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Best Books 2007: The
Future Survey "Top 30"
Selected by Michael Marien (FS editor)
NOTE:
These brief versions of abstracts published in
Volume 29 (2007)—6% of the 500 yearly total—have been chosen for their
breadth, importance, originality, authoritativeness, readability, and/or
long-term perspective.
WORLD FUTURES / SECURITY
2007 World Population Data
Sheet. Carl Haub
(Population Reference Bureau, Aug 2007/one page; 22x38").
Annual PRB report offers an easy and reliable way to scan the
latest projections to 2025 and 2050 for all regions and countries. By
2050, world population will grow from 6.63 billion as of mid-2007 to
9.30 billion (40% growth). US population will grow from 302 million in
2007 to 349 million in 2025 and 420 million in 2050 (39% growth). Highly
recommended. (FS 29:10/353)
• 2007 State of the Future.
Jerome Glenn and
Theodore J. Gordon (WFUNA and AC/UNU, Aug 2007/98p+CD).
The 11th annual report of the Millennium Project,
derived from participants worldwide in 29 Project Nodes. Updates the
useful overview of 15 Global Challenges; also sections on future
education/learning possibilities by 2030, emerging environmental
security issues, and the annual State of the Future Index. (FS
29:10/351)
• Vital Signs 2007-2008:
The Trends That Are Shaping Our Future.
Worldwatch Institute (W.W. Norton, Sept
2007/166p).
This 15th edition presents two-page essays with data,
charts, and analysis for 27 Key Indicators and 17 Special Features.
Indicators are in five categories: food/agriculture, energy/environment,
social/economic, transport/communications, and conflict/peace. (FS
29:10/352)
• The Bottom Billion: Why
the Poorest Countries Are Failing. Paul Collier
(Oxford U Press, June 2007/205p).
An Oxford economist reformulates the development issue by noting
that, for 40 years, the focus has been on a poor world of 5 billion
people. But most of these people live in countries that are now
developing, and we now need to narrow the focus to the 1 billion people
in some 60 small countries who are falling behind, and broaden the
instruments to include five international charters. (FS 29:12/472)
• Bomb Scare: The History
and Future of Nuclear Weapons. Joseph Cirincione (Columbia U
Press, Feb 2007/206p).
"Optimists" call nukes beneficial and inevitable; "pessimists" warn
of instability and unacceptable risks. This authoritative overview
covers both sides, notes positive trends, and offers guidelines for
future policies. (FS 29:4/103)
• Uniting Against Terror:
Cooperative Nonmilitary Responses to the Global Terrorist Threat.
Edited by David Cortright and
George A. Lopez (MIT Press, Oct 2007/334p).
The long-term goal of defeating terrorism requires cooperative
nonmilitary actions to end the underlying causes of extremism. This is a
"generational struggle" with no quick fix or victory, requiring a clear
and comprehensive strategy. (FS 29:12/456)
• The Next Catastrophe:
Reducing Our Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, And Terrorist
Disasters. Charles Perrow
(Princeton U Press, May 2007/377p).
Disasters from natural sources,
industrial/technological sources, and from terrorism have all increased
in recent decades, with no diminution in sight. We have most to
fear from natural disasters, and the least from terrorism. Lengthy
chapters are devoted to four areas deserving more concern: chemical
plants, nuclear power plants, the national power grid, and the Internet.
(FS 29:89/255)
• National Security and the
Threat of Climate Change. CNA
Corporation Military Advisory Board (CNA Corp, April 2007/63p).
A panel of 11 retired High-end US generals and admirals finds
that projected climate change poses a serious threat to US national
security, acting as a threat multiplier in volatile regions. It has the
potential to create disasters "on a scale far beyond those we see
today," and will add to tensions even in stable regions. (FS 29:7/207)
ENVIRONMENT / RESOURCES
•
Climate Change 2007:
Mitigation of Climate Change.
IPCC Working Group III (Summary; May 2007/35p).
The third part of the latest report of the Nobel Prize-winning
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, warning that global GHG
emissions will grow by 40-110% in the 2000-2030 period under current
policies. Points to energy efficiency options, new agricultural
practices, forest-related actions as especially cost-effective. ALSO SEE
29:4/126-127 for reports from WG I & II. (FS 29:7/208)
• Confronting Climate Change:
Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable.
UN Foundation and Sigma Xi (Feb 2007/166p)
A Scientific Expert Group warns
that average temperature is expected to rise by 0.2oC to 0.4oC per
decade, and that further increases beyond 2.0-2.5oC entails sharply
rising risks of a climate tipping point. Proposes faster implementation
of win-win solutions, a new global policy framework, strategies to adapt
to change, rebuilding cities, and increased investment in new energy
technology. (FS 29:4/132)
• The Economics of Climate
Change: The Stern Review. Sir Nicholas Stern (Cambridge U
Press, Jan 2007/712p).
An independent review for the UK Prime Minister, finding that
"climate change is the greatest market failure the world has ever seen."
The annual flow of emissions is accelerating, and the level of 550ppm
could be reached by 2035, with at least a 77% chance of temperature rise
exceeding 2oC. Stabilization requires emission levels to be reduced to
>80% below current levels. Strong action to reduce emissions must be
viewed as an investment. (FS 29:1/001)
•
With Speed and Violence:
Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change.
Fred Pearce (Beacon Press, March
2007/278p).
Interviews with leading climate scientist highlight unfolding and
potential climate catastrophes, notably huge methane releases that would
speed global warming. As aptly described here, much about Earth’s
climate system remains unknown, and climate change could be far worse
than the IPCC suggests. (FS 29:4/130)
• Hell and High Water:
Global Warming and What We Should Do. Joseph J. Romm (William
Morrow, March 2007/292p).
Former Asst Secretary of Energy warns that Earth’s average
temperature will probably rise 1.5oC by 2050 and >3oC by 2100. The 21C
is described in three stages: Reap the Whirlwind (2000-2025) of more
frequent and intense hurricanes; Planetory Purgatory (2025-2050) of
drought and high temperatures; and Hell and High Water (2050-2100) of
sea-level rise of 20-80 feet. Needed remedies are described. (FS
29:7/206)
• The World’s Water
2006-2007. Peter H. Gleick et al. (Island Press, Nov
2006/368p).
The fifth edition of an authoritative biennial survey, with
chapters on water and terrorism, seawater desalination update (it
remains a high-cost option), expected increase in floods and droughts,
and water risks facing industry. ALSO SEE Human Development Report
2006 (UNDP/422p; FS 29:1/015), focusing on poverty and the global
water crisis. (FS 29:1/016)
• OECD Environmental
Performance Reviews: China (OECD, Aug 2007/336p).
Rapid economic development has generated severe and growing
pressures on the environment, with significant damage to human health
and resources. Everywhere, a lack of strong monitoring, inspection, and
enforcement limits otherwise sound policies. ALSO SEE 29:10/374-375 for
long articles in Foreign Affairs and The New York Times on
this barrier to China’s success. (FS 29:10/376)
RETHINKING SOCIETY / HEALTH
• Infrastructure to 2030:
Mapping Policy for Electricity, Water, and Transport.
(OECD, Sept 2007/505p).
Final report of the OECD Futures Project on infrastructure needs,
finding that "nowhere does the current public policy, regulatory, and
planning framework appear adequate." Failure to make significant
progress could prove costly in terms of congestion, unreliable supply,
blunted competitiveness, and growing environmental problems. An
essential survey for anyone with any interest in these three sectors.
(FS 29:10/387)
• State of the World’s
Cities. UN-Habitat (Earthscan, 2006/204p).
The world’s urban slum population could reach 1.4 billion by
2020—twice that of 1990. The UN has evaluated >100 countries on fighting
urban poverty. Despite some successes, in >70% of countries slums now
grow by 2-6% per year. Huge numbers lack durable housing, sufficient
living area, access to water and improved sanitation, and secure tenure.
Helping the poor integrate into urban society is the only long-lasting
solution. (FS 29:3/062)
• Opening the Floodgates:
Why America Needs to Rethink Its Borders and Immigration Laws.
Kevin R. Johnson (New York U Press, Oct 2007/297p).
US immigration policy has failed. A new "open-borders system" would
be simpler, more efficient,, safer, and more consistent with American
values, without necessarily leading to a mass influx of new immigrants.
Similar to illegal drugs, this is not likely to be embraced by
politicians. Still, it’s a fresh fix for a contentious issue. (FS
29:12/494)
• A Bill of Rights for 21st
Century America. Joseph F. Coates (Kanawha Institute For
Future Study, July 2007/93p).
Much has changed in the 200+ years since the Bill of Rights was
amended to the US Constitution. Suggested updates and additions address
family composition, guaranteed employment, useful education, universal
healthcare, privacy, voter equality, court reform, and more. Similar to
Johnson (above), this is not likely to be embraced soon, but seeks to
initiate the process of consideration. (FS 29:9/301)
• A Second Opinion:
Rescuing America’s Health Care. A Plan for Universal Coverage.
Arnold S. Relman, M.D. (Public Affairs, April 2007/205p).
Former editor of the New England J. of Medicine critiques
the "medical-industrial complex" in the US, arguing that the US health
care system is in a tailspin. Only major reform will prevent its
impending crash: a simplified, single-payer insurance system, providing
everyone with a standard package of benefits, funded by a graduated
earmarked health care tax. (FS 29:11/442)
• The Medicalization of
Society: On the Transformation of Human Conditions Into Treatable
Disorders. Peter Conrad
(Johns Hopkins U Press, June 2007/204p).
In recent decades, the number of life problems defined as medical
has increased enormously. Driving forces include support of doctors, new
and profitable treatments, insurance coverage, groups that promote or
challenge medical conditions, and the growing consumer culture for
health-related products and services. Genetic research may be the next
frontier. (FS 29:7/245)
• The Real Wealth of
Nations: Creating a Caring Society. Riane Eisler (Berrett-Koehler,
April 2007/318p).
A new way of looking at economics is needed to address the many
chronic problems of the world: economic models and policies that support
caring for ourselves, others, and our environment. Six elements of a new
economic map: household production based on caregiving, the unpaid
community economy, the market economy, the illegal economy, government,
and the natural economy. ALSO SEE 29:8/298 and 29:12/474 on the need for
a honest economics for the 21C. (FS 29:8/297)
TECHNOLOGY / METHODS
• World Energy Outlook 2006.
International Energy Agency
(OECD, Nov 2006/596p).
The world faces twin threats:
inadequate and insecure supplies of energy at affordable prices, and
environmental harm caused by consuming too much energy. The threat to
world energy security is real and growing, and meeting growing demand
will require massive investment of >$20 trillion through 2030. (FS
29:11/409)
• Energy Technology:
Scenarios and Strategies to 2050. International Energy Agency (OECD,
2006/479p).
A comprehensive and detailed analysis of key energy technologies of
the next 50 years, in accord with the G8 Plan of Action.
Offers six scenarios and chapters on energy
efficiency, clean coal, CO2 capture and storage, generation IV nuclear,
wind, solar, hydrogen, and biofuels. ALSO SEE FS 29:1/018 for a guide to
conventional and alternative energy sources such as synthetic crude,
fusion, tidal, and geothermal. (FS 29:1/017)
• Biofuels for Transport:
Global Potential and Implications for Sustainable Energy and
Agriculture. Worldwatch Institute
(Earthscan, April 2007/452p).
Everything you ought to know—or ponder—about rapidly growing biofuels:
global industry trends, new technologies and
energy crops, long-term production potentials, key
economic/social/environmental issues, introduction strategies, country
case studies, and more. (FS 29:11/414)
• Mobile Communications and
Society: A Global Perspective.
Manuel Castells et al.
(MIT Press, Jan 2007/331p).
Wireless communication has diffused faster than any other
communication technology. Mobile phones overtook mainlines in 2003, and
are now well ahead. Youth culture has driven the diffusion and the key
feature of "relentless connectivity" and "instant communities" that
deepen the network society. (FS 29:3/083)
• Reset: Changing the Way
We Look at Video Games. Rusel DeMaria (Berrett-Koehler, May
2007/226p).
Video games are now big business, with global revenues of $41-51
billion predicted for 2010. Making these games now requires teams of
>100 specialists, and can cost in the tens of millions. As of early
2006, there were 70 million regular online game players. The next step
for video games is to become an intentional medium of positive change in
individuals and society. (FS
29:8/269)
• Thinking About the
Future: Guidelines for Strategic Foresight. Edited by Andy Hines
and Peter Bishop (Social Technologies, Dec 2006/242p).
A set of 115 guidelines for strategic foresight is systematically
organized in six sequential categories: Framing, Scanning, Forecasting,
Visioning, Planning, and Acting. Offers tested tips and caveats on
nearly every futures method, supplied by 36 members of the Association
of Professional Futurists. (FS 29:3/096)
The Change Handbook:
Today’s Best Methods for Engaging Whole Systems
(Second Edition). Peggy Holman, Tom Devane,
and Steven Cady (Berrett-Koehler, Jan 2007/723p).
A hefty guide to 61 planning and structuring methods that can
enable organizations and communities to better promote preferred
futures. Advice is provided on how to select, mix, and match the
methods, which include World Café, appreciative inquiry, Future Search,
community summits, and large-group scenario planning. (FS 29:3/098)
• The Leaders We Need: And
What Makes Us Follow. Michael Maccoby (Harvard Business
School Press, Nov 2007/249p).
A well-known consultant/psychoanalyst writes that in times of great
cultural change, such as the present, people need leaders to take them
to a positive future—leaders motivated to achieve the common good, who
can educate people about forces changing the world and galvanize a
creative response. Very timely. Effective leadership makes a huge
difference in shaping futures. (FS 29:10/397)
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