ReCivilization from CBC Radio
Summary: ReCivilization examines the biggest challenges facing our world, and charts a path to the future enabled by the revolutions underway in communications, innovation and learning in this new, post-industrial, digital age. Celebrated author and thinker Don Tapscott guides us along this path with some of the most prominent minds in education, government, industry, the media, science, and health and medicine -- along with the pioneers who are collaborating to create a new era of networked intelligence.
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- Artist: CBC Radio
- Copyright: Copyright © CBC 2013
Podcasts:
Host Don Tapscott looks at the media and how the industrial-age model of mass production is giving way to new, collaborative citizen journalism enabled by the web - anyone can be a publisher or a broadcaster and traditional media is being forced to adapt.
Don takes us into the public square, to look at how governments must re-engage with citizens.
Don examines how the digital revolution has cut transaction costs and changed the notion of the firm, and how business needs to operate collaboratively and transparently - to meet the needs of increasingly savvy consumers concerned about sustainability and ethical behaviour.
Don Tapscott examines the future of health care and medicine, where patients become co-managers of their own wellness, and use the web to network with each other for support, knowledge, and healing - outside the old, institutional, medical framework.
Don Tapscott looks at the transformation of education and science, and how the sharing of knowledge is moving from the industrial-age model of a one-way broadcast from teacher to student to collaborative, discovery-driven learning, enabled by the web. He also examines a new model for science that favours open data over isolated, patent-driven research.
Host Don Tapscott looks at the media and how the industrial-age model of mass production is giving way to new, collaborative citizen journalism enabled by the web - anyone can be a publisher or a broadcaster and traditional media is being forced to adapt.