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emerging scenario . active well-being and distributed economies Ezio Manzini INDACO, Politecnico di Milano

emerging scenario . active well-being and distributed economies Ezio Manzini INDACO, Politecnico di Milano. background issues . creative communities . people who, in their everyday life, invent and realize new forms of organization to solve a problem or to open new opportunities.

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emerging scenario . active well-being and distributed economies Ezio Manzini INDACO, Politecnico di Milano

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  1. emerging scenario.active well-being and distributed economiesEzio ManziniINDACO, Politecnico di Milano

  2. backgroundissues.

  3. creative communities.

  4. people who, in their everyday life, invent and realize new forms of organization to solve a problem or to open new opportunities.

  5. creative communities:are they marginal groups or promising expressions of a possible future?

  6. creative communitiesperspectives: they have to be seen in the framework of the on-going big change and of concourring socio-technical innovatons.

  7. visions of possible future.

  8. the on-going big change ( and small creative communities )

  9. the on-going big changeindividualisation …environmental pressure …connectivity …

  10. … the growing individualization is melting the traditional forms of organization: new social networks will appear (and are appearing).

  11. … the environmental pressure is changing people’s perceptions and economics: new ways of thinking and new ways of doing will appear (and are appearing).

  12. … theincreased connectivity is producing a favorable technological habitat for social innovation:new forms of organization, new ways of doing will appear (and are appearing).

  13. a more “favorable habitat” of a new wave of social innovations?

  14. other socio-technical innovations ( possible convergences )

  15. > cosmopolitan localism > distributed systems > collaborative networks

  16. possible convergences. emerging ideas of locality, well-being and production

  17. cosmopolitan localism

  18. emerging forms of localizations…

  19. valorization of local typical products.the production of high quality highly localized products, in particular food; the success of the Slow Food Association

  20. New Products R&D Established Products Resin Mastic Tree A new Brand “mastiha shop” Domestic & International Markets Source: Distributed Economies Laboratories

  21. new producer-consumer networks. • networks that permit a direct relationship between consumers and between producers and consumers.

  22. urban people linked with groups of farmers, for products and help

  23. distributed systems

  24. forms of system architectures

  25. individual people and social organizations are more and more inter-connected and a new form of society appears: the network society.

  26. in the network society small will not be small and local is not local!

  27. in the network society, the small is (or can be) a local knot of a global web. And the“local” is a locally based cosmopolitan community, i.e. a community of people embedded in a place, but open and connected with other communities/places.

  28. on on-going phenomenon: from distributed computing to distributed power generation.

  29. connected computers and connected local energy systems (co-generation and renewable energies plants) as a new possible infrastructure …

  30. from distributed computing and distributed power generation, to distributed production.

  31. a production systems organized as networks of small scale, flexible, highly context-related units.( Distributed Economies Laboratories)

  32. distributed production advantages…

  33. light, lean and adaptable systems, as distributed production and services, low transport intensive products and services, local and seasonal food

  34. better use of existing resources, as collective use of renewable energies, higher recycling possibilities, better control on waste generation and management

  35. direct producers-consumer links as de-intermediation of the distribution system, more power on the consumers’ and local producers’ sides

  36. a new generation of localizable technologies…

  37. mobile bio-energy plants Source: Distributed Economies Laboratories

  38. a new generation of local connected, power generation plants…

  39. Conventional Energy Systems Distribution Transmission Regional Boundary Source: Distributed Economies Laboratories National Boundary

  40. $ $ $ Forestry $ $ MSW Industrial waste Bioenergy Systems in Sweden & Finland Source: Distributed Economies Laboratories

  41. collaborative networks

  42. trading goods and services EBay120 millions people registered. developing free software Linux120.000 registered developers. new ways of conceiving games The Simsthousands of users contribute to the contents. mass developed astronomic research hundred of thousands of dedicated amateurs are involved. the overwhelming success of the Wikipedia project. the rise of the open-welfare concept …

  43. end-users applications as blogs, podcast, wikis, social networking websites, search engines, auction websites and peer-to-peer services. considered as a whole these applications are called social computing or web 2.0,

  44. co-creation models: mass peer-to-peer organizations. Large scale, highly distributed systems which combine many players to carry out complex tasks … without requiring burdensome, top-down hierarchical organization…(RED, Design Council, UK)

  45. co-creation of new forms of organization (that permit a sustainable use of local resources) and of new forms of social knowledge (from Free software, to Creative Commons and Wikipedia) …

  46. … and creative communities.

  47. no radical innovation towards sustainability without these active and creative people…

  48. creative communities are the drivers of all the other drivers!

  49. which vision might keep together these different events?

  50. scenario of the multi-local society.

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