September-October 2012 (Vol. 46, No. 5)

Articles

The 22nd Century at First Light: Envisioning Life in the Year 2100

A special report by members and friends of the World Future Society

A child born today will only be 88 years old in the year 2100. It’s time to start thinking and caring about the twenty-second century now.

The New Age of Space Business

By Joseph N. Pelton

The end of the space shuttle era marks a new beginning for the Space Age. A new generation of entrepreneurs are working with the world’s space agencies to bring down the costs of commercializing the high frontier. By the 2020s and beyond,we could see a historic expansion of human activity in space.

Regulating the Final Frontier

By Frans von der Dunk

As commercial endeavors enter space, international law must expand as well.

Serving Justice with Conversational Law

By David R. Johnson

Digitized, semantic legal-expert systems will enable more people to access and understand the law.

Rescuing the Mind of Africa

By Hank Pellissier

Sub-Saharan Africa is a hotbed of environmental and social scourges that compromise the development and health of the human brain—and undermine the region’s future.

World Trends & Forecasts

Book Reviews

Every Nation for Itself: Winners and Losers in a G-Zero World

New alliances and new cold wars are both possible as the era of superpowers is over, says policy scholar Ian Bremmer. The next few decades of geopolitics will be messy.

Departments

Tomorrow in Brief

  • Anti-Malarial Fashion Statement
  • Disease Detection: Waiting to Exhale
  • Trucking Down eHighway
  • Nutritional Information Overload
  • Slumdogs for Millionaires?

Future Scope

  • China’s Growing Appetite for Meat
  • More Doctors on the Way
  • Oil Shale Challenges and Opportunities
  • WordBuzz: Micro Urban

As Tweeted: RIP Ray Bradbury

Legendary science-fiction author Ray Bradbury died at the age of 91 on June 5, 2012, after a long illness. Futurists were inspired to tweet their reflections, tributes, and favorite quotations.

Search The Futurist Archives for material going back to 1992.