hypotheses-contextualism-systems-methods/
We've gotten to 106 monthly meeting https://wiki.st-on.org/2023-01-09 . That's negotiated order https://coevolving.com/commons/200710_negotiated_order_and_network_form_organizations
Expansion on the question: XP was mostly tech practices for programming. Scrum contains no tech practices for any domain. People complain about SCrum that it misses XP's tech practices. Now I see general comments that "agile in general" is missing XP's tech practices, but they don't say "XP's tech practices", they say just "tech practices."
But agile is applicable everywhere, not just programming. When you are not in programming, XP's tech practices are not relevant ---- so, if we choose to agree that tech practices are essential to agile, we have to ask what are those tech practices that apply to some other endeavor.
People who know me also spot here that this is my way of rebutting the assertion that tech practices are the foundation of agile. if you/they can't name the tech practices for other fields, then the assertion "tech practices are the foundation of agile" is false.
So it is both an interesting question in its own right, and a challenge to the assertion. Typical Alistair styles, lol.
In Canada, cold is a relative concept, @AmberWavesofFlame .
It's around freezing temperature in Toronto, and I was out bicycling on bare streets yesterday. Twice.
That's not to say that my spouse isn't nearby for warmth.
Might we have an indicator that lives for Canadians are at a stress level lower than other countries? Either that, or spouses are just nicer to each other.
> Canadian marriages are oddly stable
> In 2020 – the most recent year for which data is available – Canada recorded fewer divorces than at any point since 1973. This is particularly impressive given that Canada has 16 million more people than we did in the early 1970s. The low divorce rate was driven in large part by COVID; couples forced into close proximity by public health lockdowns unexpectedly responded by learning to tolerate one another. But even before the pandemic, Canada was already boasting a crude divorce rate that was one of the lowest in the G7.
National Post: FIRST READING: Canada is a broken disaster (except in these areas).
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/first-reading-canada-is-a-broken-disaster-except-in-these-areas
The alignment following #JJGibson on #Affordances and #GregoryBateson on ecological epistemology by #TimIngold, I've found more productive than #BrunoLatour on ANT, @camerontw
There's a whimsical chapter on "When ANT meets SPIDER: Social Theory for Arthropods" in _Being Alive_ (2011)
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203818336
Any country concerned about population decline could learn from Finland on policies encouraging infertile mothers, balancing personal and societal concerns.
> In Finland – where women first gained suffrage, where a woman is now Prime Minister – it is illegal to pay egg donors more than a basic €250 compensation for temporary discomfort (plus the basic daily allowance and kilometre allowance for transportation).
> Women in Finland donate for various reasons, but a scramble to pay bills is not one of them. Recipients do not pick their donor but are matched by doctors on basic biological criteria (donor height and her skin, eye and hair colour). At an average private clinic in Finland, one round of egg donation IVF treatment costs around €7,000, excluding medication.
> ... I became pregnant with a donor egg from a Finnish clinic. I have since left Finland to resume my university position in the United States
#HeidiMorrison | "I finally got pregnant in Finland - a country that hasn’t commodified infertility" | Dec. 12, 2022 | Globe & Mail (paywall) https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/first-person/article-i-finally-got-pregnant-in-finland-a-country-that-hasnt-commodified/
"An Extended Stay" | September 27, 2022 | UW Lacrosse at https://www.uwlax.edu/news/posts/an-extended-stay/
Climate change likely to reduce the amount of sleep that people get per year.
Investigators now report that increasing ambient temperatures negatively impact human sleep around the globe.
#climate #climatechange
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220520132837.htm
@SFuntowicz reminds me of TFH Allen et al's paper
Dragnet Ecology—“Just the Facts, Ma'am”: The Privilege of Science in a Postmodern World
https://doi.org/10.1641/0006-3568(2001)051[0475:DEJTFM]2.0.CO;2
where they quote Cronon
RT @EcologySociety1@twitter.com
NEW PAPER: Using the Panarchy framework, three propositions were identified to improve our understanding of how inequalities influence the reorganization of social-ecological systems after disasters.
https://ecologyandsociety.org/vol27/iss4/art10/
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/EcologySociety1/status/1589700536366149632
In wanting to bring more content over here, I thought I might as well share a recent post on slides:
"Stop asking for slides in advance"
https://qmacro.org/blog/posts/2022/10/31/stop-asking-for-slides-in-advance/
It seems as though this struck a chord with lots of folks. What are your thoughts? (reposting with article title, thanks @danbri)
Taking the historical perspective, here's the gas price relative to wages, which is higher than 2014-2020, but not in a longer-term view 2/
While institutions are incorporated to live beyond the lifetime of a single human being, perhaps fulfilling its mission can lead to a conclusion that the best course is to wind itself down. Courage at the #IveyFoundation , led by #BruceLourie
> One of Canada’s largest and oldest philanthropic organizations has decided to wind down and distribute its entire endowment – $100-million – to expedite efforts to align the economy with net-zero emission targets.
> The Ivey Foundation has determined that the need to transform industrial policies to meet climate goals is too acute to keep funding projects at its current rate, said Bruce Lourie, the foundation’s chief executive officer. The money will be dispersed to its slate of economic and environmental partner organizations over the next five years.
> Dr. Lourie said slashing carbon emissions by 40 per cent to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030 and getting to net zero by 2050, as per Ottawa’s international commitments, are only getting tougher to achieve. [....]
> From the foundation’s perspective, the two biggest risks facing the country are failing to adequately deal with climate change and missing related economic opportunities, such as electric vehicle and battery manufacturing and transforming the power grid, as other countries establish dominance in those areas. “So, in our philanthropic work, we’re really trying to integrate those two things – Canada’s competitiveness and prosperousness, together with the need to address our emissions,” Dr. Lourie said.
"Ivey Foundation will distribute $100-million endowment to causes aimed at accelerating progress on climate change" | Jeffrey Jones | Globe & Mail | 2021-11-29 https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-ivey-foundation-endowment-climate-change/
🆕 blog! “A small bug in Canada's eTA emails”
There's no way that I could find to report this to the Canadian Government - and I didn't fancy trying to raise a bug report with the first Mountie I met - so here's a blog post. As part of Canada's Electronic Travel Authorisation system, prospective visitors to the country get sent emails. The email […]
👀 Read more: https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2022/11/a-small-bug-in-canadas-eta-emails/
⸻
#canada #NaBloPoMo #security
Systems change researcher resident in Toronto, Canada. Past president, International Society for the Systems Sciences. Author of Open Innovation Learning book. Research fellow, CSRP Institute. Alumnus of IBM after 28 years.