Swae CEO Speaker for the Persia Educational Foundation’s Webinar Iran 2.0: Exploring AI, Policy and Democracy

Swae CEO Speaker for the Persia Educational Foundation’s Webinar Iran 2.0: Exploring AI, Policy and Democracy

Iran 2.0: Exploring AI, Policy and Democracy
When: Wednesday, 18 August, 17:00 – 18:00PM BST (London, UK)
Where: Online Webinar here

Bringing together the worlds of historical insight into Iran and its role in the global community, geoeconomics in the MENA region, as well as artificial intelligence in emergent democratic processes, our panelists will explore how and when we may be able to empower today and tomorrow’s generations to universalise participation, transparency and decision making that impact our lives in a constructive manner. 

YOU’RE INVITED TO THIS FREE EVENT!

Soushiant Zanganehpour, Founder & CEO of Swae, has been invited to speak, and we welcome all to join as it will be streamed online

Persia Education Foundation webinar on Wednesday, 18 August, 5PM BST (London, UK), please click the link below to watch the discussion:

Guest Panelists

Ali Ansari

Twitter:  @aa51_ansari  Wikipedia

Ali Massoud Ansari the Professor in Modern History with reference to the Middle East at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. He is also the founding director of the Institute for Iranian Studies. Hi research explores the history and politics of Modern Iran, including the relationship between Iranian ideologues and Western ideas of development, especially the way in which Iranian intellectuals appropriated, adapted and engaged with narratives of the Enlightenment; the concept of ‘rights’; constitutionalism; and the establishment of the rule of law. His work examines historical consciousness, and the various narratives and mythologies that have shaped contemporary Iranian identity.He is currently the FCO Fellow looking at politics of Brirish-Iranian relations in historical context.

Afshin Molavi

Twitter: @AfshinMolavi Wikipedia

An Iranian-American author, a co-director of the emerge85 Lab, a senior research fellow at the New America Foundation and Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, and a senior advisor at Oxford Analytica, Molavi is a widely published thinker focussing on global geo-political risk and geo-economics in the Middle East and Asia.

Soushiant Zanganehpour

Twitter:  @Soushiant

A winner of the Global Challenge Price 2017, Zanganehpour’s AI start up, Swae.io, defines a new model for global governance through bottom-up and inclusive decision-making to advance democratic processes that enable the grassroots to voice their concerns and redirect the rise of abuse of power and elitism towards accessing the greater good. An outstanding advocate of informed, meritocratic processes, Zanganehpour promotes better leadership among governments, corporations and communities.

More about the Persia Educational Foundation

Established in 1997, Persia Educational Foundation is a non-governmental UK-registered charity. Its mission is to promote education and advancement of Persian-speaking communities worldwide. It provides knowledge and means to our partners and co-workers in order to encourage open and connected education leading to self-sufficiency and independence.

Persia’s primary target among this population are women and girls. Persia advances that:

  • Only through education individuals and communities can reach their actual and true potential while protecting their rich heritage.
  • Women, as mothers and first educators of the next generation, offer greater potential to impact the community.
  • Promoting and accessing education and training is a universal right and key to achieving Agenda 2030.
  • Education and advancement of women and girls is the key to establishing a culture of peace and prosperity.
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Swae CEO Invited to the Council of Europe’s World Forum Talk: Can Democracy Save the Environment?

Swae CEO Invited to the Council of Europe’s World Forum Talk: Can Democracy Save the Environment?

The Council of Europe is the continent’s leading human rights organization.

Soushiant Zanganehpour, Founder & CEO of Swae, has been invited to speak at the Council of Europe’s Forum Talk on Wednesday, 11 August, 4.30 to 6 PM CEST.

This is part of a yearlong campaign to
answer one big question: 

 

“Can Democracy Save the Environment?”

 

This is under the High Patronage of Mr. Emmanuel Macron, President of the French Republic.

This Forum Talk will bring together CEOs, researchers and policy experts, including Swae’s very own Soushiant, to analyze dimensions of the relationship between global environmental challenges, technology and democracy. 

Soushiant will be providing context as to how technology can support and help true democracy in various ways. 

YOU’RE INVITED TO THIS FREE EVENT!

We welcome all to join as it will be streamed online Wednesday, 11 August, 4.30 to 6 PM CEST, please click the link below to watch the discussion:

Theme Description

The unprecedented global ecological challenges posed by climate change and biodiversity loss, among others, raise a range of compelling questions about the intersections between these challenges, the uses and application of current and emerging technology, and the ability of democracies around the world to react effectively to these crises.

On the one hand, current and emerging technology present compelling new solutions to enable better collective responses to the climate and related ecological challenges¾for example, through new systems using the latest technologies to ensure global transparency on GHG emissions and climate action, as well as software and open online viewing platforms to develop and track climate action targets at various levels of governance. More, tailored software, using AI technology, may be used to engage citizens and enhance democratic decision-making around the world in connection with the unprecedented global climate and ecological challenges, as some governments strive to ensure maximal citizen engagement in and commitment to the significant economic and social changes that may be required for required climate/environmental action.

On the other side of the coin, there is currently a transnational problem – threatening, potentially, to undermine the foundations of democracy itself – of technologically-enabled misinformation, disrupting climate action and reducing the capacities of democracies to respond to urgent environmental challenges. How might democracies respond and safeguard vital (global) information ecosystem integrity and ensure citizens around the world get high quality information on ecological challenges?

    

About Forum Talks

The Forum Talk is part of the yearlong campaign: “12 months, 1 Question – Can Democracy Save the Environment?” August will be dedicated to “Technology, the environment and democracy” and a different theme will be addressed each month until November 2021, when we plan to hold a 3 day World Forum gathering to take place in Strasbourg—the largest democracy-focused gathering of its kind.  

The World Forum for Democracy is a unique platform for political decision-makers and activists to debate solutions to key challenges for democracies worldwide. By identifying and analysing experimental initiatives and practices, the Forum highlights and encourages democracy innovations at the grassroots and their transfer on a systemic level, in order to strengthen the foundations of democratic societies.

The Global Governance Forum seeks to promote more effective global governance to achieve unprecedented measures of shared prosperity, health, education, peace and justice, and to safeguard the planetary systems on which we all rely.

MORE DETAILS

The event is organised by the Council of Europe’s World Forum for Democracy in collaboration with the Global Governance Forum and Leiden University, Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs, and will consist in presentations from the invited experts followed by interactive discussion and Q&A with participants. 

MODERATOR

Maja GROFF International Lawyer and Convenor of the Climate Governance Commission, Netherlands

SPEAKERS

Amy EAGLESTONE Democracy-Building Expert and Policy Advisor to the Chair of the Dutch Climate Council, Netherlands

Dr. Herb LIN Senior Research Scholar at the Center for International Security and Cooperation and Hank J. Holland Fellow in Cyber Policy and Security, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

Gavin Mc CORMICK Executive Director (WattTime) and Electricity Lead (Climate TRACE)

Tomer SHALIT CPO and Founder of ClimateView

Soushiant ZANGANEHPOUR Founder, CEO at Swae.io

Soushiant is a social scientist, entrepreneur and Founder of Swae.io, an AI-powered platform for smarter organizational decisions and 21st century governance. Swae helps companies, cities and organizations of all sizes benefit from the collective intelligence of their employees, stakeholders and citizens helping source innovative ideas, program and product feedback, and policy, budget, and strategy suggestions, at a fraction of the cost.

Soushiant is a recognized global practitioner in the fields of business innovation, impact investing, social entrepreneurship, and sustainability having spoken at numerous international conferences and published in The Guardian, The Financial Times, Bloomberg Business Week, and Entrepreneur magazines. He is on Harvard Business Review’s Advisory Council, and a board advisor of Biocarbon Engineering, a reforestation start-up using drones to replant a billion trees per year.

Soushiant earned his BA (PoliSci & IR) from the University of British Columbia, a Diplôme in International Affairs from SciencesPo Paris, an MPP (Public Policy & Economics) from the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), and attended Singularity University’s Global Solutions Program as a Google Scholar. He was awarded a full scholarship by the UK’s Foreign Office as one of four Canadian Chevening Scholars for his Masters

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What positive change can digital technologies have on the democratic process?


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Spark Salon Podcast- Swae Democracy and Technology

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Democracy and Technology Podcast- Episode 4

by The Spark Salon | Swae

About The Spark Salon

The Spark Salon is Tata Consultancy Service’s programme of events in the UK that showcase innovative and thought-provoking new perspectives on the role of technology in helping to create a sustainable world.

At these events, we have a number of speakers give a TED style talk on the Spark Salon’s theme. Now, through the Spark Salon podcast, you can hear these amazing ideas and discussions proposed by our expert speakers.

Swae, A New Model for Global Governance & The New Shape Prize

Swae, A New Model for Global Governance & The New Shape Prize

This coming Saturday and Sunday (May 26th and 27th), Federico Ast, Martin Monin and I will be in Stockholm, Sweden, pitching to a jury of experts about our model for 21st century (and beyond) global governance.

We were selected as 1 of 14 finalists for the New Shape Prize, a $5M USD award looking to support new models of global governance (read more about the foundation, the founder’s story and logic behind the prize, and global risks).

Given what I’ve been working on for the past year or so, I’d heard about this prize, but didn’t imagine we’d get very far. I hesitated to apply, thinking “Governance is so broken and topical today (think Brexit and Trump’s election). I’m sure some Ph.Ds from Stanford or PPE students from Oxford have a brilliant and technologically elegant model to fix it all.” Instead of giving into defeat, however, I decided to apply and treated the application process — a 30+page detailed technical proposal — as an opportunity to elaborate deeply on our ideas, assumptions, implementation plan, and vision. Here we are…

Our Model — High Level

We’re proposing a new model for global governance using a combination of new tools, new actors, and new institutions that helps us circumvent the limitations of our current system and instead facilitates bottom-up AI-supported deliberation and policy creation (read the abstract here).

To help us move past existing solutions created primarily through narrowly defined national interests, the model does three things:

1) Allow much more broad participation and competition in the design of solutions. Better ideas = a normative challenge against the current limited ideas we select from.

2) Provide access to powerful tools that are currently not democratized, so solutions can be properly deliberated, diligenced, simulated in digital environments, and de-risked before the thought of implementation. Well vetted, technically sound ideas with political backing = more tolerance for trying them out.

3) Provide real jurisdictions where ideas can be implemented to see their impacts (e.g. smart cities, communities, special economic zones, micro-nations). Real jurisdictions that would implement good solutions = a testing ground for intended and unintended impacts and a real incentive to participate to propose solutions, instead of simply moaning about the status quo.

In the short term, the model would sit alongside our existing governance system, challenging the solutions it creates, while testing itself out in different environments.

In the long term, this model will replace how we do governance at the local, national and international levels. As the model gains integrity and adoption, is used in different governance settings, more people will demand it be used where it matters most.

Criticism — How Might We Be Wrong?

Of course we could be wrong. We probably are on a number of fronts. Our model has certain assumptions and depends on some trends coming to fruition — about evolving human behaviour and cultural expectations, future of work, technology availability, adoption and trust. Before trying to defend ourselves, let me share some key criticisms we’ve heard and can anticipate:

  • “Democracy apps and civic technology platforms have tried to democratize democracy for the past 5–10 years and largely failed. Why will this be any different?”
  • “This is essentially crowdsourcing. Beyond Wikipedia, crowdsourcing hasn’t produced major breakthroughs. How will this be different?”
  • Even if this could work at the local, city or national level, how does it scale globally? How do it ensure there is impact at the global level where problems are most acute? Can’t leaders just ignore it?
  • “What happens if the policies the system produces don’t work as planned? How do we ensure things don’t get worse?”

We have answers to these criticisms and soon after the competition ends, we’ll open source our entire application (or share as much of it as we feel comfortable sharing) in order to invite as much constructive criticism and thoughtful debate about the model as possible. If there are some major holes or potential unintended consequences our model may create, we want to be aware of them and design solutions to mitigate them. If there are any burning criticisms I missed, feel free to share them below or DM me.

Our Next Steps (Win or Lose)

Win or lose, this opportunity allows us to work closely with some really excellent potential partners and collaborators (see other finalists) who each have a powerful tool or model to contribute to the problem. Of course, the process and recognition is a great source of validation — that we’re working on something that matters and could have global consequences — and the funding would be an enormous boost, helping us move beyond the bootstrapping stage we’re in. But the biggest benefit could be the relationships we build, the assumptions we adjust, new models we create out of these initial frameworks to create be even better, more fit-for-purpose system, that more practically addresses our governance shortcomings.

Whatever the outcome, we’re super excited and honoured to participate in the forum. We’ll be tweeting from Saturday onwards, from our Swae twitter account and from my own account.

Wish us luck (and best of luck to the other finalists)!

 

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