UNECE UNECE
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UNECE fosters sustainable development by translating the #GlobalGoals into norms and conventions that impact people’s lives every day.
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Forests For Fashion hosted by Samata Pattinson - the UN Forest Podcast
Sustainability is a pressing concern in the fashion and textile industry.
In this episode of “The UN Forest Podcast”, host Samata Pattinson is joined by Åsa Degerman, Ben Selby and Carlo Covini to discuss the transformative role of forests and new technologies in making fashion more sustainable and circular.
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About the UN Forest Podcast
The UN Forest Podcast is a series produced by the Joint UNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section to showcase that the potential of forests goes beyond trees. Each episode features special guests and speakers who bring insights on forests as our strongest allies in fighting climate change and creating a sustainable future now and for generations to come.
The views expressed in this episode are those of the individuals involved and should not be interpreted as endorsements by the United Nations, its affiliated organizations, its officials or Member States.
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Credits:
Samata Pattinson, CEO of BLACK PEARL
Åsa Degerman, Project Manager at OnceMore®
Ben Selby, CFO and Deputy CEO of Spinnova
Carlo Covini, Project Manager Marketing Textiles at Lenzing
Nicola Sangs, Editor and Producer
Paola Deda, Director, Forests, Land and Housing Division of UNECE
Audio credits:
“vintage jingle”
Licensor: SETUNIMAN
Link & creative commons license details: https://freesound.org/s/156019/
“Atmo – Noise”
Licensor: SIMBERTOB
Link & creative commons license details: https://freesound.org/people/SimbertoB/sounds/186597/
“Chill Background Music”
Licensor: ZHRØ
Link & creative commons license details: https://freesound.org/people/ZHR%C3%98/sounds/584430/
“Chill Background Music”
Licensor: Seth_Makes_Sounds
Link & creative commons license details: https://freesound.org/people/Seth_Makes_Sounds/sounds/670039/ -
Innovation Matters: Capitalism and Innovation (Part 1)
In this episode of Innovation Matters, we delve into the relationship between capitalism, innovation, and societal progress with Dr. Rainer Zitelmann.
Through a historical lens and contemporary examples, this episode explores how capitalist dynamics have fostered technological breakthroughs, economic development, and contributed to improved standards of living for billions globally. -
Innovation Matters: the Politics of Innovation
In this episode, we delve into the question of why certain countries excel in innovation while others, with similar resources, do not achieve the same level of success. In conversation with Dr. Mark Zachary Taylor of the Georgia Institute of Technology, Innovation Matters sheds light on the complex factors beyond institutions and policies that drive national innovation strategies.
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Innovation Matters: The Legacy of the Industrial Revolution (Part 2)
In the previous episode of Innovation Matters on the industrial revolution with Professor Emma Griffin, we explored how innovative dynamism changed our word radically in a process still going on today. This second episode explores what life was like for the working class. Often maligned as squalid and dehumanizing, Emma Griffin delves into a range of autobiographies telling a different, much more nuanced story of optimism, perspectives, and dynamism.
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Innovation Matters: The Legacy of the Industrial Revolution (Part 1)
In the mid-18th Century, the modern economy started to take shape. While limited to the invention of the factory system and the boom in the textile sector for the first decades, the Industrial Revolution brought unprecedented social and economic changes. Marking, in the words of prominent historian Eric Hobsbawn, “the most fundamental transformation of human life in the history of the world”, the innovative dynamism and legacy the industrial revolution created is alive and well today. In this episode of Innovation Matters, Professor Emma Griffin explains what prompted and upheld the industrial revolution and the innovative dynamism it paved the way for – and what we can learn from history on how to sustain innovative dynamism today and in the future.
Emma Griffin is professor of modern British history at the University of East Anglia and President of the Royal Historical Society. -
Innovation Matters: Regulation and Innovation (Part 2)
In this episode of Innovation Matters, we expand on the previous conversation with Adam Thierer, Senior Research Fellow with the R. Street Institute’s technology and innovation team, about the present and future of regulation in an era of unprecedented innovation. In Part 2, our focus is on the contemporary landscape of legislation, and the balance between permissionless innovation and effective governance. As the pace of technological advancement accelerates, we explore the challenge of reconciling rapid change with the traditional pace of legislation, particularly in the context of digitization.