This document discusses perspectives on social and societal renewal, including creating a knowledge society and learning society. It addresses how to boost renewal capital through creativity, innovation and reform. It advocates for shared contexts for innovation like future centers and living labs to address challenges. It also discusses mapping a nation's intellectual capital and closing the innovation divide between regions. Overall, the document promotes the development of innovation ecosystems and enabling workspaces to foster continuous learning, innovation and competitiveness.
3. "How
to
make
intellect
the
resource
of
[Ukraine's]
development"
What
kind
of
future
Are
we
talking
about?
04-‐10-‐2013
Hank
Kune
/
New
Club
of
Paris
4. A
Knowledge
Society?
A
Learning
Society?
Rapid
and
accelera*ng
pace
of
change
Complex
and
turbulent
socio-‐economic
environment
Ineffec*ve
future-‐orienta*on
and
short
term
focus:
right
now
and
not
next
year
Changing
nature
of
work
and
work
spaces
Stressful
working
and
thinking
environments
Difficulty
to
introduce
new
ways
of
working
in
tradi*onal
ins*tu*ons
Inability
to
put
new
ideas
into
prac*ce
Compartmentalized
work
and
defending
your
turf
Our
ins*tu*ons
are
outdated
5. Is
the
system
broken?
A
structural
disconnect
exists
between:
• the
infinite
growth
impera*ve
and
the
finite
resources
of
planet
earth;
• the
Haves
and
the
Have
Not's;
• the
financial
and
the
real
economy;
• technology
and
real
societal
needs;
• ins*tu*onal
leadership
and
people;
• gross
domes*c
product
(GDP)
and
actual
well-‐being;
• governance
mechanisms
and
the
voiceless
in
our
systems;
• actual
ownership
forms
and
best
societal
use
of
property.
O`o
Scharmer
(2012):
Leading
from
the
Emerging
Future:
From
Ego-‐system
to
Eco-‐system
Economies
10. Report
on
Intellectual
Capital
of
Poland
In
2008
Poland
produced
a
Report
on
Intellectual
Capital
of
Poland.
This
ini*a*ve
was
intended
to
call
the
a`en*on
of
poli*cians,
the
media
and
opinion
leaders
to
the
importance
of
the
quality
and
level
of
intellectual
capital
in
the
long-‐term
development
of
Poland.
11.
12. Na*onal
Intellectual
Capital
Mapping
“intangible
assets”
Human
Capital
Market
Capital
Process
Capital
Renewal
Capital
Financial
Capital
48
countries
17
years
48
indicators
13. Renewal
Capital
How
well
a
country
or
organiza*on
can
u*lize
its
human,
structural
and
rela*onal
capital
in
order
to
foster
con8nuous
learning,
innova8on
and
development,
in
order
to
sustain
its
compe**veness
even
in
changing
condi*ons
14. “CLOSING
THE
INNOVATION
DIVIDE”
OPINION
of
the
Commi>ee
of
the
Regions
July
2013
“We
cannot
address
societal
challenges
through
minor
adjustments
and
conven*onal
management
methods.
BoosJng
renewal
capital
is
cri*cal
to
success:
crea*vity,
innova*on
and
the
confidence
to
innovate
and
reform
are
also
the
keys
to
success
for
local
and
regional
decision-‐
makers.”
“Regions need new arenas as hotspots for innovation co-creation.
These could be described as "innovation gardens" and
"challenge platforms", which together form a prototype
workspace for inventing the future.
These are needed to address challenges - from small local
challenges to major societal challenges at global level.”
15. Pioneering
Innova*on
Regions
1. Entrepreneurial
discovery
2. Challenge
plaoorms
3. Bo`om-‐up
ci*zen
engagement
4. Circular
Economies
of
Knowledge
5. Science
–
Society
Dialogue
6. Innova*on
environments
and
methodologies
18. Europe
seeks
“Capital
of
innova*on”
• InnovaJve
–
concepts,
processes,
tools
• Inspiring
–
a`rac*ng
talent,
investment,
ci*zens’
engagement
• Integrated
–
with
Europe
2020
strategy:
smart,
sustainable
and
inclusive
• InteracJve
–
community
for
innova*on
in
the
city
&
with
other
ci*es
19. Visual
Ecosystem
Profiles
to
IdenJfy,
Analyze
and
Plan
for
Real
Impact
Case: Silicon Valley, CA USA
Anchors
100
90
Growth SMEs
Start-ups
90
100
Incubation Environments
Case: Otaniemi, Finland
80
Living Labs / Test-Beds
Case: Shanghai, China
60
Cluster Policies & Programs
Research & Development Activities
90
100
Education (elementary to university)
90
Physical Infrastructure and Service Structures
80
National /Regional Innovation Policy
100
Anchors
60
Growth SMEs
50 Start-ups
50
Incubation Environments
30Living Labs / Test-Beds
40 Cluster Policies & Programs
Research & Development Activities
70
Education (elementary to university)
70
80
Physical Infrastructure and Service Structures
National /Regional90
Innovation Policy
Copyright and all rights reserved.
21. 12
POTENTIALLY
ECONOMIC
DISRUPTIVE
TECHNOLOGIES
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Mobile
Internet
Automa*on
of
knowledge
work
The
Internet
of
Things
Cloud
technology
Advanced
robo*cs
Autonomous
vehicles
Next-‐genera*on
genomics
Energy
storage
3-‐D
prin*ng
Advanced
materials
Advanced
oil
&
gas
explora*on
and
recovery
Renewable
energy
McKinsey
Global
Ins8tute,
May
2013
26. FuncJons
Future
Centers
fulfil
Skandia
Future
Center
(Sweden):
1st
modern
FC
(1996)
InnovaJon
Future
OrientaJon
Knowledge
CreaJon
&
Use
Prototyping
space
Encounters
with
people
and
ideas
Talent,
EducaJon
&
IncubaJon
Anchoring
results
26
27. LEF
future
center
Department
of
Public
Works
&
Water
Management,
Netherlands
27
33. 15
Future
Center
iniJaJves
in
Japan
AcJve
co-‐learning
network
Future-‐thinking
sessions
all
over
the
country
33
34. Why
do
Future
Centers
work?
Diversity
of
stakeholders
working
together
Explicit
link
between
past-‐present-‐
and-‐future
Combine
dreaming,
thinking
and
doing
MulJ-‐perspecJve
thinking
Asking
challenging
quesJons
Examine
the
consequences
of
opJons
&
choices
Issues
that
ma`er
to
people
Focus
on
concrete
results
35. A
Living
Lab
is
a
place
for
experimenta*on
and
co-‐crea*on
with
real
users
in
real
life
environments,
Users
together
with
researchers,
firms
and
public
ins*tu*ons
look
for
new
solu*ons,
new
products,
new
services
or
new
business
models
Living
Labs
offer
services
which
enable
users
to
take
ac*ve
part
in
research
and
innova*on.
38. Third
Spaces:
where
the
boundaries
of
physical
and
virtual
merge
39. AcJon
learning
camps
as
InnovaJon-‐Enabling
Space
ACSI: Aalto Camp for
Societal Innovation
(2010-2013)
40. Prototyping
Societal
Change:
Learning
from
Prac*ce
2010-‐2012
in
Finland
2013
in
Sweden
2012-‐2013
in
South
Africa
41. International learning camp
4-8 day event + follow-through
Distributed intelligence in
global networks
Real-life challenges of
regions, cities, organizations
Based on:
Societal innovation
Self-organization
Thinking in outcomes
Knowledge Triangle
42. Inclusive
Society:
Espoo,
Malmo,
Amsterdam
The
Challenge
In
3
countries
ACSI
2012
43. Innova*on
culture
Five
perspecJves
New
kinds
of
collabora*on
Urban
test-‐beds
Demonstra*ons
in
Real
life
&
Virtual
reality
ICT
Cluster
Revolu*on
&
Job
crea*on
44. ACSI
2013:
The
Aalto
Camp
for
Societal
Innova*on
Malmö
Sweden
Societal
InnovaJon
for
Sustainable
Urban
Development
10
challenges
100
par*cipants
addressing
these
challenges
and
crea*ng
prototypes
4
days
intensive
innova*on.
6
weeks
of
on-‐site
prototyping
h`p://socialinnova*on.se/en/news/acsi2013/
45. ACSI
2013
Challenges
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
CreaJng
sustainable
city
development
with
culture
as
a
driving
force
Halving
carbon
emissions
from
freight
traffic
in
ciJes
How
to
develop
open
test
beds
for
sustainable
energy
soluJons
Towards
New
Power
RelaJons
&
Co-‐producJon:
Users
as
experts
in
The
Sustainable
City
Local
innovaJon
to
drive
social
impact
Smart
LighJng
Commitment,
ConJnuity
and
CiJzen
Confidence
in
Urban
Development
Towards
New
Local
Democracy
AcceleraJng
City
and
EducaJonal
InsJtuJons
CollaboraJon
ConnecJng
Regional
InnovaJon
Hotspots
46. OUTPUT:
New perspectives, new understanding
Prototypes& promising ideas
Plans for testing in practice
Personal and professional insights
New international networks
Intangible outcomes
Continuing the collaboration
50. Borders
to
Cross
Conference
2013
learning
about
democra*c
and
social
innova*on
h`p://borderstocross.com/conference/
51. No
Smart
CiJes
without
Smart
CiJzens
UNESCO‘s
four
learning
dimensions
52. Building a living learning network
across European schools
Promotes
inquiry-‐based
learning
opportuni*es
–
and
especially
discovery
learning
–
for
young
learners.
Develops
crea*ve
thinking
skills
by
allowing
learners
to
find
different
ways
to
answer
a
ques*on,
learn
something
new,
solve
a
problem.
Supports
projects
by
schools
and
young
people
that
create
something
or
contribute
to
the
community.
53. The
Road
Ahead
• InnovaJon
Ecosystem
thinking
• Ramping
up
to
escape
gravity
• Open
service
innovaJon
for
sectors
and
ciJes
• CollaboraJon
across
communiJes
• Sharing
knowledge,
tools,
methods,
lessons
learned
• Seeing
around
corners
• Rapid
realizaJon
• More
impact
on
the
street
&
the
work
floor
• Regions
as
Future
Centers
•
Society
as
a
Living
Lab
53
54. Open
Ques*ons
• Innova*on
Economy?
• Limits
of
Connec*ng
Everything?
• Opportunity
Costs?
• Ignorance
or
stupidity?
• Black
Swans?
• How
Rapid
is
Rapid
Implementa*on?
• How
to
move
from
control
to
encouragement?
54
55. The
Future
is
Uncertain.
.
.
• Flat
world?
• Hot
world?
• Crisis
world?
• Fortress
economies?
• Diminishing
returns?
• Tsunami?
• Looking
in
the
right
direcJon?
• Boiled
frog?
• Not
invented
here?
If
the
future
is
a
moving
target…
…shouldn’t
we
move
with
it?
56. What
is
the
future
asking?
If
the
world
around
us
is
the
result
of
the
ques*ons
we
asked
yesterday….
What
ques*ons
should
we
be
asking
today?
56
58. The
Future
Center
Alliance
h`p://new-‐club-‐of-‐paris.org/
…
develops
the
knowledge
agenda
for
na8ons,
regions
and
ci8es
in
the
knowledge
economy
…
ac8vates
the
cul8va8on
of
societal
and
poli9cal
entrepreneurship
…
par8cipates
in
projects
and
plaQorm
development
for
crea8ng
global
societal
innova9on
h`p://www.fc-‐alliance.net/
…
is
a
global
community
of
Future
Centers
and
dedicated
innovaJon
environments
…
which
share
a
passion
for
creaJng
sustainable
soluJons
to
today’s
and
tomorrow’s
challenges
…
by
nurturing
collaboraJon
and
the
freedom
to
think
differently,
learn
from
culturally
diverse
wisdom,
share
concepts
and
produce
results
that
can
be
successfully
implemented.