Friday, February 10, 2017

Global Think Tank Ratings, plus Special Report on Robots at Work


Vol. 3, No. 4 | February 2017 | AAI Foresight


New No. 1 Think Tank


The U.K.’s ChathamHouse has been crowned the 2016 Think Tank of the Year, displacing the Washington, D.C., based BrookingsInstitution as the world’s top-ranked think tank on the Global Go To Think TankIndex. Chatham House also ranked second for the best new idea or paradigm from a think tank, second in foreign policy and international affairs, second in international development, fifth in defense and national security research, eighth in environment policy, eighth in global health policy, ninth in international economics, and 77th in domestic economic policy,

The annual index, produced by University of Pennsylvania’s Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program, has come to be known as an “insider’s guide to the global marketplace of ideas,” says program director James G. McGann, senior lecturer in international studies at the University of Pennsylvania. The index also ranks institutions by region, by subject area, and by type of affiliation, as well as noting special achievements such as most innovative policy proposal and best use of media.

Future-oriented organizations recognized in the 2016 Index include (in alphabetical order):

BrookingsInstitution remains the top-ranked think tank in the United States, as well as first in domestic economic policy, first in foreign policy and international affairs, second in social policy, second in education policy, third for best new idea or paradigm, third in international development, third in international economics, fourth in defense and national security research, fourth in transparency and good governance, fourth in global health policy, fourth in domestic health policy, seventh in environment policy, 18th in energy and resource policy, 44th in science and technology.

InformationTechnology & Innovation Foundation is 58th in the top U.S. think tanks and second in science and technology.

HudsonInstitute is 107th top think tank worldwide and 23rd in the United States, 34th in defense and national security, 35th in foreign policy and international affairs, 58th in international development, and 96th in domestic economic policy.

TheMillennium Project ranks 21st for best new idea or paradigm developed by a think tank.

PewResearch Center is 19th in the top U.S. think tanks, as well as ninth for best use of the Internet, 19th for best use of print or electronic media, and 82nd for best use of social media and networks.

RANDCorporation ranks sixth in the United States and seventh worldwide, second in defense and national security, third in domestic health policy, fourth in education policy, fifth in global health policy, fifth in social policy, sixth in science and technology, seventh in energy and resource, eighth in international economics, 11th in foreign policy and international affairs, 13th in domestic economic policy, 24th in international development, and 30th in environment policy. RAND also took the top spot among think tanks with outstanding policy-oriented research programs and for best quality assurance and integrity policies and procedures.

Resourcesfor the Future is 27th in the United States, 15th in energy and resource policy, 16th in environment policy, and 18th for best new idea or paradigm.

WoodrowWilson International Center for Scholars is eighth worldwide and fifth in the United States, fifth in international development, eighth in foreign policy and international affairs, 30th in defense and national security, 30th in global health policy, 36th for best new idea or paradigm, and 81st in international economics. The Index also named the center No. 3 of think tanks to watch in 2017.

WorldResources Institute ranks 154th worldwide and 16th in the United States, third in environment policy, fourth in energy and resource policy, and 54th for best new idea or paradigm.

WorldwatchInstitute is 40th in the United States and sixth in environment policy.

Comment: Notably for foresight work, three of the 10 think tanks AAI Foresight has tracked over the last three years are the top three on the Index’s list of best transdisciplinary think tanks: Wilson Center, RAND, and Brookings; WRI comes in at number nine. These 10 are by no means the only think tanks doing foresight work, but they are among those we have long applauded for applying futures methodologies in significantly useful ways. –CGW

Source: 2016Global Go To Think Tank Index Report by James G. McGann, Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program (TTCSP).


Special Report: The Robots Are Coming—to Make You Creative

By William Halal, Owen Davies, and Hassan Syed

Futurists have been forecasting the emergence and impacts of an artificial intelligence (AI) revolution for many years, so it is satisfying to see that AI is really starting to transform industries, entire economic systems, and society itself.

But there is also a palpable fear of robots coming to take away jobs. Studies conclude that roughly half of present jobs, including professional work, could be lost to automation, possibly leading to mass unemployment and social upheavals.

TechCast recently drew from the collective intelligence of more than 50 experts for a study on AI and work. The study suggests automation is likely to eliminate about 20 percent of routine jobs by 2030, but that the loss is likely to be compensated by about 10 percent of workers gaining a guaranteed minimum income and another 10 percent finding new jobs in creative work. We conclude that a combination of government support and innovative enterprise could absorb this AI threat and turn it into a new domain of creativity and understanding.

Results and Conclusions: Muddling Through

Our survey of experts shows that a majority believe a reasonable path can be found through this difficult transition. We call this the Muddling Through Scenario, a middle scenario in which adaptation to the new technologies occurs organically through a combination of market forces that produce new creative jobs and government support that offers guaranteed benefits. Unemployment is contained at tolerable levels.

Participants in our survey (N=53) anticipate the following changes in the distribution of labor in OECD nations between 2012 and 2030:

- Complex manual labor: down from 19% (2012) to 18% (2030).
- Routine labor: down from 35% to 17%.
- Service and knowledge work: down from 34% to 31%.
- Creative work: up from 4% to 15%.
- Guaranteed minimum income: up from 0% to 8%.
- Unemployment: up from 8% to 11%.

The Possibility of a More Creative Society

This is a modest study, and many complex issues are involved, yet we think this forecast provides useful insights into how the AI issue can be resolved.

TechCast experts collectively judge that humanity will find its way safely through the coming AI/robotics crisis as the world reaches a more fully automated stage of development by about 2030. The adoption of a guaranteed minimum income and the growth of new creative jobs are likely to keep unemployment contained at 10 percent or so, which would be bad but not a major crisis. Furthermore, the widespread use of AI should increase the level of knowledge and intelligence to unprecedented levels, fostering a society of creative change and understanding.

The key is to recognize that AI can automate routine knowledge work, but there exists a huge, unexplored economic domain beyond knowledge: creativity, entrepreneurship, vision, collaboration, diplomacy, marketing, supervision, and other higher-order functions that are uniquely human. Advanced AI may be able to solve tough problems, but it cannot provide vision, purpose, imagination, values, wisdom, and other capabilities that are essential for sound leadership and tough choices.

This study indicates a general belief that intelligent machines and virtual assistants are likely to take over routine service and knowledge tasks. The technology will remain limited, however, and people will always want a real person to provide them human contact and to handle tough issues. Staff is growing rapidly in universities, hospitals, research institutes, and other advanced settings for these reasons. The service and knowledge work sector could grow dramatically, to 50 or 60 percent of the economy by 2030.

In the end, rather than diminishing people, the net effect of AI may be to enhance the value of these higher-order talents that are a unique gift to humanity. This conclusion may seem contrary to many who are convinced a disaster looms ahead. We respectfully suggest that, yes, the robots are coming to take your jobs, but more creative work and better support can also foster a more innovative, prosperous, and thoughtful civilization.

William Halal is professor emeritus at George Washington University and founder of TechCast Global. Reach him at halal@gwu.edu or william.halal@techcastglobal.com. Owen Davies is executive editor of TechCast Global. Hassan Syed is CEO of Bir Ventures and partner in TechCast Global. A longer version of this article will be published by Foresight: The journal of future studies, strategic thinking and policy.

TechCast Global (www.TechCastGlobal.com) forecasts emerging technologies, social trends, and wild cards to cover the entire strategic landscape for planners and decision makers. Its research method uses collective intelligence to pool background data and the knowledge and judgment of 150 experts worldwide. This work is validated for accuracy, showing an average error band of approximately +1/-3 years at 10 years out. For this study, we asked our thought-leader experts to forecast the future distribution of jobs across the occupational spectrum. The survey data can be accessed at TechCast Global, and details of the complete study can be found in our forthcoming article in the journal Foresight.
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Send us your signals! News about your work and other tips are welcome, as is feedback on Foresight Signals. Contact Cynthia G. Wagner, consulting editor.

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Feel free to share Foresight Signals with your networks and to submit any stories, tips, or “signals” of trends emerging on the horizon that we can share with other stakeholders and the foresight community.

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© 2016 AAI Foresight

Foresight Signals is a publication of AAI Foresight
1619 Main Street, #1172
Freeland, WA 98249

Managing Principal: Timothy C. Mack
tcmack333@gmail.com | 202-431-1652

Webmaster and IT Consultant: Tom Warner

Consulting Editor: Cynthia G. Wagner

Designer: Lisa Mathias

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Foresight Signals: Annual Reports from the Foresight Community


Vol. 3, No. 3 | January 2017 | AAI Foresight


Annual Reports from the Foresight Community


In our last edition, ForesightSignals reported on the year’s highlights at our parent company, AAI Foresight Inc., and invited futurists and foresight professionals everywhere to report on their activities as well. Here is an overview foresight accomplishments in 2016 and a preview of 2017.

World Futures Studies Federation

Submitted by Victor Vahidi Motti

The World Futures Studies Federation announced that it launched its new magazine, Human Futures .

Since its inception nearly five decades ago, WFSF has published a magazine that has undergone several changes of name and style. The latest version of the WFSF magazine, Human Futures, debuted in December 2016 as an interactive online publication.

As president and editor Jennifer Gidley explains, “In calling our magazine ‘HUMAN FUTURES’ we distinguish the World Futures Studies Federation from futures organisations with national or regional interests, and from those that emphasise high-tech, commercial and/or corporate futures. The title also counters an all-too-common media trivialisation of futures studies.”

Contact Victor Vahidi Motti, executive board member, World Futures Studies Federation, www.wfsf.org .


The Millennium Project

Submitted by Jerome C. Glenn

The Millennium Project celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2016 and continued to grow. With new Nodes in Armenia, Sri Lanka, and Tunisia, the group now comprises 60 Nodes.

In 2016, the group produced three Global Work/Tech 2050 Scenarios; conducted a NATO workshop and report on pre-detection and prevention of future forms of lone-wolf terrorists; published in Persian/Farsi the five-volume transition publication in Iran of Futures Research Methodology 3.0; translated the Executive Summary of the 2015-16State of the Future into Arabic, Chinese, Croatian, English, French, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Turkish, and Urdu; and, for the seventh year, produced tele-teaching futures concepts and methods for Azerbaijan State Economic University.

In 2017, The Millennium Project plans national long-range strategy workshops using the Global Work/Tech 2050 Scenarios; State of the Future Indexes for Pakistan and Mexico; a national collective intelligence system for Egypt; a Spanish translation of the Futures Research Methodology; online training for the use of the Global Futures Intelligence System; and the Millennium Project annual meeting, to be held October in Peru.

Contact Jerome C. Glenn, CEO, The Millennium Project, www.millennium-project.org or jglenn@igc.org.


Houston Foresight

Submitted by Andy Hines

The Houston Foresight program continues to grow, reaching 44 active students in the fall 2016 semester—its largest class since 1998. The program launched two sponsored research projects in 2016 involving teams of faculty and students. Both involved horizon scanning and scenario planning—one for the U.S. Forest Service [Ed. note: see David Bengston’s report below] and the other for Dubai’s Future Foresight Foundation.

Houston Foresight’s annual spring gathering explored the future of blockchain for higher education, and students from the program presented at the World Future Society conference last summer in Washington, D.C.

Houston Foresight also began a co-publishing arrangement with MISC magazine in collaboration with Idea Couture. Finally, the week-long certificate course passed a milestone of having graduated over 500 students since its inception in 2009.

Contact Andy Hines, program coordinator, Houston Foresight, ahines@central.uh.edu or http://houstonfutures.org/


Teach the Future

Submitted by Peter C. Bishop

Teachthe Future is about to complete its second year of operation. The first accomplishment this year was to compile and release a Library of more than 60 activities, lessons, units, and courses for teaching the future.

Katie King, deputy director, conducted a number of student workshops on the future this year in Pittsburgh, the Bay Area, and the Houston region. She describes them on the Teach the Future blog.

Peter Bishop traveled to Beijing in November to participate in the 4th Informal Working Group for the OECD Education2030 project, which is developing a list of competencies that will help students be successful in the 21st century. The OECD staff accepted Dr. Bishop’s recommendation that foresight be included in that list for the first time.

Finally, Teach the Future is planning to conduct a number of student workshops and camps on the future in the Houston region next summer.

Contact Peter C. Bishop, director, www.teachthefuture.org or peter@teachthefuture.org.


TechCast Global

Submitted by William E. Halal

TechCast Global is launching generation 8.0 of its acclaimed website with exciting new features and more membership choices. Members can now Ask Our Experts for advice on tough issues, and Strategic Tools help them conduct strategic planning with TechCast’s forecasts.

Partners Hassan Syed and Bill Halal are developing customized versions of TechCast for corporations, regions (Southeast Asia with Singapore), and cities. As opposed to the worldwide forecasts in TechCast Global, TechCast Local adapts the forecasts and tools for local use by communities.

Contact William E. Halal, president, TechCast Global, www.TechCastGlobal.com or www.BillHalal.com


Future Impacts

Submitted by Cornelia Daheim

Some recent highlights from Future Impacts include projects for customers such as Arval, Aktion Mensch, European Parliament, European Commission Joint Research Centre, EnBW, Evonik, Hermes, and the Microfinance CEO Forum.

Currently, Future Impacts is pursuing the future of work, jobs, and skills; the future of energy; the future of cities and regional development; and inclusive futures. The organization has realized new approaches such as agile scenario development, a serious game on disruption, and experiencing the future in scenario enactments.

Among Future Impacts publications in 2016 are a German publication on thefuture of work which was based on the Delphi-study by The Millennium Project, with Ole Wintermann from Bertelsmann Foundation, now translated into Korean by the Korean Labor Institute; a study on “Emerging Practices inForesight” with Sven Hirsch, and developing the first “Foresight Competency Model for the Association of Professional Futurists, with Andy Hines of the University of Houston, Luke van der Laan of the University of Southern Queensland, Australia, and Jay Gary of Oral Roberts University.

Future Impacts’ ongoing project on Megatrends for Policy-Making supports the team from the European Commission Joint Research Centre in the Steering Committee. The report from the last workshop may be found on the Policy Lab Blog.

Among the events Future Impacts is planning for 2017 are:

Jan. 26: keynote on the Future of Work in the Bavarian Parliament.

March 8: panel discussion on smart cities for Creative Business Week in Munich.

June 12-13: keynote and workshop on Work 2050 at the FFRC Futures Conference in Turku, Finland.

June 15-17: foresight gaming workshop at the Design - Develop - TransformConference in Antwerp and Brussels, Belgium.

Contact Cornelia Daheim, founder and director, Future Impacts, daheim@future-impacts.de or www.future-impacts.de



Global Foresight Books 


In his January 2017 publisher’s note, Michael Marien reports that entries on the GlobalForesight Books website had been suspended since 2015 as he developed The Security & Sustainability Guide: 1500 Organizations Pursuing Essential Global Goals. View a PDF of the August 2016 interim draft here. He writes that a new and expanded draft will be available this spring.

Books are important, but the remarkable proliferation of largely international organizations pursuing sustainability and sustainable development, as well as security, is even more important,” Marien writes.

Contact Michael Marien, www.globalforesightbooks.org/bio.html



Thomas Lombardo, director, Center for Future Consciousness, Wisdom Page, and the online Journal Wisdom and the Future


At the end of 2015, I published an article, “Science Fiction: TheEvolutionary Mythology of the Future,” in a special issue of Journal of Futures Studies on science fiction and foresight, which I co-edited with Jose Ramos. In July, I significantly updated my list of Evolving All-Time BestScience Fiction Novels, including roughly 50 recently read books from the early years (1870 to 1940) of science fiction.

During the year, I published five issues of my online journal Wisdom and theFuture, which includes a series of short philosophy articles in the July issue as educational links for my forthcoming book (see below) and online course Future Consciousness as well as an in-depth book review of Rick Smyre and Neil Richardsonʼs new book, Preparingfor a Future the Doesnʼt Exist – Yet.

In April, I was interviewed by TheAge of Reflection, an Iranian journal on social sciences, culture, and politics.

In the summer, I secured a contract with Changemakers Books to publish FutureConsciousness: The Path to Purposeful Evolution (see below). In advance publicity for the book, I published “Future Consciousness: The Path to Purposeful Evolution: AnIntroductionin the December issue of World Future Review and gave a presentation on the book at the November meeting of the World Future Society’s Arizona Chapter. In conjunction with the bookʼs publication, an online course aligning with the book will be accessible on both the Center for Future Consciousness and Wisdom Page websites.

Coming full circle, as the year drew to a close, the editor of Changemakers Books agreed to also publish my book trilogy, Science Fiction: The Evolutionary Mythology of the Future. A comprehensive history weaving together of intellectual and cultural trends and futurist thought with the evolution of science fiction, Volume One: Prometheus to Star Maker is nearing completion, with an anticipated publishing date within a year.

Contact Tom Lombardo, Center for Future Consciousness, tlombardo1@cox.net or www.centerforfutureconsciousness.com/index.html


David N. Bengston, environmental futurist, USDA Forest Service


I work in a small futures research unit at the USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station. The Strategic Foresight Group was started a few years ago and is the only futures research unit in Forest Service R&D.

A critical part of my foresight journey in 2016 has been working with several outstanding academic and consulting futurists on a number of projects: Scenarios exploring the future of forests in North America for the North American Forest Commission with Jonathan Peck and Bob Olson of the Institute for Alternative Futures; the futures of wood-basednanomaterials with Jim Dator and Aubrey Yee of the Hawaii Research Center for Futures Studies at the University of Hawaii; explorations of several emerging issues and trends in natural resources using Joel Barker’s Implications Wheel® and exceptional training from Jim Schreier; and an ongoing project to create a horizon scanning system for theForest Service under the insightful guidance of Andy Hines of the Foresight Graduate Program at the University of Houston.

We have several projects planned for the coming year that will continue to bring foresight to natural resource policy and decision making.

Contact David N. Bengston, dbengston@fs.fed.us


Freija van Duijne, president, Dutch Future Society


I have been doing two major projects in the last year. The first is for the National Energy Dialogue about the transition to a low-carbon economy. I have been doing a scenario-based conversation to get a systemic perspective about the transition and to discuss different governance perspectives.

Second, I was in charge of a process to build a strategic knowledge and innovation agenda on food and nature for the Ministry of Economic Affairs. We designed a strategic dialogue process to identify long-term research and innovation needs to address societal challenges, focusing on the role of the government in research and innovation.

I have now left the Ministry to work as an independent strategic foresight professional. This enables me to do much more of this kind of work, while being in different organisations which keeps me fresh and full of ideas.

Contact Freija Van Duijne, freija@futuremotions.nl.



Jose Cordeiro, visiting research fellow, IDE-JETRO, Tokyo


I plan to focus most of my futures work in really futurist areas like the Singularity, transhumanism, immortality, cryonics, space travel, and exponsential technologies, and I invite anyone interested in these areas to contact me.

I am also organizing the first International Longevity and Cryopreservation Summit in Madrid, to be held May 26-28. Visit http://internationalcryonicssummit.com/




Sample New and Forthcoming Books



Spring Training for the Major Leagues of Government by Frank McDonough (2016), published by Koehler Books. Brian, a new high-level government appointee, receives guidance for new situations he encounters as a senior government official. Chapters address forecasting, why promising technologies may not advance at all, and tips for success during a presidential transition.

The Signals Are Talking: Why Today’s Fringe Is Tomorrow’s Mainstream (2016) by Amy Webb (founder, the Future Today Institute), published by Public Affairs. Excerpt: “By the end of 2015, the FAA was estimating that a million drones would be sold and given as holiday presents that year—but neither the FAA nor any other government agency had decided on regulations for how ordinary Americans could use them. ... Drones were a fringe technology barreling toward the mainstream, and a lack of planning and foresight pitted dozens of organizations against each other.” 

The Veil of Circumstance: Technology, Values, Dehumanization and theFuture of Economics and Politics (2016) by Joergen Oerstroem Moeller, published by ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute (formerly the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies), Excerpt: “Over the next fifteen years, new or accelerating trends in debt, demography, urbanization, global savings, innovation, productivity and energy will transform the global power structure, with unprecedented speed, magnitude and impact.” [Ed. note: Moeller also published a Foresight Report for AAI Foresight, “ForecastingAfter Brexit,” and regularly contributes to the Huffington Post.]

Future Consciousness: The Path to Purposeful Evolution (2017) by Thomas Lombardo, published by Changemakers Books, Excerpt: “How do we create a good future? This deceptively simple question is the central challenge of human life. Moreover, as a key thesis of this book, the question brings to center stage the most distinctive and empowering capacity of the human mind: to imagine, think about, and purposefully pursue desirable and preferable futures.”

Heart of the Machine: Our Future in a World of Artificial EmotionalIntelligence (2017) by Richard Yonck, published by Arcade Publishing, Excerpt: “Now we find ourselves entering an astonishing new era, an era in which we are beginning to imbue our technologies with the ability to read, interpret, replicate, and potentially even experience emotions themselves. This is being made possible by a relatively new branch of artificial intelligence known as affective computing. A powerful and remarkable technology, affective computing is destined to transform our lives and our world over the coming decades.”


Note from AAI Foresight and Foresight Signals


The above represents only a fraction of the ongoing work of foresight professionals. Please continue to send news of your activities to Foresight Signals throughout the year! Best wishes to all.

Tim Mack, managing principal, and
Cindy Wagner, consulting editor.
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Send us your signals! News about your work and other tips are welcome, as is feedback on Foresight Signals. Contact Cynthia G. Wagner, consulting editor.

Want more signals from AAI Foresight? Check out the blog! Log in to add comments.
Feel free to share Foresight Signals with your networks and to submit any stories, tips, or “signals” of trends emerging on the horizon that we can share with other stakeholders and the foresight community.

__________

© 2016 AAI Foresight

Foresight Signals is a publication of AAI Foresight
1619 Main Street, #1172
Freeland, WA 98249

Managing Principal: Timothy C. Mack
tcmack333@gmail.com | 202-431-1652

Webmaster and IT Consultant: Tom Warner

Consulting Editor: Cynthia G. Wagner

Designer: Lisa Mathias