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#AhoraQueNosEscuchan | Ciclo 2025Todos los miércoles a la medianoche por Radio Con Vos, la periodista Ingrid Beck lleva adelante este ciclo de entrevistas a mujeres que hicieron, hacen y van a hacer historia. La directora ejecutiva de CIPPEC, Gala Díaz Langou, es la invitada de este programa. "Hoy hace falta explicar que es necesario el Estado para tener un desarrollo genuino. También tiene que tener instituciones que sean fuertes y profundamente democráticas", analiza.
Rafael Rofman Investigador Principal de CIPPEC @ESZEWA 18-3-2025
Columna de la periodista Sol Clemente con participación de la directora ejecutiva de CIPPEC, Gala Díaz Langou.
This Democracy that Delivers episode delves into the complexities of the investment landscape in Argentina. Lesly Rubio, Senior Program Manager of CIPE's Latin American Programs, is joined by the Center for the Implementation of Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth (CIPPEC) Senior Program Manager, Demian Gonzalez, and the American Chamber (AmCham) in Argentina Public Affairs Director, Marina Senestro to discuss Argentina's recent and ongoing economic transformations. The podcast examines Argentina's decades of political and economic fluctuations, and its current volatile financial crisis. As we speak, Argentina is now striving to attract foreign investment through a new set of reforms. There is no question that the arrival of a new national administration has represented a breaking point in Argentina since President Javier Milei has expressed his commitment to market-oriented solutions to tackle economic challenges. Drawing upon CIPPEC's experience in Argentina, Mr. Gonzalez shares that the Omnibus legislation (or “Ley de Bases”) highlights Argentina's great potential for greater economic growth through foreign direct investment (FDI) and increased international trade. Based on AmCham's expertise on investment in Argentina, Ms. Senestro explains the importance of transparency, partnerships, and regulations to maximize the investment in critical economic sectors, ultimately promoting national development and safeguarding investments.
En Vuelo de Regreso, Santiago y Gisela dialogaron con: Rafael Rofman - Investigador principal de CIPPEC.
Ramón Indart conversó con María Victoria Boix, Directora de Ciudades de CIPPEC.
"La gente está decidiendo mejor cuando quiere tener hijos, cuantos y si los quiere tener", expresó Emanuel López Méndez, analista de CIPPEC, en Radio EME.
“I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“Well, it's difficult. At the height of our activism, like all of the democracy movements in the world that were happening altogether, there was this emerging moment where Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, Spain, and Chile...I think that we were kind of super in love at the time with the technology and the tools. Everything seemed very fresh and groundbreaking, but I think we were kind of naive in saying that a particular set of tools was really going to bring the change that we wanted to see without us really looking at the B side of it. All the tools that we were using are designed for virality. They're not designed for healthy public debate, not even generating consensus because that's not even the problem at this stage. We're so far away from that. They're not designed to bring out the best in us. They're designed to bring out the worst in us, and that's what pays off. So I think we missed that as a generation or as an activist group. We missed that. The tools that we were so smitten by were really producing this almost collateral damage to our civic tissue and our societies. And we are so far down that rabbit hole at the moment that I think there's so much we need to walk back in terms of the power platforms have lack of accountability these algorithms have.So I guess as I grew older, I came to realize that most of the challenges that we face are not necessarily technological. They are in part, but they're also very human, right? They're very much human challenges. And we need to build these digital public spaces in a very different way than we have done.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
The Creative Process in 10 minutes or less · Arts, Culture & Society
“Even if the current system sucks, we still need to vote. That for me is something that I keep repeating. We cannot leave vacuums in the political system because someone else is going to fill them. So that for me is the number one thing. We change everything we want and work on change, but we need to make sure that the right people are voting or otherwise, it's going to be a lot harder. So we need to play both games, I guess. And then I think that we've had time to experience and experiment with these institutions for hundreds of years. And whenever we propose something new, there is this expectation that completely replaces what exists. And it always gets compared like, ‘Oh, but this happened, but…' We need to experiment. We need to be honest about this, and we need to say like, we don't know if we have unintended consequences. Like what I was saying before about our use of social media, we missed it. And so I think that we can, at the grassroots level, do a lot of experimentation and organizing kind of collectives that self-govern in different ways and use different tools and really experiment with what happens at a human level when certain technologies are used, when certain governance structures are used. So I think that's the game we will all need to play. It's twofold. On the one hand, we need to build a new system. And that makes the existing system obsolete. And we need to do this by finding sandboxes of political innovation and experimenting with political structures ourselves, but at the same time, we need to keep the pressure on the existing system to make sure that it doesn't go to hell. So it's these two things, that's our generational challenge."Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“Well, it's difficult. At the height of our activism, like all of the democracy movements in the world that were happening altogether, there was this emerging moment where Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, Spain, and Chile...I think that we were kind of super in love at the time with the technology and the tools. Everything seemed very fresh and groundbreaking, but I think we were kind of naive in saying that a particular set of tools was really going to bring the change that we wanted to see without us really looking at the B side of it. All the tools that we were using are designed for virality. They're not designed for healthy public debate, not even generating consensus because that's not even the problem at this stage. We're so far away from that. They're not designed to bring out the best in us. They're designed to bring out the worst in us, and that's what pays off. So I think we missed that as a generation or as an activist group. We missed that. The tools that we were so smitten by were really producing this almost collateral damage to our civic tissue and our societies. And we are so far down that rabbit hole at the moment that I think there's so much we need to walk back in terms of the power platforms have lack of accountability these algorithms have.So I guess as I grew older, I came to realize that most of the challenges that we face are not necessarily technological. They are in part, but they're also very human, right? They're very much human challenges. And we need to build these digital public spaces in a very different way than we have done.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“Well, it's difficult. At the height of our activism, like all of the democracy movements in the world that were happening altogether, there was this emerging moment where Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, Spain, and Chile...I think that we were kind of super in love at the time with the technology and the tools. Everything seemed very fresh and groundbreaking, but I think we were kind of naive in saying that a particular set of tools was really going to bring the change that we wanted to see without us really looking at the B side of it. All the tools that we were using are designed for virality. They're not designed for healthy public debate, not even generating consensus because that's not even the problem at this stage. We're so far away from that. They're not designed to bring out the best in us. They're designed to bring out the worst in us, and that's what pays off. So I think we missed that as a generation or as an activist group. We missed that. The tools that we were so smitten by were really producing this almost collateral damage to our civic tissue and our societies. And we are so far down that rabbit hole at the moment that I think there's so much we need to walk back in terms of the power platforms have lack of accountability these algorithms have.So I guess as I grew older, I came to realize that most of the challenges that we face are not necessarily technological. They are in part, but they're also very human, right? They're very much human challenges. And we need to build these digital public spaces in a very different way than we have done.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.”Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“So I think this is like the same as it has been forever. This is not new. Centuries and centuries ago we had the same challenges. This all starts with how you behave. And so I think it starts there.And then I would say there are a lot of really good tooling that we can still use. If you remember, your generation has been so good at using tooling to hack and troll governments and politicians. And I am in awe. I mean, talk about hack the system. You are like the new Anonymous, and I love that. Like I am right there with you. I don't even use TikTok, but if you want me to use TikTok for something, I will. So just keep using social media to troll the trolls. I think that is a very important thing that you can do and occupy that space. And then lastly, build alternatives and support alternatives. We have distributed social media projects. We have New_ Public, which is this amazing group in the United States that is like designing public spaces and rethinking digital spaces and they're incredible. Support those projects. Support everyone who's building distributed mesh infrastructure. If there's a generation that is multiplayer, it is you guys. And so you need to play in all these different games at the same time and build the alternative while you are using whatever you have at your hands to make sure that we are pushing for our agenda.I think it's fundamental that we figure out a way of doing this. I think it's absolutely wrong and unfair that those who are about to leave this Earth are the ones making decisions for those staying on Earth. That doesn't make any sense. So, how do we do it? I am not the right person for doing policy. I'm a systems thinker, so I think about systems, but how we implement the policy for that, I don't know. I do know that philosophically we must include everyone who shares this planet with us in the decision-making process.It starts with different levels. It starts with how you react when you read something. It starts with each of us personally, how we behave and how we act on social media, and educating ourselves on misinformation and disinformation tactics to be able to see them and not be part of that hyper-reactionary movement where everything is like a disaster, or we react every time we feel like offended by everything.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“Even if the current system sucks, we still need to vote. That for me is something that I keep repeating. We cannot leave vacuums in the political system because someone else is going to fill them. So that for me is the number one thing. We change everything we want and work on change, but we need to make sure that the right people are voting or otherwise, it's going to be a lot harder. So we need to play both games, I guess. And then I think that we've had time to experience and experiment with these institutions for hundreds of years. And whenever we propose something new, there is this expectation that completely replaces what exists. And it always gets compared like, ‘Oh, but this happened, but…' We need to experiment. We need to be honest about this, and we need to say like, we don't know if we have unintended consequences. Like what I was saying before about our use of social media, we missed it. And so I think that we can, at the grassroots level, do a lot of experimentation and organizing kind of collectives that self-govern in different ways and use different tools and really experiment with what happens at a human level when certain technologies are used, when certain governance structures are used. So I think that's the game we will all need to play. It's twofold. On the one hand, we need to build a new system. And that makes the existing system obsolete. And we need to do this by finding sandboxes of political innovation and experimenting with political structures ourselves, but at the same time, we need to keep the pressure on the existing system to make sure that it doesn't go to hell. So it's these two things, that's our generational challenge."www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“Even if the current system sucks, we still need to vote. That for me is something that I keep repeating. We cannot leave vacuums in the political system because someone else is going to fill them. So that for me is the number one thing. We change everything we want and work on change, but we need to make sure that the right people are voting or otherwise, it's going to be a lot harder. So we need to play both games, I guess. And then I think that we've had time to experience and experiment with these institutions for hundreds of years. And whenever we propose something new, there is this expectation that completely replaces what exists. And it always gets compared like, ‘Oh, but this happened, but…' We need to experiment. We need to be honest about this, and we need to say like, we don't know if we have unintended consequences. Like what I was saying before about our use of social media, we missed it. And so I think that we can, at the grassroots level, do a lot of experimentation and organizing kind of collectives that self-govern in different ways and use different tools and really experiment with what happens at a human level when certain technologies are used, when certain governance structures are used. So I think that's the game we will all need to play. It's twofold. On the one hand, we need to build a new system. And that makes the existing system obsolete. And we need to do this by finding sandboxes of political innovation and experimenting with political structures ourselves, but at the same time, we need to keep the pressure on the existing system to make sure that it doesn't go to hell. So it's these two things, that's our generational challenge."Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“Well, it's difficult. At the height of our activism, like all of the democracy movements in the world that were happening altogether, there was this emerging moment where Tunisia, Egypt, Iran, Spain, and Chile...I think that we were kind of super in love at the time with the technology and the tools. Everything seemed very fresh and groundbreaking, but I think we were kind of naive in saying that a particular set of tools was really going to bring the change that we wanted to see without us really looking at the B side of it. All the tools that we were using are designed for virality. They're not designed for healthy public debate, not even generating consensus because that's not even the problem at this stage. We're so far away from that. They're not designed to bring out the best in us. They're designed to bring out the worst in us, and that's what pays off. So I think we missed that as a generation or as an activist group. We missed that. The tools that we were so smitten by were really producing this almost collateral damage to our civic tissue and our societies. And we are so far down that rabbit hole at the moment that I think there's so much we need to walk back in terms of the power platforms have lack of accountability these algorithms have.So I guess as I grew older, I came to realize that most of the challenges that we face are not necessarily technological. They are in part, but they're also very human, right? They're very much human challenges. And we need to build these digital public spaces in a very different way than we have done.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).“Well, I think I face the same challenges that any man or woman would face in terms of trying to change an existing system. So there's a whole set of challenges that I think are common to everyone who's trying to disrupt the status quo and at the same time needs to engage with the status quo because we do live in a society where we play by certain rules and it is what it is.And so I think many of those challenges have to do with the nature of power and how power is conservative and power will do anything in order to stay in power. And the status quo will do anything and make itself look like anything that you want in order to stay in power. And they might change their spots a little bit here or there, but if you look deep enough, it's the same people. It's the same power.And so for me, that was the big challenge of realizing that we were facing power and power is conservative, and that's not the way to really achieve the change that we wanted to make. I wasn't patient enough for incremental changes. That's not what I'm interested in. So there's one set of challenges that I think is common to anyone in my position trying to do this. With regards to being a young woman, I mean, sure you face the same kind of sexist comments that you would face anywhere else that I face now as a woman CEO. The best thing I can do for that is just occupying the space and keep occupying the space and refusing to move away or let things like that stop me from engaging.”www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
“Even if the current system sucks, we still need to vote. That for me is something that I keep repeating. We cannot leave vacuums in the political system because someone else is going to fill them. So that for me is the number one thing. We change everything we want and work on change, but we need to make sure that the right people are voting or otherwise, it's going to be a lot harder. So we need to play both games, I guess. And then I think that we've had time to experience and experiment with these institutions for hundreds of years. And whenever we propose something new, there is this expectation that completely replaces what exists. And it always gets compared like, ‘Oh, but this happened, but…' We need to experiment. We need to be honest about this, and we need to say like, we don't know if we have unintended consequences. Like what I was saying before about our use of social media, we missed it. And so I think that we can, at the grassroots level, do a lot of experimentation and organizing kind of collectives that self-govern in different ways and use different tools and really experiment with what happens at a human level when certain technologies are used, when certain governance structures are used. So I think that's the game we will all need to play. It's twofold. On the one hand, we need to build a new system. And that makes the existing system obsolete. And we need to do this by finding sandboxes of political innovation and experimenting with political structures ourselves, but at the same time, we need to keep the pressure on the existing system to make sure that it doesn't go to hell. So it's these two things, that's our generational challenge."Pia Mancini is a democracy activist, political scientist, open source sustainer, co-founder & CEO at Open Collective and Chair of DemocracyEarth Foundation. She has worked in politics in Argentina as the Chief of Advisers and Deputy Secretary of Political Affairs, Government of the City of Buenos Aires and CIPPEC think tank. She has developed technology for democracy around the world and is a YC Alum, Young Global Leaders (World Economic Forum). She co-founded DemocracyOS & The Net Party (Partido de la Red).www.piamancini.comhttps://opencollective.comhttps://democracy.earthwww.creativeprocess.info www.oneplanetpodcast.orgIG www.instagram.com/creativeprocesspodcast
Mercedes Bidart es nacida en Argentina y desde muy pequeña se dio cuenta de la importancia de fomentar en el mundo la justicia económica. Ella estudió la Licenciatura en Ciencias Políticas en la Universidad de Buenos Aires para posteriormente dirigir proyectos de desarrollo comunitario en asentamientos informales con la ONG TECHO y trabajar para el Programa de Ciudades de CIPPEC desarrollando capacidades en los gobiernos locales de América Latina.Posteriormente, en el año 2017 se muda a los Estados Unidos para obtener una Maestría en Planificación Urbana en el MIT. Mientras estudiaba esta maestría, colaboró con Community Innovators Lab, U.Lab, MIT CREATE, el Programa SPURS y el 'Societal Transformation Lab' del Presencing Institute, una red global de equipos que lideran iniciativas de cambio de sistema. Después del MIT, se mudó a la ciudad de Nueva York para asesorar al vicealcalde de estrategia política de la ciudad sobre estrategias de "nueva economía" para apoyar a las minorías y las empresas propiedad de mujeres.Mercedes Bidart es cofundadora junto con Viviana Siless y Juan Constain de Quipu Bank, empresa a la que hoy dirige y que es una plataforma que permite a las comunidades rediseñar sus economías cambiando la forma en que las microempresas realizan transacciones y la forma en que se realiza la evaluación crediticia. Le apasiona el potencial de la tecnología para fomentar la colaboración cívica y económica en comunidades marginadas.Quipu lanzó su producto en el 2020 en Colombia y a la fecha atienda a más de 3000 usuarios y en el año 2022 ha sido seleccionada dentro de las 10 empresas más innovadoras de América Latina por la revista FAST COMPANY.Recuerda que ahora puedes escuchar Cuentos Corporativos en vivo. Estamos en RADIOMEX los martes y jueves a las 8 pm de la CDMX.Síguenos en:www.cuentoscorporativos.com Newsletter. Escribe una ReseñaEncuesta Audiencia Nuestras redes sociales:Facebook Instagram. Linkedin. Twitter Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Los embarazos adolescentes se redujeron un 55% entre 2015 y 2020 en todo nuestro país, lo que se materializa en una disminución de la tasa de fecundidad en provincias como Santiago del Estero, según un informe publicado por el Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento (CIPPEC). Desde el organismo ven esto como una buena noticia y explican dos posibles causas: el cambio en conductas culturales y sociales a partir del crecimiento de los movimientos feministas y la disponibilidad de nuevos métodos anticonceptivos de fácil aplicación y escaso margen de error. En la mañana de #BuenasNotas, Sergio Salerno y María Julia Matar conversaron con Emanuel López, miembro de CIPPEC, para conocer todos los detalles de este informe. Escuchalo.
Bienvenidos a un episodio especial del podcast de TED en Español donde converso con algunos de nuestros oradores. Soy Gerry Garbulsky. En este episodio conversamos con Gala Díaz Langou, quien actualmente es Directora Ejecutiva de CIPPEC. Ahí se dedica a diseñar políticas públicas para erradicar la pobreza en Argentina. En esta conversación Gala nos habla sobre las diferencias entre los que más y los que menos tienen y comparte ideas concretas para cerrar esta brecha. Esta es una versión editada de una conversación más larga que publiqué en mi otro podcast, Aprender de Grandes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
El 2 de julio pasado, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner dio un discurso en Ensenada durante un acto homenaje a Juan Domingo Perón. En un momento, la expresidenta y actual vicepresidenta llamó a discutir un salario básico universal ‘‘que no dependa del favor de nadie y de independencia, que es la gran ventaja de la Asignación Universal por Hijo‘‘. No se extendió mucho al respecto, pero el comentario generó revuelo: despertó entusiasmo en algunos, preocupación en otros, fue desestimado como utópico por otros, y en fin, encendió un acalorado debate en los medios.¿Qué es el salario básico universal? ¿Se implementó en algún lugar del mundo? ¿Sería plausible una medida como esta en la Argentina de hoy? ¿Podría reducir la pobreza? Tres académicos e investigadores nos brindan sus respuestas: Nicolás Dvoskin (Economista, Politólogo y Dr. en Ciencias Sociales, investigador de CONICET), Gala Díaz Langlou, Directora Ejecutiva de CIPPEC y Darío Judzik, doctor en economía y profesor en la universidad Di Tella.
Comenzó el censo y hablamos con Rafael Rofman, especialista en demografía social y director del programa de Protección Social del CIPPEC. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/urbanaplayfm/message
Liliana Franco nos cuenta de las intimidades y de lo que se habló en la cena del CIPPEC del 2/5/2022
Luciá Hernández is my guest on Episode 156 of Inside Ideas with Marc Buckley. Luciá is an expert on platform-based business models. She has been around the collaborative economy for more than a decade, later Platform Economy, helping organizations of all kinds in the adoption of these mindsets. As an advisor and consultant, she brings the platform-ecosystem mentality to the company building the internal capabilities to think systemic to design platform strategies, in a real guidance and support relationship. She is an expert evaluator of the European Commission under the H2020 program, URBACT validated expert, the network of cities sharing and applying sustainable principles. A connector in OuiShare, an international Think and Do Tank dedicated to social impact regarding digital transformations, the evolution of cities and the future of organizations. Adjunct Professor at business schools such as ESADE and EADA and an international lecturer and keynote speaker. She has participated in the design of public policies with the European Commission, the IDB, CIPPEC, and some local governments. She is an expert on new emerging trends related to the platform economy, participating in international forums and communities, with a wide network of trusted international consultants. She is always researching and exploring the intersections between regenerative design and platform design in order to provide a framework for those who have a platform and want to understand how to become regenerative, ecosystem, and networked strategies to impact at scale, being part of international forums and communities, and connecting people, projects, and ideas. #PlatformDesign #EcosystemDesign #BusinessModels #RegenerativeDesign #TourismInnovation #RegenerativeTourism #SharingEconomy #PlatformEconony #platformmodels #regenerativemodels #regenerativeplatforms #regeneration #ecosystemplatforms #boundaryless https://youtu.be/zEa01rXBIpU https://luciahernandez.co/ https://twitter.com/luciahdez3 https://www.linkedin.com/in/luciahd/ https://www.ouishare.net/ https://luciahdez.medium.com/regenerative-platforms-design-principles-daf31508322a https://youtu.be/zEa01rXBIpU
Hablamos sobre jubilaciones de privilegio con Rafael Rofman, director del Prog. de Protección Social de CIPPEC. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/urbanaplayfm/message
La politóloga e investigadora dialogó con Diego Huberman acerca de su trabajo de investigación en el CIPPEC acerca de la implementación de la boleta única. Explicó en qué lugares se utiliza ese mecanismo electoral y expuso los motivos por los que dirigentes de algunos distritos se resisten a su implementación en contraposición con los que la impulsan. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/radiojai/message
Se conoció el índice de pobreza del primer semestre (40,6%) y hablamos con el director del Programa de Protección Social de CIPPEC, Rafael Rofman. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/urbanaplayfm/message
Hablamos sobre la licencia de paternidad con la coordinadora de Protección Social de CIPPEC, Florencia Caro Sachetti. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/urbanaplayfm/message
In this continuation of the Democracy that Delivers mini-series on "COVID and Corruption In Latin America", we take a closer look at our recently released report's second of three country case studies: Argentina. Cohosts Ken Jaques and Elena Padbury are joined by Demian González Chmielewski, Public Management Program Coordinator at CIPPEC, a CIPE partner organization that promotes democratic public policies in Argentina. Their research reveals that behind Argentina's strong legal framework lies a gap between institutions and practice which, in the current economic and health emergency context, can be an opportunity for either transparency or corruption. Listen to Demian's recommendations for bridging the gap to transparency.
Mujeres en ciencia y tecnología: entrevista a Paula Szenkman (CIPPEC) | #Segurola
In this continuation of the “Future of Work” series, we seek to make sense of the changes, reforms, and challenges brought about by COVID-19 in Latin America. Our host Ken Jaques is joined by CIPE Latin America & Caribbean Regional Director and cohost John Zemko in a discussion with the newly-appointed Executive Director of the Center for the Implementation of Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth (CIPPEC) Gala Diaz Langou. Live from Buenos Aires, Langou shares the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on socio-economic inequalities in Argentina, her vision for bridging the gaps, and more about CIPPECC's own "Future of Work" initiative.
A lo largo de los siglos, en la humanidad logramos algo increíble: pudimos erradicar una gran parte de la pobreza extrema que teníamos hace 100, 200 o 300 años. Sin embargo, al día de hoy todavía hay muchísima pobreza en prácticamente todo el mundo. Y no solo eso, sino que la brecha entre los que más tienen y los que menos tienen es muy grande, y en muchos casos todavía se está agrandando. Como esto me da bronca, hoy conversé con Gala Díaz Langou. Gala es la directora ejecutiva de CIPPEC y le dedica su vida a investigar los mecanismos de la pobreza y a buscar el desarrollo de políticas públicas para ver cómo podemos hacer para cerrar estas brechas y erradicar la pobreza para siempre. ¡No se lo pierdan! Soy Gerry Garbulsky y quiero que juntos aprendamos durante toda la vida. El lunes 24 de mayo de 2021 a las 18:30 h (hora de Argentina) tendremos un encuentro gratuito por Zoom de la Comunidad Aprender de Grandes para seguir aprendiendo de Gala Díaz Langou, interactuando entre todos. Gala y Gerry van a estar ahí para conversar con todos. La participación es gratuita, pero tenemos cupos limitados. Si querés participar, anotate lo antes posible en https://aprenderdegrandes.com/comunidad ¡Ojalá nos veamos el lunes que viene! Pueden ver los links relevantes de este episodio en http://aprenderdegrandes.com/gala Inscripción a los cursos de Aprender de Grandes: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/cursos Suscripción al email corto de los lunes con ideas para empezar la semana: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/newsletter Episodios del podcast Aprender de Grandes: https://aprenderdegrandes.com/episodios Aprender de Grandes está disponible en... Youtube: http://youtube.com/AprenderdeGrandes Spotify: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesSpotify Apple Podcasts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesApple Google Podcasts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesGoogle Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/aprenderdegrandes/ Stitcher: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesStitcher TuneIn: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesTuneIn ivoox: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesivoox Overcast: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesOvercast Pocket Casts: http://bit.ly/AprenderDeGrandesPocketcast Y en las redes sociales... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aprenderdegrandes/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/apdegran/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/apdegrandes/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/aprenderdegrandes/ Música y sonido: Estudio Pomeranec (http://pomeranec.com/).
11 de junio de 2010. Recibimos al director de la radio J. Zárate. En medio del mundial Sudáfrica 2010 debatimos un poco sobre el fútbol y su importancia social. Luego, Federico trae data del CIPPEC sobre subsidios políticos a ONGs. En la sección de ciencia, Ezequiel hace una crónica del primer TEDxRosario, realizada el 10 de junio. Por último, un rant contra las pulseras energéticas. Ezequiel, Federico y Cecilia.
La mayor parte del trabajo de los cuidados de la familia y los hogares todavía está a cargo de las mujeres. Todo eso es trabajo, y tiene un valor concreto, pero aun así sigue siendo invisible para la economía. Gala Díaz Langou es directora del programa de protección social de CIPPEC. En su charla en TEDxRíodelaPlata, nos muestra la trampa de la economía del cuidado y cómo perpetúa la pobreza. Gala propone además algunas políticas públicas concretas para mejorar la situación de las mujeres. Para más ideas de TED en Español, los esperamos en TEDenEspanol.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Entrevista de Nico Yacoy en Viva la Pepa! a Gonzalo Dieguez , director del Programa de Gestión Pública de CIPPEC, por reforma del Estado para hacerle frente post pandemia
This week we are joined by John Zemko, Regional Director for LAC at CIPE, and Julia Pomares , who has been the executive director of the Center for the Implementation of Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth (CIPPEC) since December 2015. CIPE and CIPPEC worked together during the 2011 presidential elections in Argentina to hold the first presidential debates in the country. During this most recent election, we saw the candidates debate each other twice. Results aside, and at a time when we are seeing protests break out all across the region, she discussed what we can take away from this election, especially regarding the state of democracy in Argentina.
Nicolás Trotta entrevista la directora ejecutiva de CIPPEC, Julia Pomares y su visión de la construcción política feminista de los últimos años. En paralelo también entrevista al Licenciado en economía Bernardo Kosacoff (@Beni1950) sobre los acuerdos políticos y económicos necesarios en el país que viene.
"Las empresas privadas y la administración pública se tienen que poner de acuerdo si queremos comenzar hablar de "hacer ciudad". Así de enfático se muestra Gabriel Lanfranchi, Director de ciudades del Centro de Implementación de Políticas Públicas para la Equidad y el Crecimiento (CIPPEC).En este podcast partimos de los barrios de Argentina para viajar por ciudades como París y Barcelona teniendo como hilo conductor sus procesos de transformación, el papel de lo público/ privado y la tecnología en cada uno de ellos. Al final regresamos a Buenos Aires para conocer el notable proceso de transformación urbana que vive en los últimos años y sus retos a escala metropolitana.
It was an opportunity I could not pass up. So, I sat down to interview Julia Pomares. Julia is the Executive Director of CIPPEC, - the Center for the Implementation of Public Policies Promoting Equity and Growth, a major think tank from Argentina. CIPPEC, along with a sister think tank, CARI - the Argentine Council for International Relations, coordinated the think tank efforts for the Argentinian Government’s G20 hosting year. I spent some time with Julia during Argentina’s hosting year and have had the opportunity to work with Julia in the current Japanese G20 hosting. I was very interested in exploring with Julia her experiences as the co-coordinator for the Argentinian G20. What did she see as her mission and goal? It was a hugely eventful year with Julia and her colleagues holding many meetings with the large number of think tanks through the G20 and at the formal meetings of the T20 and G20. Julia and colleagues organized 10 Task Forces that produced over 80 policy briefs and 20 proposals for the G20. The T20 Communique was in the end 47 pages long. And yet the Leaders’ Declaration was a mere 7 pages. So, I wanted to ask her - from her experience what did she see as the relationship of the T20 and other engagement groups and the Leaders Summit. Many researchers see a growing disconnect between the G20 Leaders’ Summit and the T20 process. What was the view of Julia from her experience at the Argentinian T20 and G20 Leaders’ Summit and now the T20 and the Japanese G20 Summit.
Esteban es productor de espectáculos y consultor en temas de gobierno Abierto. Fue Titular de primera Agencia de Innovación y Gobierno Abierto de Argentina, en Bahía Blanca. Asesor del municipio de Córdoba y de la Cámara de Diputados de Nación en materia de tecnología, innovación y gobierno abierto. Consultor de CIPPEC en el programa Usina de Ciudades Inteligentes. Ideas: Cuando Bahía Blanca lanzo su portal de datos ya existían publicaciónes de compras y el portal GastoPublicBahiense de un vecino de la ciudad En 2012 Esteban miro los casos de Obama (desde 2009) y la plataforma Irekia del Pais Vasco Bahía Blanca empezo publciando datos sensibles y críticos (ambientales, de compras, sueldos, etc) Se comenzó con Junar porque muy rápido se pudo publicar datos con visualizaciones, formatos reutilizables y APIs Se potenció el portal GastoPublicoBahiense entregando los datos que gestión anterior intentaba bloquear. Esteban no trabajaría de nuevo dentro de un gobierno Muchos gobiernos toman al Gobierno Abierto como a una oficina de marketing La Ciudad de Bahía Blanca acompaño a la plataforma que permitía transparentar todos los gastos a los 135 municipios de Provincia de Buenos Aires pero ninguno de los otros gobiernos aprovecho la oportunidad. Para generar impacto el foco es la participación ciudadana. Hay que crear políticas de estado (a largo plazo) y no políticas de gobierno (gestión actual). El Gobierno Abierto debe ser una política de estado con normas y leyes que acompañen. Hay que llegar al conceso de que este es el camino. En Argentina no hay ciudades inteligentes y posiblemente no haya en latinoamerica. Tampoco hay muchas en el mundo. Hay formas inteligentes de resolver las cosas y no en todas las ciudades es igual. La inteligencia esta en el uso de la tecnología, en el uso de datos para tomar decidiones pero no hay una fórmula. No hay mediciones del impacto que generan las políticas de Gobierno Abierto. Hasta no hace mucho se medía la transparencia por la cantidad de datos liberados. Hay que ir mas allá y ver para que y que generan los datos liberados. Hay que estandarizar los datos. Si hubiera estándares nacionales los datos serían comparables y mucho más interesantes. Los 135 municipios de la Provincia de Buenos Aires usan el mismo software de administración de dinero pero no se aprovecha en publicar datos estandarizados. Existen periodistas que usan los datos y construyen y otros que destruyen: 'Un periodista mediocre a veces hace más daño que un político corrupto' La Nación Data hace trabajos interesantes para mirar Hay que mirar a: Manuel Aristarán Hay que mirar a: Javier Arteaga
María Belén Sánchez (@belusanchez__) es Licenciada y profesora en Ciencias de la Educación por la Universidad de San Andrés, y candidata doctoral por la misma Universidad. Tiene un Master en Educación y Desarrollo Internacional por el Instituto de Educación de University College of London (UCL). Ejerce actividad docente en la universidad de San Andrés y la Universidad Nacional de San Martín, y es coordinadora del Programa de Educación en CIPPEC.En el presente episodio conversamos sobre financiamiento educativo y equidad en la ArgentinaPara más información sobre cómo contribuir con la equidad educativa en la Argentina, visitá: www.masvoces.org.arEste episodio fue musicalizado por el anfitrión del show, conjuntamente con Atahualpa Coullery y Gonzalo Cucheti. Asimismo, el track de la outro fue tomado del episodio anterior, donde contamos con la participación de la guitarra es de Dizzy Espeche y el bajo de Augusto Peloso.
En otro sábado de Cuarto intermedio y para conocer un proyecto que modificaría la formación docente en el país, Mariano Castro y Florencia Corregido dialogaron con Belén Sánchez, Coordinadora del Programa de Educación de CIPPEC ; con Marina Feldman, de la Comisión del Sindicato SUTEBA-Quilmes; con el autor de la iniciativa, el senador Eduardo Aguilar, del FpV - Chaco.
Guadalupe Granero, Coordinadora del Programa de Ciudades de Cippec. The post #636B first appeared on a vos Ciudad.
La política es cultura. Es el lenguaje, los símbolos, las identidades. La política es el candidato, el puntero, la encuestadora, el operador, la manzanera, el gurú. La política es lo deseable, lo posible, lo utópico. La política no es la guerra, la política es la batalla cultural. Anfibia Podcast presenta Batalla Cultural. Conduce Martín Ale, jefe de redacción de Anfibia. En este episodio, hablamos de cómo serán los partidos políticos del futuro junto a la politóloga y directora ejecutiva de Cippec, Julia Pomares.