The paper will first discuss certain sociocultural trends such as population growth, increased life expectancy, the labour force and education, and look at how these are affecting society as a whole. Such trends are linked with the global economy and the industrial sector as well as the environment. The consequences of such trends are a number of problems which face the world in the future, particularly in developing countries. These problems include overpopulation, levelling off of food supplies, diseases, natural resources depletion, and conflicts and clashes in areas where immigration and cultural differences exist. Such problems are discussed together with their implications. Some ideas are then given on how these future difficulties might be overcome; and it is clear that information will have an enormous role to play in this respect. Topics covered comprise global awareness (for example of the environment, birth control, women's rights, healthcare) through education and information; frontierless transactions; global information access, dissemination, communication and transfer of knowledge; knowledge build‐up and transfer through CDROM archiving of latent skills and know‐how; and the like.
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1 April 1995
Review Article|
April 01 1995
The world to come: what we can do now Available to Purchase
David Raitt
David Raitt
c/o Learned Information (Europe) Ltd, Woodside, Hinksey Hill, Oxford OX1 5AU,UK E‐mail: draitt@estec.esa.nl
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-616X
Print ISSN: 0264-0473
© MCB UP Limited
1995
The Electronic Library (1995) 13 (4): 269–278.
Citation
Raitt D (1995), "The world to come: what we can do now". The Electronic Library, Vol. 13 No. 4 pp. 269–278, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb045373
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