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Turnaround Challenge: Business and the City of the Future
Contributor(s): Blowfield, Michael (Author), Johnson, Leo (Author)
ISBN: 0199672210     ISBN-13: 9780199672219
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $47.49  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2013
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Environmental Economics
- Business & Economics | Strategic Planning
- Business & Economics | Development - Sustainable Development
Dewey: 658.401
Physical Information: 0.8" H x 6.1" W x 9.3" (1.20 lbs) 264 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Do we have the rights to optimism? Can capitalism deliver a next great wave of growth? The future, wrote William Gibson, 'is already here. It just isn't evenly distributed yet. Lucid and polemical, Turnaround Challenge is a dig into that future and its meaning for business. It dissects the
nexus of social, economic, environmental and governance crises confronting us, and a series of colliding megatrends with the potential to reshape opportunities for growth.

Three cities of the future are emerging. The first is Petropolis, the alluringly familiar but decreasingly resilient city, locked into the century old technologies of fossil fuel-driven mass production. This is the city of rising inequality, credit-fuelled consumption, offshored jobs, climate
volatility, and unsustainable household and national debt. The second city is Cyburbia. This is mass production on the steroids of IT: the latest manifestation of science fiction's city without pain, but one inhabited by voice-activated popcorn dispensers, of athletics' shoes with in-built Twitter
feeds, of sensor-packed and censoring glass towers that risk reducing their citizens to digital factors of production in the supply chain of big data. The third is the Distributed City, where technology is deployed with the intent to connect us not virtually but physically--from Nairobi's network of
innovation spaces to Hamburg's Participatory Budgeting experiments, from Barcelona's network for micro-manufacturing, to Austin's distributed smart grid.

These are the cities of society's future, and they have very different implications for business success, and our ability to navigate the social, economic, and environmental megatrends that confront us. Blowfield and Johnson present the DNA of the winners of the future, high growth and disruptive
businesses, emerging from the bottom up, and with the capacity to tackle society's biggest challenges head on.