US News
Red Herring – “Game Over,” April 1998
Hazel Henderson believes the information age will bring an end to win-lost economics. By Deborah Claymon [email protected] How is information technology changing global economics? Let me count the ways. At the most fundamental level, we are now at a bifurcation point. For hundreds of years, we have used money-based exchange. This system was an …
“International Fund Strategies”; Issue N 7, December 1997, London, UK
What do you understand by the term ‘risk’? It is linked with foresight, and that’s what futurists try to do. I look at the future as partly determined by things that human beings can’t control, and partly the result of decisions humans make about things they can control. With enough information and using probability theory, …
“International Fund Strategies”; Issue N 7, December 1997, London, UK Read More »
Wired – “Win-Win World,” Issue 5.02 – February 1997
Win-Win World, Wired, February 1997 Futurist Hazel Henderson has a modest proposal: Abolish economics and make way for the economy of abundance. By Kevin Kelly Is a profession that missed the biggest change since the Industrial Revolution worth saving? British-born futurist Hazel Henderson doesn’t think so. A veteran technocrat – with stints at the US …
Wired – “Win-Win World,” Issue 5.02 – February 1997 Read More »
Whole Earth Review – “To Stitch the World Back Together Again,” Issue 87 – Fall 1995
How would you describe what you do? I’m trying to be a practicing social innovator. My goal, of course, is just to weigh in on the side of life in human evolution — that’s all. I don’t really have any big pretensions about how much of a difference I’m going to make. I always knew …
Whole Earth Review – “To Stitch the World Back Together Again,” Issue 87 – Fall 1995 Read More »