In less than 100 words, what is your idea?:
The Sustainable Economy Ideas Index (see an early mock-up at http://sustainableeconomy.ideascale.com/) will provide an online forum where people can share and promote ideas on what Australian governments can
do to support a sustainable economy. This project will harness the power of crowdsourcing to bring together the best policy ideas for solving the challenges Australia faces in transitioning to an economy that operates within environmental limits. The Sustainable Economy Ideas Index will allow students, academics, policy analysts, forward-looking businesses and other concerned citizens to work together to capture policy ideas from Australia and around the world and collaborate on making those ideas as compelling and easy to understand as possible.
What is the social need or challenge your idea could address?:
We need a central repository for all the ideas - whether implemented elsewhere or not - that will help inform the debates and decisions made to transition our economy to one that is more socially and environmentally sustainable.
The Sustainable Economy Ideas Index will be the place to go to learn about other ideas and contribute knowledge, experience and research.
What kinds of ideas will be in the index?
The index will focus on policy ideas which could be implemented by federal or state governments in Australia - while we recognise that actions by individuals, civil society and business are also important, ideas for changing government policy are often more complex and harder to find. The index will mainly be a platform for collecting ideas that have already been proposed or implemented elsewhere - although there's room for original ideas where clear gaps in existing proposals can be identified.
What’s really new about your idea?:
Currenty, many great ideas are buried in the recommendation sections of long reports, or can be found in papers in academic journals, on many other websites and submissions to government inquiries.
As yet, there is no project that brings together, translates and synthesises the existing research and ideas in a way that is accessible, usable and interactive.
The Sustainable Economy Ideas Index proposes to create the research tool that will do this and bring together in the one space bright and creative researchers to be part of this project: forward-looking thinkers who want to find solutions to the environment crisis, not simply criticise and lament current policies.
Comments
Re: Sustainable Economy Ideas Index
Great
Please open source this and use the Traidmark.org business structure:)
www.traidmark.org
Should trade profit everyone? Yes.
Traidmark represents a new business structure that was created as a way
for profits to be used to fund innovation and progress for the benefit
of humanity. This is done by donating Net profit to innovative
charitable/research organisations and stating the percentage donated
clearly for consumer clarity.
www.mustart.org
We put on interactive events that include everyone. Why not come to the
next event or make your own.
Regards
Ed Whyman
Creative Producer
www.whymandesign.com
Re: Sustainable Economy Ideas Index
I have a deep background in data management, data modelling and data integration. Let me know if I can help you with data capture or data presentation/mining for this.
Re: Sustainable Economy Ideas Index
Sounds great idea. I am completely new to this site first. Once I am able to amble I will come back to you read further and where possible put in my humbe worth.
Dr Venkat Pulla
www.strengthsbasedpractice.com.au
Re: Sustainable Economy Ideas Index
Oops! This idea was accidentally posted as anonymous. Should add that it's a start-up project hosted by the Centre for Policy Development (http://cpd.org.au | @centrepolicydev)
One of the main problems that I think this project could solve is the 'google invisibility effect' in policy debates: if an idea doesn't come up on the first page of google search results it may as well not exist for the majority of the interested public. This effect is compounded by the fact that many government websites lack long-lived urls, so old policies disappear after a change of government or departmental reshuffle - I've heard stories of ministers and departmental secretaries not being aware of old policies that were still technically in effect! Many of the ideascale & user-voice type of tools have the ability to 'graduate' an idea when it has been implemented (e.g. if a company has decided to adopt a product idea) - it would be fantastic if we could adapt this for the ideas index so that it can track ideas that are adopted as policy.