Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa

Statement delivered by K.Y. Amoako Executive Secretary, Economic Commission for Africa at the 5th Annual Peter Doherty Distinguished Lecture. Mr. Amoako, on his remarks he highlighted that, sustainable development is easy to explain but substantially more difficult to realize. Basically, it is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It is a pattern of development that ensures a steady enhancement of well-being over time. It requires structural changes that lead to enduring widespread improvements in the quality of life of a society. It is hardly breaking news that as we settle into the 21st century, science and technology have become pervasive in all sectors of human endeavour. They shape the way we grow our food and eat it, the way we dress, the way we travel, the way we learn and work, the way we communicate, and the way we make war and peace. In the last century alone, science and technology generated more knowledge than in all the epochs of human existence put together. Hundreds of millions of people have already enjoyed the fruits of this explosion in enhanced health, education, life expectancy, reduced maternal mortality, labour saving, and entertainment. The United Nations Development Program has produced a technology achievement index. It measures technology creation, technology diffusion and the human skills that go with harnessing technology.

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Format: Speech biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2003-04
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10855/31336
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spelling dig-uneca-et-10855-313362023-02-06T10:07:18Z Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa Statement delivered by K.Y. Amoako Executive Secretary, Economic Commission for Africa at the 5th Annual Peter Doherty Distinguished Lecture. Mr. Amoako, on his remarks he highlighted that, sustainable development is easy to explain but substantially more difficult to realize. Basically, it is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It is a pattern of development that ensures a steady enhancement of well-being over time. It requires structural changes that lead to enduring widespread improvements in the quality of life of a society. It is hardly breaking news that as we settle into the 21st century, science and technology have become pervasive in all sectors of human endeavour. They shape the way we grow our food and eat it, the way we dress, the way we travel, the way we learn and work, the way we communicate, and the way we make war and peace. In the last century alone, science and technology generated more knowledge than in all the epochs of human existence put together. Hundreds of millions of people have already enjoyed the fruits of this explosion in enhanced health, education, life expectancy, reduced maternal mortality, labour saving, and entertainment. The United Nations Development Program has produced a technology achievement index. It measures technology creation, technology diffusion and the human skills that go with harnessing technology. 2018-12-28T07:33:46Z 2023-02-06T08:15:04Z 2003-04 Speech https://hdl.handle.net/10855/31336 eng [9] p. application/pdf ETH Africa
institution ONU
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country Etiopía
countrycode ET
component Bibliográfico
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region África del Este
libraryname Biblioteca de la Comisión Económica para África de la ONU
language eng
description Statement delivered by K.Y. Amoako Executive Secretary, Economic Commission for Africa at the 5th Annual Peter Doherty Distinguished Lecture. Mr. Amoako, on his remarks he highlighted that, sustainable development is easy to explain but substantially more difficult to realize. Basically, it is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It is a pattern of development that ensures a steady enhancement of well-being over time. It requires structural changes that lead to enduring widespread improvements in the quality of life of a society. It is hardly breaking news that as we settle into the 21st century, science and technology have become pervasive in all sectors of human endeavour. They shape the way we grow our food and eat it, the way we dress, the way we travel, the way we learn and work, the way we communicate, and the way we make war and peace. In the last century alone, science and technology generated more knowledge than in all the epochs of human existence put together. Hundreds of millions of people have already enjoyed the fruits of this explosion in enhanced health, education, life expectancy, reduced maternal mortality, labour saving, and entertainment. The United Nations Development Program has produced a technology achievement index. It measures technology creation, technology diffusion and the human skills that go with harnessing technology.
format Speech
title Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
spellingShingle Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
title_short Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
title_full Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
title_fullStr Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
title_full_unstemmed Harnessing technologies for sustainable development in Africa: by K.Y. Amoako executive secretary, economic commission for Africa
title_sort harnessing technologies for sustainable development in africa: by k.y. amoako executive secretary, economic commission for africa
publishDate 2003-04
url https://hdl.handle.net/10855/31336
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