Rewilding the workplace I: How can we rewild the workplace?
Digital capabilities are revolutionising the world of work. Much mainstream debate is about job loss: where will the jobs of the future come from? But there’s also the question of how we will work. Can we work in ways that enhance our health and wellbeing — and even that of the planet?
Tell us in the comments below, read more in our annual publication The Long View, and join us in Singapore with authors Paul Hawken and Janine Benyus to discover how nature’s models can transform commerce and help us tackle one of our greatest challenges: climate change.
RSVP: Learning from Nature, National University of Singapore, 5.00–6.30pm, Tuesday 8 March.
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Related signals of change
These small but important ideas and innovations raise questions about future challenges and opportunities, and their implications for sustainability.
- The first robotic, farmerless farm
- Rolls-royce launches project to design unmanned ships
- An ‘unconditional’ basic income for Utrecht’s unemployed
What are your thoughts on how can we rewild the workplace? Tell us in the comments below.
More in the ‘Rewilding the workplace’ series:
- Part II: Anna Simpson relays insights from Paul Hawken and Janine Benyus, speaking at the National University of Singapore on ‘What can workplace design learn from nature?’.
- Part III: Are wilder workplaces a step to restorative work?