Human creativity is a natural, infinitely renewable resource — and it’s coming up with smart, cheap solutions to people’s biggest problems. Strategist Navi Radjou explains. If an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty, then the developing world must be filled with optimists. There, people have learned to get more value from limited resources and find creative ways to reuse what they already have. For example, in India, potter Mansukh Prajapati has created a fridge made entirely of clay that uses no electricity and can keep fruits and vegetables fresh for many days — it is, quite literally, a cool invention. In Africa, if your cell phone battery runs low on power, you can often find resourceful entrepreneurs who’ll recharge it with their bicycle. And, in Peru, the area around Lima is extremely humid but also very dry; it receives only one inch of rainfall a year. An engineering college in the city has figured out a way to create water out of air — they’ve designed a gia
Blog is interested in strategic thinking and planning for peace and the dissemination of a culture of coexistence and cultural knowledge and news review. The Code is concerned with the various fields of reporting, cultural support and communication in the field of systematic analysis Edited by Hatem Babeker Awad Al-Karim and others