We need to change the structures...
The institutions are wicked...
The market is oppressive...
Democratic politics is corrupt...
Educational system does not prepare our citizens...
Culture is contaminated by pre-modern views...
And then comes 1 person, somewhere, somehow, and starts changing the world!
Jogue fora a roupa velha
Aqui vocês encontrarão reflexões sobre o que ainda não existe. Cartas esperançosas do "eleitor-do-futuro" (cidadãos brasileiros) que tentam conclamar o "Presidente-do-Futuro-do-Brasil" (povo brasileiro) a lutar por outra forma de desenvolvimento. Formulações sobre economia, política e educação. E algumas confissões e curiosidades. O pano de fundo é o desejo sincero de jogar fora a roupa velha, que veste o Brasil há décadas, costurada com idéias e instituições que não nos servem mais.
terça-feira, 1 de maio de 2012
domingo, 22 de abril de 2012
domingo, 26 de fevereiro de 2012
Creative thinking and startups
http://blog.startupprofessionals.com/2012/02/entrepreneurs-need-creative-thinking.html
sábado, 18 de fevereiro de 2012
Governo-preneurs: the future of social movements
In the 80s/90s, the boom of democratization in Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia and Africa led to new constitutions, in many cases supported by strong social movements. The underlying idea of this constitutional project was that we needed to overcome the injustices of the old regime, and would set a new constitution to guide us in a difficult yet necessary trajectory. The constitution, so to speak, was the guiding light in the end of the tunnel which was not a train -- in a world in which rules of men only proved to lead to poverty, inequality, and injustice. Social movements, in this context, organized their activities to push governments to fulfill those ideals and rights embedded in the new constitution. When governments did not do what they were expected to, they were accused of violating the Constitution. Judicial activism, in many places, rose as an answer to the legitimate social demands of society, often channeled by influent social organizations.
The best paradigm of this regime is South Africa. South African constitutionalism is widely regarded as one of the best expressions of a carefully designed constitution. When the South African government failed to deliver those promised socioeconomic rights, social movements quickly took the initiative to bring a case to court. Many of these cases ended up in the South African Constitutional Court. And the Court did take a bold and active position in some of these cases, ordering the government to take reasonable measures to translate the constitutional aspirations of the South African people into reality.
Has this strategy worked?
I think the right answer is NO (if it worked, it worked only in a very limited sense). Why not? Here is one reason. A deep mistake of this strategy -- judicial activism by social movements -- is that it tends to assume that the reasons why governments are not 'fulfilling their tasks' is because they are corrupt (putting their private interests in the place of public ones) or they are not setting the political priorities (and allocating the financial resources) in the right way. Thus judicial intervention is regarded as an appropriate tool to clean these vices and force governments to do the right thing.
In fact, the reason why governments, in many cases, have not delivered the 'constitutional aspirations' is not the lack of moral probity, not the lack of financial resources, not the lack of political capacity to set political priorities properly, but a question of knowledge. The real answer is that most governments don't have a clue how to answer some of the most serious challenges of our time. How do we improve the quality of education in the Brazilian Amazon, a complex region in which mobility is difficult and markets are weak? How can we rescue millions of Latin Americans from poverty? How can we guarantee universal health care in any African country? The right answer is: nobody knows. To be sure, we have some insights here and there, some narrow examples of success in one city or another, but we don't know how to address these problems in a larger scale.
If we take this conclusion seriously, the way we are used to deal with politics and governments should change. It does not seem enough to push governments to do things, because even if you win in courts, you might lose in real life. Social movements should start organizing themselves to build the new -- new ideas, new policies, new institutions. And by doing that, assist governments in finding solutions to problems we currently don't know how to address and should not expect bureaucrats to be better qualified to find the solution.
When this happens (and there are few examples in which this is already happening), social movements will become 'governo-preneurs'. They will abandon a childish approach to life -- cry and get a lollipop, cry louder and you will get two lollipops -- and take a mature and sophisticated attitude, yet harder and more complex, which consists of sharing a higher level of trust and struggling to formulate new hypothesis, new experiments, new possibilities, which can help the country, with and without the government, to fulfill our aspirations of development.
When this happens, society will also star to develop an authentic attitude towards power. We will stop looking for a political leader that claims to know the answers to our hopes and start valuing those that are committed to finding the solutions to what we don't know. We will also be less critical to someone's mistakes and more open to someone's ability learn from them. We will start taking more responsibility for our common challenges, for common goals, because we might also realize that the solution to these questions cannot be found by one or another leader alone, but will require the participation of all of us.
This does not necessarily mean 'giving up' individual's/organization's autonomy, agenda and political discourse. It means moving the level of political argumentation and discourse from a 'principiological level' to an 'institutional level': 'I want better quality education, and I want the government to flexibilize the federalist structure so that those regions that have no capacity to solve their challenges and be appropriately supported by those who can'. It means pushing the government to do the right thing, not only to 'do': 'I want government to protect the environment, and to create the economic incentives to foster a green economy in the country'. And it means internalizing the level of demand: from the other to ourselves -- so that the ultimate motto of society should be: every person, one agenda, every group, one goal.
When this happens, we might figure out how our dominant conceptions of constitutional democracy are mistaken. We will quickly notice that we are inverting means and ends. Democracy will finally be interpreted as it should always have been: a regime in which people's individual and collective expressions are allowed, fostered and supported. Instead of a regime that obeys constitutional rights, that fulfills fundamental rights, a regime that respects separation of powers... What seems to be an anxiety today -- how can you even make sense of democracy without a clear standpoint: fundamental rights -- might end up meaning exactly the opposite -- how can you even think of democracy as a regime that does not place in its center you and I, not some 'notion' of what an ideal individual should be.
When we start understanding our national challenges in a 'post-principiological' way, and when our societies and our social movements start to act in this inspiring and exemplary fashion, we might end up realizing how each of us, each of our social groups, can and should effectively contribute to the country. Our democracy might be much more vivid and energetic. Our governments, much more concerned with what we, individually and collectively, think before they act. And the spirit of action might finally meet the world of knowledge, giving an important step in bridging the gap between knowledge and politics.
The best paradigm of this regime is South Africa. South African constitutionalism is widely regarded as one of the best expressions of a carefully designed constitution. When the South African government failed to deliver those promised socioeconomic rights, social movements quickly took the initiative to bring a case to court. Many of these cases ended up in the South African Constitutional Court. And the Court did take a bold and active position in some of these cases, ordering the government to take reasonable measures to translate the constitutional aspirations of the South African people into reality.
Has this strategy worked?
I think the right answer is NO (if it worked, it worked only in a very limited sense). Why not? Here is one reason. A deep mistake of this strategy -- judicial activism by social movements -- is that it tends to assume that the reasons why governments are not 'fulfilling their tasks' is because they are corrupt (putting their private interests in the place of public ones) or they are not setting the political priorities (and allocating the financial resources) in the right way. Thus judicial intervention is regarded as an appropriate tool to clean these vices and force governments to do the right thing.
In fact, the reason why governments, in many cases, have not delivered the 'constitutional aspirations' is not the lack of moral probity, not the lack of financial resources, not the lack of political capacity to set political priorities properly, but a question of knowledge. The real answer is that most governments don't have a clue how to answer some of the most serious challenges of our time. How do we improve the quality of education in the Brazilian Amazon, a complex region in which mobility is difficult and markets are weak? How can we rescue millions of Latin Americans from poverty? How can we guarantee universal health care in any African country? The right answer is: nobody knows. To be sure, we have some insights here and there, some narrow examples of success in one city or another, but we don't know how to address these problems in a larger scale.
If we take this conclusion seriously, the way we are used to deal with politics and governments should change. It does not seem enough to push governments to do things, because even if you win in courts, you might lose in real life. Social movements should start organizing themselves to build the new -- new ideas, new policies, new institutions. And by doing that, assist governments in finding solutions to problems we currently don't know how to address and should not expect bureaucrats to be better qualified to find the solution.
When this happens (and there are few examples in which this is already happening), social movements will become 'governo-preneurs'. They will abandon a childish approach to life -- cry and get a lollipop, cry louder and you will get two lollipops -- and take a mature and sophisticated attitude, yet harder and more complex, which consists of sharing a higher level of trust and struggling to formulate new hypothesis, new experiments, new possibilities, which can help the country, with and without the government, to fulfill our aspirations of development.
When this happens, society will also star to develop an authentic attitude towards power. We will stop looking for a political leader that claims to know the answers to our hopes and start valuing those that are committed to finding the solutions to what we don't know. We will also be less critical to someone's mistakes and more open to someone's ability learn from them. We will start taking more responsibility for our common challenges, for common goals, because we might also realize that the solution to these questions cannot be found by one or another leader alone, but will require the participation of all of us.
This does not necessarily mean 'giving up' individual's/organization's autonomy, agenda and political discourse. It means moving the level of political argumentation and discourse from a 'principiological level' to an 'institutional level': 'I want better quality education, and I want the government to flexibilize the federalist structure so that those regions that have no capacity to solve their challenges and be appropriately supported by those who can'. It means pushing the government to do the right thing, not only to 'do': 'I want government to protect the environment, and to create the economic incentives to foster a green economy in the country'. And it means internalizing the level of demand: from the other to ourselves -- so that the ultimate motto of society should be: every person, one agenda, every group, one goal.
When this happens, we might figure out how our dominant conceptions of constitutional democracy are mistaken. We will quickly notice that we are inverting means and ends. Democracy will finally be interpreted as it should always have been: a regime in which people's individual and collective expressions are allowed, fostered and supported. Instead of a regime that obeys constitutional rights, that fulfills fundamental rights, a regime that respects separation of powers... What seems to be an anxiety today -- how can you even make sense of democracy without a clear standpoint: fundamental rights -- might end up meaning exactly the opposite -- how can you even think of democracy as a regime that does not place in its center you and I, not some 'notion' of what an ideal individual should be.
When we start understanding our national challenges in a 'post-principiological' way, and when our societies and our social movements start to act in this inspiring and exemplary fashion, we might end up realizing how each of us, each of our social groups, can and should effectively contribute to the country. Our democracy might be much more vivid and energetic. Our governments, much more concerned with what we, individually and collectively, think before they act. And the spirit of action might finally meet the world of knowledge, giving an important step in bridging the gap between knowledge and politics.
The best political system: China x US?
How should we think of the infra-structure of a political system that simultaneously fosters the national ambitions of socioeconomic development and at the same time preserves and enhances our deepest moral values? This is the first question that came to my mind once I read this NY Times piece. My intuition is that the right 'frame' should not be the American or the Chinese, but something else. The core question is what can we learn from the experience and limits of each country's political system and how can we think of a better design.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/16/opinion/why-chinas-political-model-is-superior.html
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Why China’s Political Model Is Superior
By ERIC X. LI
Published: February 16, 2012
Shanghai
THIS week the Obama administration is playing host to Xi Jinping, China’s vice president and heir apparent. The world’s most powerful electoral democracy and its largest one-party state are meeting at a time of political transition for both.
Many have characterized the competition between these two giants as a clash between democracy and authoritarianism. But this is false. America and China view their political systems in fundamentally different ways: whereas America sees democratic government as an end in itself, China sees its current form of government, or any political system for that matter, merely as a means to achieving larger national ends.
In the history of human governance, spanning thousands of years, there have been two major experiments in democracy. The first was Athens, which lasted a century and a half; the second is the modern West. If one defines democracy as one citizen one vote, American democracy is only 92 years old. In practice it is only 47 years old, if one begins counting after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 — far more ephemeral than all but a handful of China’s dynasties.
Why, then, do so many boldly claim they have discovered the ideal political system for all mankind and that its success is forever assured?
The answer lies in the source of the current democratic experiment. It began with the European Enlightenment. Two fundamental ideas were at its core: the individual is rational, and the individual is endowed with inalienable rights. These two beliefs formed the basis of a secular faith in modernity, of which the ultimate political manifestation is democracy.
In its early days, democratic ideas in political governance facilitated the industrial revolution and ushered in a period of unprecedented economic prosperity and military power in the Western world. Yet at the very beginning, some of those who led this drive were aware of the fatal flaw embedded in this experiment and sought to contain it.
The American Federalists made it clear they were establishing a republic, not a democracy, and designed myriad means to constrain the popular will. But as in any religion, faith would prove stronger than rules.
The political franchise expanded, resulting in a greater number of people participating in more and more decisions. As they say in America, “California is the future.” And the future means endless referendums, paralysis and insolvency.
In Athens, ever-increasing popular participation in politics led to rule by demagogy. And in today’s America, money is now the great enabler of demagogy. As the Nobel-winning economist A. Michael Spence has put it, America has gone from “one propertied man, one vote; to one man, one vote; to one person, one vote; trending to one dollar, one vote.” By any measure, the United States is a constitutional republic in name only. Elected representatives have no minds of their own and respond only to the whims of public opinion as they seek re-election; special interests manipulate the people into voting for ever-lower taxes and higher government spending, sometimes even supporting self-destructive wars.
The West’s current competition with China is therefore not a face-off between democracy and authoritarianism, but rather the clash of two fundamentally different political outlooks. The modern West sees democracy and human rights as the pinnacle of human development. It is a belief premised on an absolute faith.
China is on a different path. Its leaders are prepared to allow greater popular participation in political decisions if and when it is conducive to economic development and favorable to the country’s national interests, as they have done in the past 10 years.
However, China’s leaders would not hesitate to curtail those freedoms if the conditions and the needs of the nation changed. The 1980s were a time of expanding popular participation in the country’s politics that helped loosen the ideological shackles of the destructive Cultural Revolution. But it went too far and led to a vast rebellion at Tiananmen Square.
That uprising was decisively put down on June 4, 1989. The Chinese nation paid a heavy price for that violent event, but the alternatives would have been far worse.
The resulting stability ushered in a generation of growth and prosperity that propelled China’s economy to its position as the second largest in the world.
The fundamental difference between Washington’s view and Beijing’s is whether political rights are considered God-given and therefore absolute or whether they should be seen as privileges to be negotiated based on the needs and conditions of the nation.
The West seems incapable of becoming less democratic even when its survival may depend on such a shift. In this sense, America today is similar to the old Soviet Union, which also viewed its political system as the ultimate end.
History does not bode well for the American way. Indeed, faith-based ideological hubris may soon drive democracy over the cliff.
Eric X. Li is a venture capitalist.
sexta-feira, 17 de fevereiro de 2012
Dean Holloway - University of Calgary Faculty of Law
Some interesting statements:
"The conventional model of in North America is in need of change".
"To answer the question what legal education should look like in the future, we first need to answer the question what should legal profession look like in the future".
"Globalization is having an effect on how law firms are organizing themselves and on legal services".
"Those firms that are prospering are those that embody the spirit of entrepreneurialism and innovation".
"The law school in the future has to be an active participant in the global scene".
"International aspects of legal education exist at the margins, they don't go to the core".
"What we don't do enough in law schools in North America is to teach students the art of solution oriented analysis".
"The best lawyers are leaders. A client wants someone who leads them to the best solution. ... That is not what American law schools teach... In private law and NGO sectors, our students will have to work in teams. That is a skill. It is a skill that can be learnt, but not something that in systematic way we teach".
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