Boston 2010 FUTURES FUTURES 2009 - 2010 Dr. Alonso Lujambio Secretario de Educación Pública México 2006 - 2010 www.globalmillenniumprize.org Unique visitors 175,221 Number of visits 567,475 Pages 5´913,512 Hits 7’309,404 Countries 110 1/07/2010 International Judges 2009-2010 International Winners Azerbaijan 4 México 5 South Africa 1 2009-2010 WINNERS Winners projects proposals highlights 1. Azerbaijan Mexico 3. Mexico 6. Azerbaijan 9. Mexico 10. Azerbaijan 11. México 14. South Africa Mexico Shrajiya Mammadova: Creation of the Production World Fair. Rafael Romero Villegas: Animation short movie promoting recycling , water use and ecological preservation. Rosa Lara Rosales: Educational method for housing intensive vegetable production. Mayra Cruz: Family gardens for satisfying nutritious needs. Lala Hasanova: World Wide Web opportunities for supporting research, educational forums and mass education. Miguel Antonio Rivera: Network of young creators and self-advocacy course for marginalized communities Aydan Khlafova: Creation of the World Peace Network for Youth and United Youth Peace Organization. Martha Gabriela Rodríguez: Municipal workshops to support self-esteem of local women. Tabang Sebotoane: Workshops to teach people how to use new inventions. Rafael Oropeza y Monterrubio: TRIZ courses that could be taught from grammar school level in order to accelerate learning process for technological innovations. 2010 phrase: LET’S ACCELERATE INNOVATIONS & INVENTIONS TO IMPROVE OUR FUTURE. GLOBAL MILLENNIUM PRIZE 2009 - 2010 AWARD CEREMONY NATIONAL AWARD CEREMONIES AZERBAIJAN TURKEY SOUTH AFRICA GLOBAL MILLENNIUM PRIZE FOR WOMEN 2011 2011 GLOBAL MILLENNIUM PRIZE FOR WOMEN 2011 Global Millennium Prize for Women 1st. international contest Mission To stimulate women’s foresight and financing education, by teaching them methodologies on how to prepare productive projects profiles with vision of the future as well as immediate actions. Vision To develop women’s futurist leadership in their communities and countries and to propitiate positive changes, for today and for the long term. Goal To encourage creativity, social responsibility and world solidarity among women. Instructions Introduction The project’s idea. Market The opinions and facts you have collected from your research and people knowledgeable and interested in your project. Project Your project and the stages for designing, implementing and operating it. Commercialization Your business plan (sales, promotion and advertising) and possible customers. Budget You can estimate in one chart the total cost to design and implement your idea. In another chart you can estimate the total income and costs when your project is in operation Benefits Who will benefit from your project ? Summary A ten line or less summary of the most important highlights of your project. (Don’t repeat the whole project). TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP PROGRAM FOR MEXICAN WOMEN TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP PROGRAM Mission To foster Mexican women’s leadership by strengthening their self-esteem and by teaching them the skills needed for successful team work, the strategies they can use to attain the objectives of their community projects, with future vision, immediate actions and the ability to raise funds for their programs with social responsibility. Vision To develop a national program, replicable worldwide, for training women leaders committed to global solidarity. 2011 Goals I. 2011 Target Pilot programs in 5 States in Mexico. Programs & Services 1. 2. Training programs . Development of links with financial institutions. Resources 1. Human Resources 2. Material Resources. 3. Financial Resources. Evaluation First year: 30 courses, benefiting 600 women, 1000 projects with financial support . Feasibility Study 1. Legal aspects. 2. The market. 3. The project. 4. Commercialization. 5. Organizational structure. 6. Financing. 7. Impact and economic and social evaluation. II. Annual Fund and Capital Fund. III. Agreements IV. Training Programs 62nd. UN DPI/NGO Annual Conference FOR PEACE AND DEVELOPMENT. DESARM NOW! 62 UN DPI/NGO Annual Conference UN DPI/NGO’s Declaration main hightlights An Agenda for Action for Governments & international organizations. 1. Nuclear disarmament To reform the Security Council : more representative , more responsible and capable of response to violations: to promote disarmament and non proliferation of nuclear weapons. 2. Disarmament of small arms and conventional weapons. To prevent the proliferation of light arms among civil population. To implement the Protocol on weapons control. To regulate the international trafficking of weapons. 3. General To declare 2010-2020 the International Decade of Disarmament. World Agenda to evaluate technology linked to disarmament. To significantly reduce armed violence by 2015. Action Items to UN through Secretary General To transform the UN Conventional Arms Registration into a World Watchdog overseeing the interlinking civil societies with UN entities for monitoring trade and use of weapons. Action Items through NGOs and Civil Societies To unify & develop international networks to promote peace, security, disarmament and development. CONCLUSIONS To save lifes, limit casualties & prevent the destruction of our civilization. 2009-2010 Collaborations Collaborations 1. 2009 SOF Spanish translation review 2. 2010 SOF mexican experts opinions & quote 3. Latin America 2030 RTD 4. MP Financial Sustainability Study : • Fondea proposal & RTD 5. All MP requirements Strategic alliance with FUTURES 2010 Annual Conference Millennium Project Panel THE FUTURE OF MEXICAN BRAIN DRAIN 1. 2010: 0.5 % GDP. At least 1%. Scenarios: 2012 “Desirable”, 2018 “Alternative” & 2027 “Inertial”. 2. + 60 % live in USA, 24% in Europe and the rest Canada and other countries. 3. OECD recommendations: a) Creation of the Ministry of Science. b) Improvement in 3 critical areas for innovation: Framework of conditions: 1. Strengthening competence across several sectors and access to financements: 2. Improving the government’s system and 3. Increasing public expense in science and technology. c) Prioritize alleviating the financial crisis negative impact on: 1. Innovation and 2. The green recovery. 4. The Mexican Sectorial Funds are supporting research projects in strategic areas: health, water, environment, hydrocarbon technology, energy alternative sources, transportation, information technologies, and poverty alleviation. 5. Mexican Talent Networks. Supported by Mexican Government, Union of Mexicans living abroad and companies interested in accelerating their commercialization process, mainly in the following fields: information technology, bio & nanotechnology, medical devices and high precision mechanical manufacture. Mexican Spatial Agency. Organizers Mexican Government UN System Place Leon Poliforum, Guanajuato State Dates August 23 - 27 Forums 1. Social 2. Governments 3. Global Interactive + 26,000 participants 192 countries M a i n T he m e s 1. Poverty & exclusion 2. Employment •3. Education 4. Technology & innovation 5. Health 6. Gender equity 7. Security, social justice and human rights 8. Sustainable development 9. International migration 10. Citizen participation 11. Global association & cooperation OBJECTIVES & ACTIVITIES 1.3 BILLION YOUNG PEOPLE Objectives 1. To identify priority actions for youth on international development agenda beyond the MDG. 2. To strengthen cooperation between countries & social actors linked to youth policies. Social Forum 1. 2. To reach agreements between youth & governments to attend to needs and demands of young people worldwide. To promote participation of the young as a distinct social sector. Government Forum To present a Declaration with recommendations for youth and development. Millennium Development Goals 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Global Interactive Forum Poverty affects 650 million young people. Youth is a force against poverty and marginalization. To encourage equity in young people participating in education. To foster leadership worldwide among young women. To involve young people as health service providers. To reduce risks for young women. To inform young people about health risk prevention tools and comprehensive health services. To encourage young people in the use of renewable energies and sustainable consumption. Access to quality jobs & better development conditions. Youth Information Fair that will include artistic, cultural, academic, technological and recreational activities. GLOBAL INTERACTIVE FORUM GLOBAL INTERACTIVE FORUM Nº. Workshops Main Themes 1. Wages & purchasing power. 1. Poverty and exclusion. 2. Bracelets. All 3. Videogames. 4. Technology & education. 4. Traffic lights, police and fines. 3. Education. 5. Dizzy?... No!... Drunk! 10. Citizen participation. 6. Climbing without borders. 9. International migration. 7. Youth passport. 3. Education. 8. Temporal blindness. 7. Security, social justice & human rights. 9. Earth’s tree. 8. Sustainable development. 10. NGO creation. 11. Global association & cooperation. 11. Journalism. All 12. Paint your world. All W E L C O M E! A U G U S T 2 3 - 2 7, 2 0 1 0 Thank you.