In 2006, the digital economy underwent a dramatic transformation that changed the map of talent migration.
Theme: Economic geography and applying Michel Foucault's concept of episteme
Subject Article: "Vancouver’s high-tech hurdle: Attracting top-level talent."
Other Links: 1. "The Texas Migration Miracle."
2. "Webcast: The San Antonio Brain Gain."
3. "The Second Machine Age."
4. "Why innovation and start-ups are thriving in ‘flyover country’."
5. "Enrico Moretti: The Geography of Jobs."
6. "Demographic Changes in and near US Downtowns."
7. "A Revolution that’s Rewriting the Laws of Economics."
8. "From Metal to Minds: Economic Restructuring in the Rust Belt."
9. "That 'Useless' Liberal Arts Degree Has Become Tech's Hottest Ticket."
Postscript: Concerning episteme, the first machine age is one. The second machine age is its own episteme. Don't take data analysis from the first and apply it to the second.
In 1925, urban planner & historian Lewis Mumford described four “great tides” of migration that reflected the economic transformation of the US. Eight decades later, Robert Fishman (professor of architecture & urban planning at the University of Michigan) noted the large-scale return of people to global cities, labeling it the Fifth Migration. Today’s great tide, the Sixth Migration, is ebbing from global cities & towards a better quality of life.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Ezra Klein Is Transforming Education
Journalists have replaced teachers as the curators of expertise.
Theme: Workforce development and talent
Subject Article: "Ezra Klein Finds Conversations About the Future of Journalism 'Tiresome.'"
Other Links: 1. "Labor Disputes, Wooden Shoes, and Italian Bread."
Postscript: Concerning economic development, I focus on education and health care. The interview with Ezra Klein says a lot more about the future of education than it does journalism. Readers consume content and learn. Klein's business model subsidizes that education. Klein's business model cares more about the quality of the audience than quantity of audience. This is a matter of education, not journalism.
Theme: Workforce development and talent
Subject Article: "Ezra Klein Finds Conversations About the Future of Journalism 'Tiresome.'"
Other Links: 1. "Labor Disputes, Wooden Shoes, and Italian Bread."
Postscript: Concerning economic development, I focus on education and health care. The interview with Ezra Klein says a lot more about the future of education than it does journalism. Readers consume content and learn. Klein's business model subsidizes that education. Klein's business model cares more about the quality of the audience than quantity of audience. This is a matter of education, not journalism.
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