Skip to main content
Log in

The relevance of association networks for/in a sustainable information and communication society

  • Open Forum
  • Published:
AI & SOCIETY Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

This contribution deals with taking up the challenge of sustainable development through human centred systems which aim at the creation and repatriation of global quality in each society, and which are seen to operate as a whole, on a local, regional or even a planetary scale. The paper argues that, particularly in a field such as information, communication, environment, technological processes and innovations, which have structurally revolutionised first of all manufacturing but also education and daily living at the same time. However, producing new pathogenous structures require, by necessity, a political ecology in order to relate these fields to new figures of meditation/mediance and crossbreeding built up by associative networks. PRELUDE'S experience, as an international networking programme of scientists pursuing with other social factors objectives of codevelopments (in response to the failure of bad development in the North and in the South), and its contribution to the theme “Global Perspective 2010” of the CE-FAST Programme suggest the actual relevance and, turning to the future, the decisive function of associative networks as a way of approaching more efficiently, because of their flexibility, complex, highly heterogeneous situations to be tackled in a systemic and global fashion. In complementing institutions and established companies these networks give their new performances and efficacity to institute, and so doing displace acquired balances, and increase their capacity to innovate.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References and notes

  1. Environment, etymologically speaking, signifies all our surroundings. A lot of configurations with regard to various levels and scales are considered, from local instruments, industry, living space, and from the regional to the international and planetarian world and through local responses to global problems. Each problem is the result of various interactive processes and represents growing global complexity at a functional level related to a capacity for satisfying physical, mental and social welfare. See Georges Thill, “The Importance of Sociocultural Perceptions for a Methodology of Risk Assessment and Prevention Management”, Proceedings of the Danish Conference about Prevention of Cancer:Chemical Carcinogens ín our Environment, Scanticon, Aarhus, May 10–13, 1992.

  2. Peter Kemp,Das Unersetzliche. Eine Technologie-Ethik. Von katastrophalen Bedrohungen zu eineim humanen Umgang mit neuen Technologien, Berlin, Wichern, 1992.

  3. Gérard Valenduc, Patricia Vendramin, “Expériences de médiation et d'évaluation dans la recherche de l'innovation technolgique”,La lettre EMERIT, Fondation Travail-Unversité, Cellule “Travail & Technologies” (rue de l'Arsenal 5, B-5000 Namur Belgium), mars 1993.

  4. Georges Thill/PRELUDE (Programme of REsearch and Liaison between Universities for DEVelopment, International Network, Scientific Coordination: Prof. Georges Thill, Namur University, 61, rue de Bruxelles, B-5000 Namur, Belgium),The Transfer of Scientific and Technological Skills and Expertise and their Appropriation. The Relevance of Associative Networks, FAST/Monitor, FOP 307 (EN), CCE, Brussels, November 1992.

  5. G. Gordon, J. Kriegler/CAPIRN (International Research Network on Culture and Production,World Production Cultures. Country Report on Anthropocentric Systems in the United States, FOP 262, APS Research Papers Series, vol. 18, FAST/Monitor, CCE, December 1990.

  6. G. Thill/PRELUDE, op. cit. G. Ceraglioni, L. Milone,The Shelter Problem, CSS/FAST 12, Torino (Italy), 20 May 1992.

  7. Georges Thill/PRELUDE, op. cit.; see Annex II,Note concerning the concept planetary.

  8. Olivier Mongin, “Une mémoire sans histoire? Vers une autre relation à l'histoire”,Espirit, mars-avril 1993, pp. 102–113.

  9. C. Freeman, “Japan a new national system of innovation”, in: G. Dosi et al. (eds),Technical Change and Economics, London, Pinter, 1988.

    Google Scholar 

  10. As stressed by the Centre de Sociologie de l'innovation, Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Mines, Paris. B. Latour et al.,Les Réseaux que la raison ignore, Paris L'Harmattan, 1993.

  11. Jorge Niosi, Bertand Bellon, Paolo Saviotti, Michael Crow, “Les systèmes nationaux d'innovation: unité et diversité”, Problèmes économiques/Economie internationale, n∘2.311, 3 février 1993, pp. 22–30.

  12. Georges Thill, sous la direction de,L'invention socio-épidémiologique, Enquête-test dans la Basse Sambe auprès de la population ouvière masculine, 2 tomes, Namur University, Department of Sciences, Philosophies, Societies, of the Faculty of Sciences, 1980. See also: Georges Thill, “The Importance of Socio-cultural Perceptions for a Methodology of Risk Assessment and Prevention Management”, Danish Conference: Chemical Carcinogens in our Environment. Prevention of Cancer, Santicon, Aarhus, Denmark, May 10–13, 1992.

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Thill, G. The relevance of association networks for/in a sustainable information and communication society. AI & Soc 8, 70–77 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02065179

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02065179

Keywords

Navigation