How Telenor is using technology for world peace along with the Nobel Peace Centre
Advertisement
Technologies have for quite some time been used as tools for violence, from clubs and swords to bombs and missiles. In less obvious way, technologies are crucial to making or keeping up peace in a society.
So what can we affect with technology that would have some bearing on the likelihood or severity of suffering around the world? We discover a clue in past approaches to deal with this problem, which have frequently included grass-roots community association. That association was then used to exert political influence (e.g. in against war dissents), and to grow direct action community-based responses to local deficiencies and problems (soup kitchens for the poor). The intriguing thing to note here is that centralized institutions like governments have often added to suffering by triggering wars and neglecting to perceive local resource needs… and at the same time these institutions are being undermined by late technological developments.
World Peace might sound like a utopia but it’s not a far thought when the corporations of today are fighting to establish peace.Telenor is kickstarting a new age where companies and innovations will pull off the challenge to establish peace.
How?
Telenor Youth Forum (TYF) is a program run by Telenor Group and the Nobel Peace Center , with the aim to empower youth to solve social issues through technology.
Twenty-six talented millennials from Telenor’s 13 markets are selected from a pool of nearly 5,000 applicants to represent their countries in the fourth annual Telenor Youth Forum (TYF) and 2016 Nobel Peace Prize activities.
The one-year TYF program begins inOslo , Dec. 8 – 11, during Nobel Peace Prize week. The selected delegates will take part in events related to honoring the Nobel Peace Prize winner, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, in addition to working in teams to design solutions to major social challenges.
Last year, Jimmy Wales, founder of wikipedia was the mentor for TYF delegates
Advertisement
So what can we affect with technology that would have some bearing on the likelihood or severity of suffering around the world? We discover a clue in past approaches to deal with this problem, which have frequently included grass-roots community association. That association was then used to exert political influence (e.g. in against war dissents), and to grow direct action community-based responses to local deficiencies and problems (soup kitchens for the poor). The intriguing thing to note here is that centralized institutions like governments have often added to suffering by triggering wars and neglecting to perceive local resource needs… and at the same time these institutions are being undermined by late technological developments.
World Peace might sound like a utopia but it’s not a far thought when the corporations of today are fighting to establish peace.
How?
Advertisement
The one-year TYF program begins in
Last year, Jimmy Wales, founder of wikipedia was the mentor for TYF delegates
Advertisement
- A centenarian who starts her day with gentle exercise and loves walks shares 5 longevity tips, including staying single
- A couple accidentally shipped their cat in an Amazon return package. It arrived safely 6 days later, hundreds of miles away.
- FSSAI in process of collecting pan-India samples of Nestle's Cerelac baby cereals: CEO
- India's e-commerce market set to skyrocket as the country's digital economy surges to USD 1 Trillion by 2030
- Top 5 places to visit near Rishikesh
- Indian economy remains in bright spot: Ministry of Finance
- A surprise visit: Tesla CEO Elon Musk heads to China after deferring India visit
- Unemployment among Indian youth is high, but it is transient: RBI MPC member
- JNK India IPO allotment date
- JioCinema New Plans
- Realme Narzo 70 Launched
- Apple Let Loose event
- Elon Musk Apology
- RIL cash flows
- Charlie Munger
- Feedbank IPO allotment
- Tata IPO allotment
- Most generous retirement plans
- Broadcom lays off
- Cibil Score vs Cibil Report
- Birla and Bajaj in top Richest
- Nestle Sept 2023 report
- India Equity Market