EconomistAsia.net loveq= hemisphere of nations share girls' dream to end poverty

how to celebrate 2.5 bn asian millennials leading sd goal generation

Consequences what happens when America's richest programmer bill gates reviews Ezra Vogel- Asia-America's kindest connector.
.. Macraes' last 100 trips to Asia - they started with dad Norman Macrae teen serving in allied bomber command (today's Myanmar)-
The Economist became min diary of Norman Macrae's half century of asian trips from Myanmar 1943 on- we archive that at normanmacrae.net economistjapan.com; connection of my 50 trips with 5 generations of my family in Asia only made full sense from 2001 and mostly
15 trips to Bangladesh thanks to interviews with Fazle Abed & friends 1 2 3 and young chinese scholars at his 80th birthday filled most gaps EconomistPoor.com .. Asia trips 1 to 51 india -1-3 1984-2004; indonesia 4-7 (1982-1994) ; singapore 8-10 (1982-1992) japan (11-17) 1985-2013; thailand (18.19) 1984-1995 ; malaysia (20-21) ; 1993 korea (22-23); 1990-2017 bangladesh (24-39) 2007-2018;
dubai (40,41) 2015,6; qatar(42) 2017; china (43-50) 2016-2019 hong kong 51 (1996) like 7 members of my scotttish family tree i have enjoyed the huge privilege of learning more about advancing the human lot from the two thirds who are asian than my own race caucasian
...united ; ASIA/MIDDLE EAST: Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh & women, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Cyprus, Georgia, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Lebanon/yemen, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar (Burma), Nepal, Oman, Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore-Asean, Sri Lanka, Syria, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Turkey, Turkmenistan, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, -eurasia, Russia- we list twice because most of its land is in asia but traditionally its capital and history is categorised as european....Mapping livelihood economics of two thirds of humans- in 1983 london scot james wilson started the economist as a newsletter of royal societies chattering classes- his initial goal ro end poverty and starv=ation in scotland and nearest islands london ruled over- 17 years later queen victoria sent wilson to calcutta with charter bank to end poverty wherever britain ruled over asia; sadly james died 9 months after landing of diarrhea; it took another 120 years before bangladesh, china and unicef taught every village mother how to cure diarrhea with a recipe of water sugar and salts; from this first open source health service, a billion women across the continent spent 1970-2020 ending extreme poverty - with the help of universities who knew fazle abed vest, at www.abedmooc.com we track how/why the world used bangladesh as its lab for solutions that worked without access to electricity or any of the engineering that glasgow gave to the world from 1760; some people ask what happened to the economist mission- you can read 2nd editor walter bagehot's attempts to help victoria journey to commowealth at the english constituition; but progress was to slow to prevent the colonial eara where whites 15% designed world trade to exclude most of human development in the economist's 1943 centenary biography; at that tie my dad was teenage navigator in alied bomber command stationed in modrnday myanma; the east end of the bay of bengal opposite to calcutta's west end; what happened next to bay of bengal - yuo'd thnk kamala harris and berkeley let alone howard alumni would urgenrly follow coming from her mothers'schennai- in a hasty retreat from responsibility anywhere the british raj had rlued -india eas partioned; calcutta the superport of asoa's 19th century was assigned to india; the rest of the bay was given to pakistan to rule; it took 24 years for bangladeshi people to win back indepenence now the 8th most populous nation with less than zero capital; my father norman macrae mapped varios asian economic models from 1962 when he first surveyed hs war time foe japan - he named the model poorest villagers would need to network rural kensianism; while he named the win-win supercity/port model of tokyo capital belt roadtsrs; for the next 30 years those who saw the economist as the first viewspaper for debating globalisation exponentials were trewed to regular updates on every asian peoples progess or not in sharing these new economic modelsSustainability's last chance decade: Feb 2021 2025report.com 37th annual update- economistpoor.com - thanks to hard work of asian motherhood, one billion asians have ended extreme poverty in the last 40 years - research shows human development's greatest lesson is not yet a curriculum in any western university -can you help adamsmith.app change economists before year end summits in Glasgow 1 2 & Dubai -try applying Economist alphabet Ai Bank Child Diary Edu Food Green Health Inclusion ..my scottish family's concern for development of two thirds of humans who are Asian goes bac 150+ years to founding of the pharmacy kemp's corner in mumbai to grandad's sir kenneth kemp's 25 years of mediation with gandhi leading to sir ken's last project wrining up the legalese of india's independence to my father's 40 years reporting asia's sustainability entrepreneurial revolution in The Economist; to his last article 20 years later on lessons from bangladesh needed to rectify the west's subprime disaster: japan's ambassador to dhaka helped aspiring youth journalists and others listen to sir fazle abed legacy debriefs - see our catalogue abed.games offering the most vital alumni networks youth can linkin if they are to celebrate being the first sustainability generation REFERENCES UN ENVOY EDUCATION -asia has proven to be greates champion of former uk prime minister Gordon brown -10 years un envoy edu links include A 1 2 lots of moving parts - some are very radical empowering new universities and apprenticeships - I have been tracking the for 5 years since being at un launch 2016 - can try and help with queries chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk - if real summits return end 2021 hope to unite updates cop26 nov Glasgow and worlds largest edu summit allied to uae expo dec -meanwhile zooms can make connections
..

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

2019 coming soon multiicountry asian partnerships for sdg generation

although two thirds ogf humans are asian- multilateral institutions headquarterlocations have lagged

the official united nations regions hq is thailand - fine but over 25% of world's future depends on china and japan and korea both financially and socially and when you look at tech led by these 3 countries its applications to 2020s contexts eg virus tracing seem a mile ahead of the americas or europe

over 100 nations belong to development banking networks which have a more oriental gravity and potentially smarter constitutions than the bretton woods elites such as the un imf and world bank;
aiib is headquartered in beijing
the new development bank first propsed by indian manmohan singh is in shanghai
the japanese originated asian developed bank is located in the philippines
How many countries are members of ADB?

When was ADB established?
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Web Result with Site Links


Asian Development Bank - Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Asian_Development_Bank
The headquarters of the bank is at 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines, and it has 31 field offices in Asia and the Pacific and representative offices in Washington, Frankfurt, Tokyo and Sydney.
Headquarters‎: ‎Ortigas Center‎; ‎Mandaluyong, ...
Main organ‎: ‎Board of Governors
President‎: ‎Masatsugu Asakawa‎ (from 17th Jan...
Membership‎: ‎68 countries

Masatsugu Asakawa

Masatsugu Asakawa (born 1958), by career a Japanese civil ...

Eurasian Development Bank

The Eurasian Development Bank (EDB) is a regional ...

United Nations Economic and

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and ...

Category:Asian Development ...

Pages in category "Asian Development Bank". The ...

Ortigas Center

Ortigas Center is a central business district located within ...
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ADB: Contacts | Asian Development Bank

www.adb.org › contacts
Headquarters (HQ) 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong City 1550, Metro Manila, Philippines Tel +63 2 86324444 Fax +63 2 86362444 www.adb.org AsianDevBank ...
‎ADB Holidays · ‎Visiting ADB · ‎Media Contacts · ‎Videoconferencing Facilities

other multilateral banks with somewhat more flexibility than bretton woods may be
europe EBRD
www.ebrd.com
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) invests in changing lives. Through our financial investments, business services and work on ...
‎Careers at the EBRD · ‎What We Do · ‎Work With Us · ‎History of the EBRD
the idb - inter americas bank
islamic dev bank

FOR A FEW YEARS THE 6 PLUS 1 ANNUAL DIALOGUE LOOKED REALLY PROMISING - IT ALSO FREED APPRECIATION OF WHY THE IMF CONSTITUTION REQUIRES ITS MOVE TO BEIJING AS SOON AS AMERITHIRD OF WHAT THE CHINESE DO
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Sunday, December 29, 2019

how east india company empoverished half the world

Bad company: The astonishing and violent rise of the East India Company

- Oct 12th 2019
The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company. By William Dalrymple. Bloomsbury; 576 pages; $35 and £30.
AT THE START of his new book William Dalrymple notes that it is “always a mistake to read history backwards”, and to assume that what happened was inevitable. Readers are unlikely to make that mistake with his subject—the dramatic rise of the East India Company (EIC)—a tale so improbable as almost to defy belief.
A private company granted a monopoly on trade with Asia, the EIC launched its first expedition in 1601. Armed with “40 muskets”, its crew of second-raters promptly got stranded in the English Channel for two months. At the time India accounted for a quarter of global manufacturing, and backward Britain just three percent. By about 1800 the EIC commanded the most powerful armed forces in Asia; its armoury in Calcutta held 300,000 muskets. In the intervening centuries it had grabbed control of India, killed and impoverished many of its people, enriched Britain and raised questions about the boundary between the state and commerce that still resonate.
Mr Dalrymple sails through this story in fine style. The first substantial contact between the EIC’s grubby emissaries and northern India’s sophisticated Mughal rulers took place in 1614, with the British grovelling for commercial privileges; soon the flow of spices to Europe by sea upended centuries of overland trading routes through the Middle East. After that comes the decay of the Mughal empire, the development of Madras and Calcutta and wars between the French, British and local rulers. The battle of Plassey in 1757 was pivotal: the EIC secured control over Bengal, and thus the ability to exploit its population.
By the end of the 18th century the company’s cruelty and cronyism caused outrage in London, and the British government began to exercise more direct oversight. There followed a final drive for territorial dominance. In 1792 the EIC controlled only 9% of the subcontinent’s area; by the early 19th century it ran most of it. In 1859 the EIC formally handed over power to the British government.
Luck played a huge role in all this; several times the company flirted with disaster. But it also had some competitive advantages. Until the mid-18th century it relied on naval power and commercial savvy. After that new weapons and military tactics became critical, until eventually some local rivals achieved military parity. The Tipu Sultan of Mysore, perhaps the EIC’s most effective adversary, used French technology. At that point the EIC’s financial clout became vital; it could tap into a network of lenders in Bengal. Following the American war of independence, Britain discouraged the growth of a settler class in India who might rebel. And the British were expert manipulators. “Know you not the custom of the English?” wrote Tipu. “Wherever they fix their talons they contrive little by little to work themselves into the whole management of affairs.”
Like other modern historians, Mr Dalrymple repudiates romanticised conceptions of colonialism. But in this case, he is not breaking new ground: accounts of the EIC’s murderous blend of commerce and government are nothing new. Adam Smith called it a “strange absurdity”. Edmund Burke accused it of “cruelties unheard of”. The first page of John Keay’s history, published in 1991, describes its venal reputation. At times Mr Dalrymple’s narrative, with its romping descriptions of battle scenes, itself verges on Hornblower.
What stands out is rather his sympathetic portrayal of India’s embattled Mughal rulers. He renders a poignant depiction of Shah Alam, an emperor in name but for much of his life a puppet of the EIC, who expressed himself through beautiful poetry. The book’s major omission is a full analysis of the Asian trading system centred around Bengal—the role of commercial agents who acted autonomously from the company; the position of Calcutta as an entrepot; and the strong links between the EIC and Chinese trade. Stamford Raffles, who founded Singapore, was a clerk in the EIC. William Jardine, who would co-found a firm that led the opium trade with China, first worked as an EIC ship’s surgeon.
What relevance does the EIC have today? The reader will find plenty that echoes in modern India. The well-to-do in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) still grumble about Marwari money-men. India’s practice of running its federal administrative service with a tiny group of elite officers owes something to the EIC. Centuries of domination by the Mughals and then the British remain part of modern political debate, especially for Hindu nationalists.
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Wednesday, December 25, 2019

2019

GOOD TO SEE JACK MA'S TOUR OF HOW SMALL BUSINESSES CAN SUPPLY ECOMMERCE TAOBAO REACHED VIETNAM IN 2020, huge joy to attend in detroit and toronto his 2017 gateway tours in the days that it was still assumed that jobs mattered to us/canadian presidents






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Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, April 24, 2020 – Aibaba.com, the global business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce platform of Alibaba Group, held an online summit yesterday for Vietnamese businesses seeking to weather the current global economic downturn induced by the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than 2,200 export-focused businesses across Vietnam joined the "New and Now 2020 Go Export" Alibaba.com Vietnamese Seller Online Summit during which Alibaba.com unveiled 4 customised membership packages and a suite of digital solutions including AI-powered tools to help them go global and gain tips for connecting with buyers globally. There was a special sharing about new policies of the Government of Vietnam on e-commerce by the Vice Chairman of Vietnam E-Commerce Association (VECOM).


Mr. Zhang Kuo - General Manager of Alibaba.com and Mr. Kuo Yiling - Head of Asia Pacific, Alibaba.com shared insights regarding local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and global buyer trends in the market. They showcased solutions for SMEs to accelerate digital transformation and find a long-term sustainable direction. Mr. Zhu Yi - Deputy Country Manager of Alibaba.com Vietnam and two successful e-commerce entrepreneurs from Vietnam, further discussed steps for seizing global trading opportunities in the digital era.

Mr. Nguyen Ngoc Dung - Vice Chairman of VECOM stated: “The application of e-commerce in business is getting more popular and leveraged more strongly. For 2020, the Government has approved the project on management of e-commerce activities for import and export goods whereby Vietnamese SMEs can register their business, pay taxes and more online through e-signatures.”

In line with Alibaba Group Chairman, Daniel Zhang’s recent address talking about SMEs being the livelihood of an economy, Alibaba.com, one of the world's leading B2B e-commerce platforms, is taking steps to help SMEs triumph over this challenging economic situation. Mr. Zhang Kuo - General Manager of Alibaba.com said, “Our strategy is to help more SMEs go global, especially in Vietnam. We are reinventing online trade shows to make sure buyers can find suppliers through videos, live meetings and live streams. We have provided all kinds of tools to enable suppliers to digitalize their products, promotions and services in order to be discoverable all over the world.”

A recent survey showed that most global buyers are searching for products through search engines or e-commerce platforms. Mr. Kuo Yiling, Head of Asia Pacific, said, “With over 40% year over year traffic growth, today, nearly 20 millions buyers send inquiries or request quotations from over 200 countries and regions on Alibaba.com. Our Vietnamese suppliers have listed 600,000 products on Alibaba.com and receive an average of 50,000 inquiries globally every 30 days. Top local industries like food and beverage, home and garden and construction have seen impressive growth on the platform. ”
Alibaba.com has been at the forefront of leveraging big data and AI algorithm technology to enable SMEs all over the world. The ‘Smart Marketing Solution’, unveiled at the summit will help Vietnamese suppliers market their products at the right prices using big data. The solution makes it easier for SMEs to acquire new customer traffic and to understand their top products, market demand and conversion rates, which help them develop business strategies and future growth. The backend technology also helps companies save labour costs through automation.
Through various ‘Value Added Service Solutions’ available on Alibaba.com platform, suppliers can set up their business online quickly with support for product posting, creation of online store and verification services. Alibaba.com also launched an online training program called ‘Together We Can- Alibaba.com Seller Accelerator E-Course’ an exclusive and customized online training session aimed to help SMEs go through the special circumstances.
Ms. La Kim Nhung, Founder of IMITI CO., LTD, shared the growth story of her furniture company. What started with just 5-10 employees has now expanded to more than 10 countries, thanks to the Alibaba.com platform. According to her, businesses need to fight for digital transformation as it is the future. Also in this summit, Ms. Ngo Thi Thanh Hien, Deputy Director of Ameco Industrial Company, one of the leading mechanical companies in Vietnam, shared on how going digital is a must for businesses. The company's first overseas order came through Alibaba.com and today 70% of Ameco's production is exported to more than 50 countries around the world.
After more than 10 years in Vietnam, thousands of enterprises have successfully developed their businesses on the Alibaba.com B2B e-commerce platform. Individuals, entrepreneurs, enterprises, organization can watch the full playback of "New and Now 2020 Go Export” - Alibaba.com Vietnamese Seller Online Summit  on https://alibaba.shangzhibo.tv/watch/10027934
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Monday, December 23, 2019

years great losses to educational economics and youth futures include

fazle abed - see eg 1  2  3

from japan broadcasting nhk
death of water angel: nakamura Water, Not Weapons: The Greening of Afghanistan
50m 00s

Broadcast on December 14, 2019Available until December 14, 2020

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trust girls and boys of asia pacific to map sdg world

I am wondering whether any of the young scholars around you see this week's meeting between Abe and Xi and S korea as the opportunity for Japan China Korea and the AP7 to face the sdgs. I assume the AP7 integrates the islands of 4 Taiwan 5 HK 6 Singapore (and hence Asean) & the continental region of 7 India/Bangladesh

I interpret all my father's named survey's in The Economist as wanting to cheer on the AP7 rising - how sdgs depend on the 2/3 of peoples/families who are Asian are the new new world that can unite the old world' s3  continents that crossover in the middle east and America's North South Belt Roads. In 2012 I understood the Japan Embassy in Dhaka to host 2 roundtables around similar maps with fazle abed and his tech visionary kamal quadir Bkash.com

Maybe my Scottish and younger friends and I are dreaming but I will try to discuss this with Vincent (President of Brac University) in New York while he is there Jan 7-8. What partnerships  can only Brac U linkin now around women and jack ma's loveq rising?

quotient loveq fazle OR ma -crazy - YouTube

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the wor...

Happy 2002s to all your scholars and your extraordinary human consciousness. 
Any errors are mine alone
Chris Macrae +1 240 316 8157

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Thursday, December 19, 2019

qatar wise

 oorigins of wise education laureates alumni

sheika moza first jay qatar, sdg eminent committee, qatar foundation -un coalition refugee education, designer of womnes campus education city

wise ceo/ conference producer stavros yiannoka formerly a coordinatir at nus singapore mentired by mahbubani

1 2 3 sir fazle abed brac- bangladeshforst education laureate, 50 years end poverty designer; last 10 years new university coordinator- dounding member of soros osun colaition, laureate of kk yidan prize by tencent



Preparing for a Less Disrupted, Better Future for Education

Conference Session 1: 09:00 - 12:45 Doha (GMT+3)
  • 09:00-9:15: Welcome and Setting the Scene

    Stavros Yiannouka, CEO, WISE, Qatar
    Simon Breakspear, Research Fellow, Gonski Institute, UNSW, Australia
    Anthony Mackay, CEO, National Center on Education and the Economy, Australia


  • 09:15-9:45: Keynote Speaker + Q&A

    Speaker: John Hattie, Director, Melbourne Education Research Institute, University of Melbourne, Australia

    Moderator
    : Asmaa Al-Fadala, Director of Research & Content Development, WISE, Qatar

  • 09:45-10:30: Panel: Innovative Leadership Practices & the Future of Schooling

    Speakers: Valerie Hannon, Board Director & Co-founder, Innovation Unit (UK)
    Staneala Beckley, Ministry of Education, Sierra Leone
    Maina Gioko, Head of Professional Learning Programme, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa, Kenya

    Moderator: Charlotte Jones, Global Head of R&D, Education Development Trust, United Kingdom 


  • 10:30-11:00: Break


  • 11:00-11:45: Panel Discussion: New Relational Models and Dynamics in School Leadership: Who Gets to be a Leader? Who Gets Agency to Act in Certain Spheres?


    Speakers: Amy Bellinger, Education Commission, United Kingdom
    Kirin Bir Sethi, Founder, Design for Change, India
    Valerie Yip, Senior Lecturer, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Moderator: Dominic Regester, Program Director, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria


  • 11:45-12:30: A Conversation about Leadership and Equity: How Can We Build More Equitable Systems for the Future?

    Speakers
    : Xueqin Jiang, Education Consultant, China
    Pasi Sahlberg, Professor, Education Policy, Gonski Institute, UNSW Sydney, Australia
    Sara Ruto, CEO, PAL Network, Kenya
    Karen Edge, Reader in Educational Leadership, UCL, United Kingdom

    Moderator: Anthony Mackay, CEO, National Center on Education and the Economy, Australia

  • 12:30-12:45: Closing

    Anthony Mackay, CEO, National Center on Education and the Economy, Australia

  • ==============

  • Conference Session 2: 18:00 - 21:45 Doha (GMT+3)

    • 18:00-18:15: Welcome and Setting the Scene

      Dominic Regester, Program Director, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria
      Asmaa Al-Fadala, Director of Research & Content Development, WISE, Qatar

    • 18:15-18:45: Keynote Speaker + Q&A

      Speaker: David Sengeh, Minister of Education, Sierra Leone

      Moderator: Asmaa Al-Fadala, Director of Research & Content Development, WISE, Qatar

    • 18:45-19:30: Panel: Innovative Leadership Practices & the Future of Schooling

      Speakers: Jennifer Groff, Research Fellow, Qatar Foundation, United States of America
      Hessa Al-Thani, Assistant Professor, Educational Sciences, Qatar University, Qatar
      Noam Gerstein, Co-founder & CEO, Bina, Germany

      Moderator: Dominic Regester, Program Director, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria

    • 19:30-20:00: Break 


    • 20:00-20:45: Panel Discussion: New Relational Models and Dynamics in School Leadership: Who Gets to be a Leader? Who Gets Agency to Act in Certain Spheres?

      Speakers
      : Mohammed Elmeski, Clinical Associate Professor, Arizona State University, United States of America
      Carol Campbell, Associate Professor, Leadership and Educational Change, University of Toronto, Canada
      Chantal Kabanda Dusabe, Education Advisor, School Leadership, VVOB Rwanda, Rwanda

      Moderator: Shelby Cosner, Professor, Educational Organization and Leadership, University of Illinois, Chicago (UIC), United States of America

    • 20:45- 21:30: A Conversation about Leadership and Equity: How Can We Build More Equitable Systems for the Future?

      Speakers: Wendy Kopp, CEO & Co-founder, Teach for All, United States of America
      Santiago Rincón-Gallardo, Education Consultant, Mexico/Canada
      Vicky Colbert, Founder and Director, Fundación Escuela Nueva, Colombia

      Moderator: Azad Oommen, Co-Founder, Global School Leaders, United States of America

    • 21:30-21:45: Closing

      Asmaa Al-Fadala, Director of Research & Content Development, WISE, Qatar
      Dominic Regester, Program Director, Salzburg Global Seminar, Austria

    =======================
  • 2 best wise summits inaugural and this in beijing
  • WISE-LIFE China Education Forum


    • Home
    • >
    • Grants
    • >
    • WISE-LIFE China Education Forum
    areaIndustry Development
    OrganizationBeijing Xinminsirui Education Consulting Center (better known as "21st Century Education Research Institute")
    Year2016
    RegionBeijing
    URLhttp://www.21cedu.org/

    The WISE-LIFE China Education Forum is the first cooperation between two education innovation platforms in China and abroad: World Innovation Summit for Education and LIFE Education Innovation (21st Century Education Research Institute) ,in hopes of inspiring people’s thinking and actions towards education and exploring innovative plans to improve learning and address the major educational problems by presenting worldwide experiences and efforts in education innovation.

    Today’s world is complicated with frequent contradictions. Therefore, people place their hope on education to cultivate? individuals who can adapt to the future and society. Education equity is the basis of a shared future of mankind, which means providing quality education for every learner to help make up for his/her disadvantages, release his/her maximum potentials and fill the gap between rich and poor, urban and rural. male and female effectively.

    Innovative ways over technological innovations are needed to ensure education equity. Innovation is not bringing forth the new from the old, but jumping out of stereotypes’ limitations to find more effective solutions under limited conditions to promote social equity. The atmosphere and environment created by innovation will make 21st century skills, such as critical thinking, cooperation, creativity and communication able to boom.

    With “Innovation Promoting Equity” as its theme, the WISE-LIFE China Education Forum brings together experts, scholars and policy-makers in different fields from China and abroad to discuss how to solve complicated education problems using strategic thoughts and how to find innovative and sustainable solutions under limited conditions. When facing rapid changes, global connection and uncertain future, we should reflect on? today’s education and consider how we cultivate talents that can adapt to or even create, the future.

    The Macao Tongchai Charity Association provides funding for the WISE-LIFE China Education forum’s partial logistical expense.

  • =========


  • current speakers
  • Speakers for latest zoom summit 14 sept 2020

    Stavros N. Yiannouka

    Stavros Yiannouka

    WISE
    Qatar

    Simon Breakspear

    Simon Breakspear

    Gonski Institute, UNSW
    Australia

    Anthony Mackay

    National Center on Education and the Economy
    Australia

    Dr. Asmaa Al-Fadala

    Asmaa Al-Fadala

    WISE
    Qatar

    John Hattie

    John Hattie

    Melbourne Education Research Institute, University of Melbourne
    Australia

    Valerie Hannon

    Valerie Hannon

    Innovation Unit
    United Kingdom

    Staneala Beckley

    Staneala Beckley

    Ministry of Education
    Sierra Leone

    Maina Gioko

    Maina Gioko

    Aga Khan Academy Mombasa
    Kenya

    Charlotte Jones

    Education Development Trust
    United Kingdom

    Amy Bellinger

    Amy Bellinger

    Education Commission
    United Kingdom

    Dominic Regester

    Dominic Regester

    Salzburg Global Seminar
    Austria

    Kiran Bir Sethi

    Kirin Bir Sethi

    Design for Change
    India

    Xueqin Jiang

    Xueqin Jiang

    Education Consultant
    China

    Valerie Yip

    Valerie Yip

    University of Hong Kong
    Hong Kong

    Pasi Sahlberg

    Pasi Sahlberg

    Gonski Institute, UNSW Sydney
    Australia

    Sara Ruto

    Sara Ruto

    PAL Network
    Kenya

    Karen Edge

    Karen Edge

    UCL
    United Kingdom

    David Sengeh

    David Sengeh

    Minister of Education
    Sierra Leone

    Jennifer Groff

    Jennifer Groff

    Qatar Foundation
    United States of America

    Hessa Al Thani

    Hessa Al-Thani

    Educational Sciences, Qatar University
    Qatar

    Noam Gerstein

    Noam Gerstein

    Bina
    Germany

    Mohammed Elmeski

    Mohammed Elmeski

    Arizona State University
    United States of America

    Carol Campbell

    Carol Campbell

    Leadership and Educational Change, University of Toronto
    Canada

    Chantal Kabanda

    Chantal Kabanda Dusabe

    School Leadership, VVOB Rwanda
    Rwanda

    Shelby Cosner

    University of Illinois at Chicago
    United States of America

    Wendy Kopp

    Wendy Kopp

    Teach for All
    United States of America

    Santiago Rincón-Gallardo

    Santiago Rincón-Gallardo

    Education Consultant
    Mexico/Canada

    Vicky Colbert

    Vicky Colbert

    Fundación Escuela Nueva
    Colombia

    Azad Oommen

    Azad Oommen

    Global School Leaders
    United States of America


=====
  • speakers at part 2
  • Speakers

     Maryanna AbdoManaging Director, Centre for Evidence and Implementation
     
     Styliani Adamantia PipaStudent, American Community Schools of Athens
     
     Hassan Al-DerhamPresident, Qatar University
     
     Asmaa Al-FadalaDirector of Research and Content Development, WISE
     
     Nayef Al-IbrahimCEO, Ibtechar
     
     Fatma Al RemaihiCEO, Doha Film Institute
     
     Manos AntoninisDirector of GEM Report, UNESCO
     
     Ahmed BaghdadyResearch Manager, WISE
     
     Rukmini BanerjiCEO, Pratham Education Foundation
     
     Victoria BasmaPolicy Officer, WISE
     
     Staneala BeckleyChair, Sierra Leone Teaching Service Commission
     
     Lorenzo BenussiChief Innovation Officer, Fondazione per la Scuola della Compagnia di San Paolo
     
     Patrick BrothersCo-Founder & Co-CEO, HolonIQ
     
     Gordon BrownUN Special Envoy for Global Education, Former Prime Minister, Commission Chair, The Education Commission
     
     Samantha ButtersCEO, Fair Education Alliance
     
     Akshay ChaturvediFounder & CEO, Leverage Edu
     
     Rosie ClaytonCo-Founder, Weaving Lab
     
     Stephane Coillet-MatillonCEO, KIWIX
     
     Vicky ColbertFounder and Director, Fundación Escuela Nueva
     
     Shelby CosnerProfessor, Educational Organization and Leadership, University of Illinois, Chicago (UIC)
     
     Krista DavidsonHead of Programmes & Operations, INJINI
     
     Smita DeorahCo-Founder & Chief Operating Officer, LEAD School
     
     Daniel DotseCEO & Co-Founder, Lead for Ghana
     
     Craig D’SouzaHead of Global Security, Intelligence & Investigations (GSII), Executive Protection (GSEP), Facebook
     
     Eddie DuttonEmergency Manager, Education, Education Cannot Wait
     
     Thor EllegaardCEO, Edtech Denmark
     
     Thana El-SallabiProgram Officer, WISE
     
     José EscamillaDirector, TecLabs
     
     Andrea Escobar VilaExecutive Director, Empresarios Por La Educación
     
     Maha EssidStudent, Northwestern University, Qatar
     
     Mike FeerickFounder and CEO, Alison
     
     Meagan FalloneExecutive Director, Barefoot College
     
     Elyas FelfoulDirector, Policy Development & Partnerships, World Innovation Summit for Education
     
     Stefania GianniniAssistant Director-General for Education, UNESCO
     
     Rebeca GrynspanSecretary-General, SEGIB
     
     Owen HenkelInvestment Director, Pearson Ventures
     
     Faye HobsonProgram Manager, Salzburg Global Seminar
     
     Sean HolroydAssoc. Professor of Teaching in Physiology and Biophysics, Weill Cornell Medicine (Qatar)
     
     Safeena HusainFounder, Educate Girls
     
     Ameena HussainChief Curator and Director of Programs, WISE
     
     Andrew JackEducation Editor, Financial Times
     
     Janhvi M. Kanoria Director of Innovation, Education Above All
     
     Amel KarboulCEO, Education Outcomes Fund for Africa and the Middle East
     
     Surya KarkiCountry Director and Co-Founder, United World Schools Nepal
     
     Julia KirbyManager of Research & Content Dissemination, WISE
     
     Yang LanChairperson, Sun Media Group and Sun Future Art Education Foundation
     
     Dayoung LeeAssociate Partner, Dalberg
     
     Catalina Lopez-CorreaCOO, RUTA N
     
     Grace MainaSenior Deputy Director, Curriculum and Research Services, Kenya Institute for Curriculum Development
     
     Fiona MavhingaExecutive Advisor, CAMFED Association
     
     Mikkel Mouritz MarfeltDirector, Investor Relations and New Strategic Initiatives, Labster
     
     Mona MourshedFounder, Generation: You Employed
     
     Ngoc NguyenStudent, Georgetown University Qatar
     
     Darleen OpferVice President and Director, RAND Education and Labor, RAND Corporation
     
     Danilo PadillaEducation Programme Specialist, UNESCO
     
     Olli Pekkah HeinonenDirector General, Finnish National Agency for Education
     
     Daniel QuinteroMayor, City of Medellín
     
     Sungsup RaDirector Human and Social Development Division, South Asia Regional Department, Asian Development Bank
     
     Ana RaadFounder and Director, EcosiSTEAM
     
     Jaya RamchandaniFaculty Member, UWC ISAK Japan
     
     Fernando ReimersFord Foundation Professor of the Practice in International Education and Director of the Global Education Innovation Initiative and of The International Education Policy Program, Harvard University
     
     Dominic RegesterProgram Director, Salzburg Global Seminar
     
     Elizabeth RobisonFounder & CEO, Strategic Fundraising Advisors
     
     Larry RosenstockCEO and Founding Principal, High Tech High
     
     Sara RutoCEO, PAL Network
     
     Asif SalehExecutive Director, BRAC Bangladesh
     
     Jaime SaavedraGlobal Director, Education, The World Bank
     
     Sarah ShaathClass of 2020, Northwestern University, Qatar
     
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     Maria SpiesCo-Founder & Co-CEO, HolonIQ
     
     Liesbet SteerDirector, The Education Commission
     
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     Amira YahyaouiFounder & CEO, Mos.com
     
     Stavros YiannoukaCEO, WISE

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FROM 1977

 


Two Billion People: A Survey of Asia | Foreign Affairs

https://www.foreignaffairs.com › reviews › capsule-review
One of them is communist China, which has been following a policy which Macrae calls "rural Keynesianism." The others are "capitalist roaders" such as South ...
.

 

The unacknowledged giant | The Economist

https://www.economist.com › ... › Jun 19th 2010 edition
Jun 17, 2010 — Norman was the first journalist to “discover” Japan. In 1962 he wrote a survey predicting that a country most Westerners regarded as synonymous ...

  • An unacknowledged giant | The Economist

    https://www.economist.com › schumpeter › 2010/06/23
    Jun 23, 2010 — Norman Macrae was one of the twentieth century's great visionaries | Schumpeter.

Norman Macrae - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Norman_Macrae
Norman Alastair Duncan Macrae CBE (1923 – 11 June 2010) was a British economist, journalist and author, considered by some to have been one of the world's ...
Date of death: 11 June 2010
‎Career · ‎Books

The 2025 Report: A Concise History of the Future, 1975-2025

https://www.amazon.com › 2025-Report-Concise-Histor...
Norman Macrae worked at The Economist, spanning 5 decades as its most prolific editorial writer, during a period which saw the paper grow from 4th ranked ...

Norman Macrae - The Atlantic

https://www.theatlantic.com › archive › 2010/06 › nor...
Jun 18, 2010 — A remarkable man you never heard of died last week. In a splendid obituary The Economist salutes the creator of its intellectual identity.

Will Remote Working Replace The Office? : Planet Money - NPR

https://www.npr.org › transcripts
Aug 11, 2021 — ROSALSKY: It was written by the deputy editor of The Economist. His name was Norman Macrae. And Macrae said that, basically, this newfangled ...

Mr. Norman Macrae | IT History Society

https://www.ithistory.org › honor-roll › mr-norman-ma...
He joined The Economist in 1949 and retired as its deputy chief editor in 1988. He foresaw the Pacific century, the reversal of nationalization of ...

The coming entrepreneurial revolution : a survey - EconBiz

https://www.econbiz.de › Record › the-coming-entrepre...
Authors: Macrae, Norman. Published in: The economist. - London : Economist, ISSN 0013-0613, ZDB-ID 1806-5. - Vol. 261.1976, p. 41-65. Subject: Unternehmer ...

End-Poverty Economics Dictionary by (Oriental) Friends of ...

https://www.linkedin.com › pulse › end-poverty-economi...
May 17, 2018 — ... Dictionary by (Oriental) Friends of The Economist's Norman Macrae ... hardest with Norman mainly died before he did- so The Economist ...

  • Chris Macrae MA DAMTP Cantab - LinkedIn

    https://www.linkedin.com › unwomens
    Foundation Norman Macrae ERworld.tv , The Economist's Unacknowledged Giant. valuetrue.com 9500 investors in millenials = most connected educated ...

The Economics of the Office: Why Do We Still Commute?

https://psmag.com › Economics
Oct 30, 2017 — It wasn't supposed to be this way—at least according to Norman Macrae. ... Macrae, an influential journalist for The Economist who earned a ...

BOOKS of LIFE WRITING - Plunkett Lake Press

https://plunkettlakepress.com › ...
Norman Macrae (1923-2010) served in the Royal Air Force as a navigator in ... earning his Ph.D. when The Economist offered him a temporary job in 1949.

Finding miracles – Norman Macrae | Ben Bansal

https://benbansal.me › ...
Jan 21, 2013 — The Economist's anonymity policy makes it somewhat difficult for individual journalists to rise to fame. It's thus not surprising that the ...

How to Advise Hi-Trust Leaders on Growing Young ... - GHDonline

https://www.ghdonline.org › uploads › health_ent...
DOC
-Celebrating Open Society Curricula of The Economist's Entrepreneurial Revolutionary Norman Macrae. This book offers both actionable future maps to play ...

Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits, Vol. IX on JSTOR

https://www.jstor.org › stable
27 Norman Macrae (1921–2010): Pioneering Journalist of The Economist on Japanese Affairs. (pp. 309-318). BILL EMMOTT and ADRIAN WOOLRIDGE.

Books: Norman Macrae - Edward Betts

https://edwardbetts.com › monograph › Norman_Macrae
Von Neumann may have been a famous genius, but according to Norman Macrae, ... Norman Macrae was a stalwart of The Economist for half a century: he joined ...

The Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution - Mind the Post

https://pacojariego.me › 2016/04/24 › the-coming-entre...
Apr 24, 2016 — Featured Image: “The coming entrepreneurial revolution”, a survey in The Economist of December 25, 1976, Norman Macrae ...

1. In 1972, Norman Macrae, an editor at the | Chegg.com

https://www.chegg.com › questions-and-answers › 1-19...
This question hasn't been solved yet · 1. In 1972, Norman Macrae, an editor at the Economist, speculated prophetically about a time in the future, please ...

Unacknowledged GiantанаThe Economist Obituary of The Net ...

http://www.truevaluemetrics.org › NormanMacrae
PDF
Jul 5, 2016 — The Economist's ptoyouth economist, Norman Macrae, died June 2010аа. ;аHis 40 year of work on the Entrepreneurial Revolution curriculum of ...

Norman Borlaug saved millions of lives, would his critics ...

https://allianceforscience.cornell.edu › blog › 2020/04
Apr 24, 2020 — Well, as we know, something did happen: the Green Revolution. The hundreds of millions of people who may have starved in India and elsewhere did ...

Obituary: Norman Macrae, journalist | The Scotsman

https://www.scotsman.com › News › Obituaries
Jun 27, 2010 — A popular figure around the offices at the Economist, Macrae was regarded fondly for his inability to iron clothing, clean his shoes or wear ...

John von Neumann: The Scientific Genius Who Pioneered the ...

https://www.maa.org › press › maa-reviews › john-von-...
Norman Macrae's book on the life (and, to some extent, the work) of John von Neumann ... (Macrae, a journalist who at one time was editor of The Economist, ...

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#Reiwa1 japan and south korea and china including diaspora - from 1968 - how the greatest engineers came together

#Reiwa2 japan and uk and europe from 1964 - how prince charles invited japan and the euriopena union never to war again

#Reiwa3 japan and east asian coast to singapore, Hong Kong and asean by 1968 - how container shipping/superports became the world's win-win trading route with ever smaller enterprises webbing just-in-time supply chains

#Reiwa4 japan and australia/new zealand and south pacific and asean

#Reiwa5 japan and india-bangladesh still emerging but with several leapfrog interventions

#Reiwa6 japan and central asia with or without russia

#Reiwa7 japan and africa ticad since circa 1988

#Reiwa0 in all of the above there was pof course the relationship between japan and usa

girls history q 1 - whats number 1 rule of governing end poverty networks
.................................................................................................................x

xhow mightthe peoples of asia pacifc celebrate development since the UN formed escap in 1947- by the late 1950s thanks to americans borlaug and deming miracles began around japan rising which connected major far east islands taiwan hk singpaore and south korea penisular; by 1968 china had ended any belief that russia was leading the way its peoples wanted to be freed after 110 yers of withdrawing from world trade rather than accept the british proposition that opium be used as a currency-three miracles in one emerged by the late 1970s: china adapted rural keynsianism and women lift up half the sky focusing on barefoot medic networks and rice green revolution- the disapora chiense were now the 3rd strongest finacial network and the fastest growing one- they wanted to inward invets in the mainland- deng after surveying us, germany and japan concluded only japans engineering leaders had the knowhow china most needed - the mniracle of over a billion chinese being lifted out ofpoverty began; it took almost 20 years more before a team around manmohan singh opened up india to trade- sadly the indians model didnt distribute rural health and education as deeply as china did- added to this the nation with the ekast resources of all at its birth 1971 showed what women can build out of vilages , hard work and for 3 decades no access to electricity grods or telecoms - from late 1990s bangladesh became a world epicentre of leapfrog models - eg solar for electricity, text mobiule banking for hundreds of millions of unbanked

most exciting times to be

alive


UNWOMENS



WHY INDIA NEEDS TO LOVE CHINA NOW NOT ENGLISH SPEAKING CHIEFS


If whole Eurasian continent had been 10 degrees more to south, mercantile co,lonia half of millennium 2 might never have happened; the north coastal belt could have been easy to navigate as happy Euro North route to china's east coast is now, and british empire would never have decimate india's economy just because india blocked sialing routes to .



Can you help us B C U ... see to: wherever you parent girls that the miracles of china and bangladesh 1972-2017 resonate through every education system including WISE summits at UNGA (new york sept 2018) at Paris March (2019), at the 2nd 100 nations rebirth of Belt Road Imagines may 2019 beijing BRI- school mba systems ???


Happy 175 James--Our hopes that scots, economist and media people could help end poverty began 175 years ago with this charter for all world class branding colaborations of end poverty


We have made such arrangements and under such superintendence, as will secure the accomplishment of all that we propose, in a way which we trust will render our objects and exertions useful to the country: we have no party or class interests or motives; we are of no class, or rather of every class: we are of the landowning class: we are of the commercial class interested in our colonies, in our foreign trade, and in our manufactures: but our opinions are that not one part of these can have any lasting and true success that is not associated and co-existing with the prosperity of all.

And lastly—if we required higher motives than bare utility, to induce that zeal, labour, and perseverance against all the difficulties which we shall have to encounter in this work—we have them. If we look abroad, we see within the range of our commercial intercourse whole islands and continents, on which the light of civilization has scarce yet dawned; and we seriously believe that FREE TRADE, free intercourse, will do more than any other visible agent to extend civilization and morality throughout the world—yes, to extinguish slavery itself. Then, if we look around us at home, we see ignorance, depravity, immorality, irreligion, abounding to an extent disgraceful to a civilized country;

and we feel assured that there is little chance of successfully treating this great national disease while want and pauperism so much abound: we can little hope to improve the mental and moral condition of a people while their physical state is so deplorable:—personal experience has shown us in the manufacturing districts that the people want no acts of parliament to coerce education or induce moral improvement when they are in physical comfort—and that, when men are depressed with want and hunger, and agonized by the sufferings of helpless and starving children, no acts of parliament are of the slightest avail.

more
-james died in kolkata- instead of his vision charter banking this port as mid 19th C gateway to win-win trade new belt road between china bangaldesh and india, the opium wars forced china to wall off a fifth of the world's most creative people for over 100 years- this was an even greater loss to the artistic freedom of man than the steady decline of venice and the whjole med sea region from 1500 as mercantile rukers of waves win-lose trades replaced half a millennium of celebrating the amazing grace of silk road traders- flash forward to 1972, make sure wherever you parent girls that the miracles of china and bangaldesh 1972-2017 resonate trough every education system including wise summits at UNGA (spet 2018) at Paris March (2019), at the 2nd 100 nations rebirth of Belt Road Inspires may 2019 BRI- school mba systems



This blog would like to include special country months eg Korea -lift up half the sky : searching for ladies who see jobs as most basic human right 1 2


online library of norman macrae--


q1 2018 videos worth discussing wherever stidnets meet


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Posted by chris macrae at 9:21 AM No comments:
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Tuesday, September 5, 2017

In a declaration, the BRICS(Brazil-Russia-India-China- South Africa -togeteher with 5 guests Egypt, Guinea.., Tajikistan, Mexico and Thailand) called upon all nations to adopt a comprehensive approach in combating terrorism including countering radicalisation and blocking terror financing sources. Here is the full text ofXiamen Declaration

Xiamen, China, 4 September 2017

3 is it still possible for 2024 to live up to this 1984 goal for changing education (Norman Macrae 1 & Chris Macrae 2024/5 report)

peoplecentredeconomics.JPG follow the Ma: jack has spent since 1994 searching for where big-small chnage will come to chich markets - so fast moving consumer goods chnaged by ecommerce; finance and social sharing markets eg bikes by mobile apps-clouds; furniture by OTO; jobs education and happiness sectors by 1 refugee and bodrer crossings, 2 expereintial learning olympics and the games of education of youth as sustainability goals generation on every belt road map se are the most exciting times to be ali


linking in fans of BRAC and planetMOOC

Edit

bracnet and worldyouthcommunity.com welcome you - text us 240 316 8157 with email for invitation to join BRACnet and help develop the MOOCs sustainability youth need to share with each other - isabella@unacknowledgedgiant.com

4 education &

17 Youth-public-private partnering

1 end poverty

2 zero hunger

3 good health wellbeing

5 gender equality

6 clean water sanitation

7 affordable clean energy

8 decent work

economic growth

9 industry, innovation, infrastructure

10 reduce inequality

11 sustainable cities communities

12 responsible consumption and production

13 climate action

14 life below water

15 life on land

16 peace & justice========

come co-blog with us

- we are converting several blogs into synonyms webs using google $12 dollar a year rental scheme


COLLAB INVITE 7 summits 2018-2019
previously

what does east and worldwide youth want from open learning -2015 dialogue, due Tokyo late june- opportunity to test 5 billion person elearning satellite

q 1 can community health open elearning training unite hemispheres (lead nets: Partners in Health origin americas, brac origin muslim bangladesh, medicins sans frontieres
the japanese parties likely to include those representing corporate world like toyota, tokyo university and national higher ed policy, ambassadors and eg JICA and thru abdul latif mit labs- why tokyo father Norman Macrae earned The Emperors highest international award for his teams at The Economist helping japan choose future sectors of world trade
Our family's work has tracked doubling of global coms spend every 7 years since 1946 -that's 4000 fold by 2030 in terms of whats sustainable





Home
Diarrhea Curriculum - Valung India's and Health Networks Greatest Innovation for Sustainability
Introducing You to World Record Games of Job Creation
women and youth manage poverty. so why not heart of development
Losing Sustainability- the greatest intergenerational mistake?

ABOUT OUR FRIENDS NETWORKS 1 2
Trust-flow mapping has been core of scottish economics since 1748 and Franciscan Community Development since 2008- valuetrue and POP key leadership metric : integenerational sustainability exponentials; unlie ting revolutions wen Te Economist was born to mdeiate end of hunger, millennials need help in mediating communications (now the sector tat most money and human lives are spent on -future shockingly from about 5% in 1950 to about 25% in 2010s)

Remembering
Author of Asia Rising
Author of Japan Rising
Leader of singapore rising
who else?

which other pro-yout economical ways has asia contributed to sustaining millennials:
worlds best superports
worlds best womens village investment banking and mobile tec infrastructures
worlds best quality systems and fast moving sector visions mapping back from future goals
...
.
20 years ago Jim Rohwer published Asia Rising and was plotting launching the equivalent of The Economist in Asia. (some personal research available by dad Norman macrae if you can give us context of interest). While Jim's super optimistic book has in many ways turned out to be under-optimistic sadly he died in a boating accident. If anyone's an alumni of Asia Rising we love to be contacted chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk - and I will be making as many lins as I can to the references of what was explorable in 1995. Asia's development was then and is now the best news anyone can have the privilege of diarising.






























































































































































ut 14 results (0.67 seconds)

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  1. Asia Rising: Why America Will Prosper as Asia's Economies Boom

    https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0684825481
    Jim Rowher - 1996 - ‎Business & Economics
    Chapter 1 (The Miracle) In general Norman Macrae, "Two Billion People," The Economist (May 7, 1977). Jim Rohwer, "A Billion Consumers," The Economist ...
  2. Remade in America: How Asia Will Change Because America Boomed

    https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0609504126
    Jim Rohwer - 2001 - ‎Business & Economics
    How Asia Will Change Because America Boomed Jim Rohwer ... Norman Macrae, a former deputy editor of TheEconomist and probably the best financial ...
  3. The Economist in China: Old hands | The Economist

    www.economist.com/blogs/analects/.../economist-china
    The Economist
    Feb 27, 2012 - As it happens, Norman Macrae, the then-deputy editor of The ... Fifteen years later, in 1992, Jim Rohwer explained in another special report ...
  4. Asia Rising: Amazon.co.uk: Jim Rohwer, Jim Rowher ...

    www.amazon.co.uk › ... › Accounting › International
    Amazon.com, Inc.
    Rating: 5 - ‎5 reviews
    Buy Asia Rising by Jim Rohwer, Jim Rowher (ISBN: 9780684825489) from ... Certainly since my father, Norman Macrae, surveyed Japan's extraordinary growth ...
  5. Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Asia Rising: Why America ...

    www.amazon.com/Asia-Rising.../0684825481
    Amazon.com, Inc.
    Jim Rohwer's Asia Rising is unquestionably the best book to come out and ..... Certainly since my father, Norman Macrae, surveyed Japan's extraordinary growth ...
  6. Tracking how curriculum of Entrepreneurial Revolution ...

    normanmacrae.ning.com/xn/detail/6339278:Comment:17787
    Dec 17, 2013 - What started Norman Macrae's genre of Entrepreneurial Revolution was .... Megatrends Asia, by John Naisbitt, and Asia Rising, by Jim Rohwer.
  7. Books | Oxford Futures Library

    oxfordfutures.sbs.ox.ac.uk/pierre-wack-memorial-library/.../index.html
    Norman Macrae, The 2024 Report: A Concise History of the Future 1914-2024 .... Jim Rohwer, Asia Rising: Why America will Prosper as Asia's Economies ...
  8. COURRIER INTERNATIONAL no:4 01/12/1992 | Musée de ...

    museedelapresse.com/courrier-international-no-4/
    Translate this page
    ... L'ANNEE DU DRAGON CHINOIS – JIM ROHWER – UN SECOND SOUFFLE ... BBC EST UNE ESCROQUERIE – NORMAN MACRAE – DATA SECTEURS ...
  9. 老江湖——经济学人在中国_爱思网_新浪博客

    blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_5fb3c51d01012t4l.html - Translate this page
    Mar 6, 2012 - As it happens, Norman Macrae, the then-deputy editor of The ... Fifteen years later, in 1992, Jim Rohwer explained in another special report ...
  10. Journaux anciens de collection: COURRIER ...

    www.journaux-collection.com/fiche.php?id=758271
    Translate this page
    ... L'ANNEE DU DRAGON CHINOIS - JIM ROHWER - UN SECOND SOUFFLE ... UNE ESCROQUERIE - NORMAN MACRAE - DATA SECTEURS - ANALYSE ...
  11. 《经济学人》在中国:行家里手- 程阳的日志- 网易博客

    chengyangblog23.blog.163.com/.../21539717320124... - Translate this page
    May 27, 2012 - As it happens, Norman Macrae, the then-deputy editor of The ... Fifteen years later, in 1992, Jim Rohwer explained in another special report ...
  12. Fw: [爆卦] 來自經濟學人對中國的報導 - 批踢踢實業坊

    https://www.ptt.cc/bbs/.../M.1345950090.A.7B3.html
    Translate this page
    Aug 26, 2012 - 14 posts - ‎13 authors
    As it happens, Norman Macrae, the then-deputy editor of The ... Fifteen years later, in 1992, Jim Rohwer explained in another special report ...
  13. 老江湖——经济学人在中国- 经济学人双语精选- 爱思英语学习网

    www.24en.com/coop/ecocn/2012-03.../140375.html
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    Mar 6, 2012 - As it happens, Norman Macrae, the then-deputy editor of The ... Fifteen years later, in 1992, Jim Rohwer explained in another special report ...
  14. [PDF]The Learning Revolution

    cmap.upb.edu.co/rid=1GQBQRQMK.../The-Learning-Revolution.pdf
    Records 1000 - 1200 - Also: Jim Rohwer, Asia. Rising, Nicholas ...... The United Kingdom: Joanna Rose, Sheila Kitzinger, Norman Macrae, David Lewis, Michael.
  15. The Learning Revolution - Scribd

    https://www.scribd.com/doc/205064514/The-Learning-Revolution
    Feb 6, 2014 - Also: Jim Rohwer. 1996). page 38. Being Digital. 1998). John Naisbitt ......Norman Macrae. Malaysia: Terry Netto. Peter M. Jim and Pat Lennox ...
  16. LibraryofMistakes's author cloud | LibraryThing

    www.librarything.com/authorcloud.php?view...
    LibraryThing
    ... Henry Dunning Macleod David S. Macmillan Norman Macrae H. W. Macrosty .... Everett M. Rogers James Harvey Rogers Felix G. Rohatyn Jim Rohwer John ...

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we map unescap as having been founded by the 5 charter members of the un to focus win-win mapping across asia pacific from 1947 with headquarters chosen in thailand - (as well as un hq other regional uns for africa are connecetd out of nairobi and ethiopia, and central europe out of vienna and geneva

Member States

  • Afghanistan** 24 April 1953
  • Armenia 26 July 1994
  • Australia 28 March 1947
  • Azerbaijan 31 July 1992
  • Bangladesh** 17 April 1973
  • Bhutan** 6 January 1972
  • Brunei Darussalam 26 July 1985
  • Cambodia** 20 August 1954
  • China 28 March 1947
  • Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (the) 31 July 1992
  • Fiji 3 August 1979
  • France 28 March 1947
  • Georgia 25 July2000
  • India 28 March1947
  • Indonesia 28 September1950
  • Iran (Islamic Republic of) 10 July 1958
  • Japan 24 June 1954
  • Kazakhstan 31 July 1992
  • Kiribati** 26 July 1991
  • Kyrgyzstan 31 July 1992
  • Lao People's Democratic Republic (the) **16 February 1955
  • Malaysia 17 September 1957
  • Maldives 5 August 1976
  • Marshall Islands (the) 31 July 1992
  • Micronesia (Federated States of) 31 July 1992
  • Mongolia 21 December 1961
  • Myanmar** 19 April 1948
  • Nauru 20 July 1971
  • Nepal** 6 June 1955
  • Netherlands (the) 28 March 1947
  • New Zealand 8 March 1948
  • Pakistan 30 September 1947
  • Palau 18 July 1996
  • Papua New Guinea 27 August 1976
  • Philippines (the) 28 March 1947
  • Republic of Korea (the) 20 October 1954
  • Russian Federation (the)*** 28 March 1947
  • Samoa 5 July 1963
  • Singapore 21 September 1965
  • Solomon Islands** 3 August 1979
  • Sri Lanka 10 December 1954
  • Tajikistan 31 July 1992
  • Thailand 28 March 1947
  • Timor-Leste** 18 July 2003
  • Tonga 20 July 1971
  • Turkey 18 July 1996
  • Turkmenistan 31 July 1992
  • Tuvalu ** 26 July 1985
  • United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (the) 28 March 1947
  • United States of America (the) 28 March 1947
  • Uzbekistan 31 July 1992
  • Vanuatu** 27 July 1984
  • Viet Nam 23 August 1954

Associate Members*

  • American Samoa 28 July 1988
  • Cook Islands (the) 11 July 1972
  • French Polynesia 31 July 1992
  • Guam 24 July 1981
  • Hong Kong, China**** 25 November 1947
  • Macao, China ***** 26 July 1991
  • New Caledonia 31 July 1992
  • Niue 3 August 1979
  • Northern Mariana Islands (the) 22 July 1986

Notes:
* Not a member of the United Nations
** Least Developed Country
*** Continuation of membership of former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
**** Change of name from Hong Kong to Hong Kong, China (1 July 1997)
***** Change of name to Macau, China (20 December 1999) and further changed to Macao, China (4 February 2000)

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Join us in exploring economics: designed to invest in next generation's livelihoods starting with ending being born into poverty- and voicelessness over the future's possibilities.

Asia explorations have helped us map this more than anywhere else including:
*Japan since 1962 with father and The Economist
China with The Economist Asia Team since 1972
Bangladesh village networks since 2005 eg grameen.tv and brac.tv
Pre-war Korea with my uncle once removed
Gandhi's Inidian
Independence wit my maternal granfater 1921-1946
With Asia's and Africa's elearning satellite yazmi since 2014
With youth-valuation emerging open society views - eg Soros, Gorbachev, Nobel Peace, Preferential Option Poor since 1984
With womens empowerment valuation networks since 2012

2020 is 44th year since my father at the economist started linking in those who saw china's race of one fifth of the world's people ending poverty as determining whether human sustainability would be possible- survey 1977 in the economist, bad actors response in dc 1978, .. as schwarzman has said, china is a core curriculum for any child of the 21st century seeking human sustainability-see deans from oxford, mit and tsinghua who agree- who else are people working courageously to celebrate sustainability knowhow and exchanges between chinese youth and other national-when can you next zoom:

china institute/ peking u alumni of ny
ny time sept 16 7pm -china's 2020 deadline to end poverty
with pbs kuhn & getzels
columbia u poverty researcher qin gao
un's wenyan yang
dexter roberts, author

klaus schwab annual world forum celebrating china's new champion and 5 meta hubs linking in 4th industrial revolution between san fran, tokyo, beijing, delhi, geneva

bloomberg - in normal years 2 main summits hosted - un sdgs, trade with china

brookings china author cheng li
thinktank china centre globalisation
unicorn author and silcon dragon host rebecca fannin

un's special adviser on tech for youth livelihood - jack ma
lifes work of kissinger
...


How can your family networks linkin (9500)chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk

About Me

chris macrae
chrismacrae.com youtube washington dc email chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk linkedin 9500 skype chrismacraedc co-author with The Economist's Norman Macrae 1984's 2025Report - 40 years to transform education and save our species
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