BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 97 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Designing Governance for Native Hawaiians
1. Designing Governance for Native Hawaiians
Seizing the Opportunity to Innovate
Native Hawaiian Chamber of Commerce
Willows
August 21, 2014
2. Richard Kaipo Lum, PhD Vision Foresight Strategy LLC “Reframing the future.” www.visionforesightstrategy.com
richard@visionforesightstrategy.com
3. Lum
James Dator
Glenn Paige
Fred Riggs
Raymond Studer
David Greene
Glen Schubert
Samuel Finer
Eric Beinhocker
Richard Nelson
Richard Nelson
Hendrik Spruyt
Fernand Braudel
Stephen Jay Gould
James Rosenau
Thomas Risse
Stephen Krasner
Dennis Wrong
Bertrand Russell
Jon Pierre/ B. Guy Peters
Clayton M. Christensen
Futures, political design
Co-evolution of technologies
Evolution of the State
Complexity, Future of the State
Governance w/o States
Power
History of government
Governance, Future of the State
Disruptive Innovation
Mo‘o ‘Ike
4. “Today we find ourselves with political systems based on 18th century philosophy, run with 19th century administrations, built on 20th century technologies, attempting to confront 21st century challenges."
Richard A. K. Lum, PhD
5. A Rare Historic Moment
Political Community
Process
Content
This moment is about creating
There will be no better or more important time for us to be innovative
6. "...everywhere people and their societies have entered an emergent epoch, an epoch marked by pervasive uncertainties, perplexing ambiguities, and unending contradictions fostered by a wide range of dynamics, not the least being newly empowered individuals and expanded roles for nongovernmental agents of change."
James Rosenau, Distant Proximities
7. A SUPER SHORT HISTORY OF MODERN POLITICAL DESIGN
The lineage of the modern governance
8. Lineage of Modern Governance
Athens
Rome
Middle Ages → Enlightenment
English Civil Wars
American Revolution
•Citizenship
•Democracy
•“Roman” citizenship
•Checks & balances
•Mixed government
•Representation
•Passive citizenship
•The modern state
•Sovereignty
•Separation of powers
•Constitutions
•ConCons
•Federalism
Popular sovereignty, Consent of the governed…
10. Implications of Our Political History
•Constitution document
•Tripartite government
•Elected representatives
•Passive citizenship
•A society of states
11. "At Westphalia in 1648, a set of general rules for the conduct of international relations was concretized in the peace treaties. As we show, those rules make it difficult for the world to deal with many kinds of contemporary problems, and our critique of the Westphalian settlement rests on the belief that these kinds of global problems for which Westphalia is dysfunctional have grown most dramatically over the years and are therefore in the most dire need of attention.”
Kegley and Raymond. The Ghost of Westphalia.
The Long, But Perfect, Quote
12. THE EMERGING POLITICAL LANDSCAPE
The world’s assumptions about governance will be tested
16. “IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY, IT IS BECOMING increasingly clear that conventional modes of political steering by nation-states and international regulations are not effectively dealing with global challenges such as environmental problems, humanitarian catastrophes, and new security threats.” Thomas Risse. Governance Without a State: Policies and Politics in Areas of Limited Statehood
17. Sustaining Innovation
Improving performance along the established, expected dimensions
The Athenian reforms of Solon
(594 BCE)
Constitution-making process of South Africa (CE 1990s)
Disruptive Innovation
Redefining the dimensions of performance or serving new customers
The Athenian reforms of Cleisthenes
(508 CE)
Constitution-making process of the USA
(CE 1787)
Clayton M. Christensen. The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail
19. More Examples of Political Innovation
Sustaining
Disruptive
Improving performance along the established, expected dimensions
Redefining the dimensions of performance or serving new customers
Constitution-making/ state-building
•Iceland’s constitution-making process (2012)
•America’s constitution-making process (1787)
Daily governance
•Data.gov
•“We the People” White House petition site
•SmartCongress.org
•Github*
•Algorithms/automation/ machine learning*
•Participatory budgeting*
Community/ non-state actors
•Honolulu 311 mobile app
•FixMyStreet
•Mosaic rights*
•Crisis mapping*
20. Ask Yourself: What are You Trying to Do?
Are you just trying to improve the behaviors of the system,
or are you trying to redefine the system?
27. Representative Process
All of the design work is performed by the delegates within the Constitutional Convention.
28. Participatory Design Process
Most of the design work is conducted by the delegates in the Convention.
A select number of issues are given to the full political community to collaboratively design (which the ConCon must accept).
29. Democratic Process
All of the design work is performed – collaboratively – by the full political community via open design conferences and online collaboration tools.
30. Let’s Compare
Control
Democratic Quotient
Innovation Potential
Representative Process
High
Low
Low
Participatory Design Process
Medium
Medium
Medium
Democratic Process
Low
High
High
31. A FEW KEY TERMS
Evolving our language and mindsets
32. Key Concepts to (Re)consider
Governance
Political Community
Sovereignty