Showing posts with label #Participatory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Participatory. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2024

🌊 IMSPARK: Pacific Adaptations in the Global Innovation Race🌊

🌊 Imagine... Pacific Adaptations in the Global Innovation Race🌊

💡 Imagined Endstate:

A future where the Pacific region, rich in unique perspectives and natural resources, becomes a central player in global innovation, particularly in technological advancements. 

🔗 Link: 

Explore the Vision for Competitiveness

📚 Source:

Special Competitive Studies Project. (2024). Vision for Competitiveness. Retrieved from https://www.scsp.ai/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Vision-for-Competitiveness-1-1.pdf

💥 What’s the Big Deal:

The Special Competitive Studies Project's (SCSP) "Vision for Competitiveness" identifies emerging technologies, particularly AI🤖, as pivotal in securing economic and strategic dominance. For the Pacific Islands, traditionally viewed as peripheral in global technological debates, this presents a crucial opportunity🌏. Integrating Pacific perspectives into global technology policies could drive innovations tailored to unique environmental and societal needs, from sustainable ocean management to disaster resilience technologies. 

Engaging Pacific nations in the innovation race diversifies the global tech landscape. It ensures that these islands, often first affected by global challenges like climate change, have a voice in shaping solutions🌅. This approach empowers the Pacific to participate and lead in environmental technology and digital democracy, harnessing local knowledge and global technology to create resilient, sustainable communities🌱.

Through strategic partnerships and leveraging local knowledge🤝, Pacific nations contribute to and benefit from global technological ecosystems, enhancing their competitiveness and sustainability. 


#PacificInnovation, #GlobalInnovation, #AIForGood,#TechInclusion, #SustainableIslands, #InclusiveInnovation, #FutureTech, #ParadigmShift, #Participatory,#Intersectional ,#RICEWEBB,#IMSPARK, #IMVID 



Thursday, January 18, 2024

🏠 IMSPARK: A Pacific Future with Fair and Equitable Access to Homeownership 🏠

🏠 Imagine… A Pacific Future with Fair and Equitable Access to Homeownership 🏠




💡 Imagined Endstate: 

A region that has fostered a culture of inclusion and diversity, where everyone has equal opportunity to build wealth and stability through homeownership.

🔗Link:

📚Source: 

Brown, J. R., & Cookson, J. A. (2024). Lender-reported reasons for mortgage denials don’t explain racial disparities. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. 

💥 What’s the Big Deal: 

The article by Brown and Cookson (2024) reveals that Black and Hispanic applicants are more likely to be denied mortgages than White applicants, even after controlling for income, credit score, and other factors. 🏦  The authors find that the lender-reported reasons for denials, such as debt-to-income ratio, credit history, and collateral, do not fully account for the racial gap in mortgage outcomes. 🌈 This suggests that there may be other factors at play, such as discrimination, bias, or structural barriers, that prevent people of color from accessing homeownership.

Homeownership is a key source of wealth and economic security for many Americans, especially in the Pacific region, where housing prices are high and rising. 🏘️ However, the racial gap in homeownership has persisted for decades, contributing to the racial wealth gap and intergenerational inequality. 📈 By addressing the root causes of mortgage denials and ensuring fair and equitable access to homeownership, the Pacific region can empower more people of color to achieve their financial goals and improve their quality of life.


#homeownership,#racialequity, #Mortgage,#WealthGap,#Pacific,#Poverty, #Inequality, #Participatory,#RICEWEBB, #IMSPARK,

Sunday, January 7, 2024

🌅 IMSPARK: A New Pacific Perspective on Poverty and Inequality🌅

🌅 Imagine... A New Pacific Perspective on Poverty and Inequality🌅



💡 Imagined Endstate:

Imagine a future where Pacific islanders are not only free from material deprivation, but also empowered to pursue their valued goals and aspirations. A future where human development is measured not by income or consumption, but by the capabilities and opportunities that people have to live a life they value.

🔗 Link:

📚 Source:

Alkire, S. (2010). Poverty, inequality and development: A discussion from the capability approach’s framework. In J. Soler, F. Sabaté, & J. Serrano (Eds.), Open Mind: Philosophy and the Mind Sciences in the 21st Century (pp. 133-164). MIT Press.

💥 What’s the Big Deal:

The capability approach is a normative framework that focuses on what people are able to do and be, rather than what they have or lack.🌴 It challenges the conventional views of poverty and inequality that rely on income or consumption indicators, 🌺 and instead proposes multidimensional and participatory approaches that respect the diversity and agency of human beings. 🌊Applying the capability approach to the Pacific context can help us understand the complex and interrelated challenges that Pacific islanders face, such as climate change, health, education, gender, culture, and governance, and design policies and interventions that enhance their capabilities and freedoms 🙌.


#poverty,#paradigmshift, #CapabilityApproachFramework,#inequality, #Participatory, #intersectional,#RICEWEBB,#IMSPARK, 

 

👥IMSPARK: Hawai'i Prioritizing Civic Education 👥

👥Imagine... Hawai'i Prioritizing Civic Education 👥 💡 Imagined Endstate:  A Hawaii where civic education is prioritized, ensuring that...