We need more and more designs that enable to spread with integrity. We can share and create and understand and feel safe in the way we share ideas. And it's that's a legal technology, isn't it, that allows adigital object to spread. So we're thrilled to see what's happening in cities and places. Now, you sai, what if a company, a digil company, wants to do this? Well, i would come right out with my signboard of five design trades. You want to talk about living in the doughnut. Ok? My dear companies, let's sit down. Ye you can show me your purpose on your webb side, and
When Kate Raworth began studying economics, she was disappointed that the mainstream version of the discipline didn’t fully address many of the world issues that she wanted to tackle, such as human rights and environmental destruction. She left the field, but was inspired to jump back in after the financial crisis of 2008, when she saw an opportunity to introduce fresh perspectives. She sat down and drew a chart in the shape of a doughnut, which provided a way to think about our economic system while accounting for the impact to the world around us, as well as for humans’ baseline needs. Kate’s framing can teach us a lot about how to transform the economic model of the technology industry, helping us move from a system that values addicted, narcissistic, polarized humans to one that values healthy, loving and collaborative relationships. Her book, “Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st Century Economist,” gives us a guide for transitioning from a 20th-century paradigm to an evolved 21st-century one that will address our existential-scale problems.