The Environment Foundation

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2003 - Values & Time

In 2003, the Foundation will celebrate its 20th Anniversary. During this year, we will focus our attention on Values & Time. We will take the opportunity to look back over 20 years to see how values have changed and to look into the future, to see how they might evolve in the years to 2020.

"Time is short" and "Time is money" are phrases that are increasingly heard in all walks of life. If it is to be successful, the sustainability agenda will need to promote a profound shift in the way we understand and manage time.

As news becomes instant and money spins around the world at accelerating speeds, so business finds that current time is becoming ever ‘wider’. This involves the opening out of the time dimension, with more and more happening every minute of every day. By contrast, while it too is urgent, the sustainability agenda is pushing us in the other direction, towards ‘long’ time.

Most politicians and business leaders – for perfectly understandable reasons – find it hard to think even two or three years ahead. This was well illustrated by the short-termism of the banking sector in the Foundation’s Fifth Consultation. The scale of the overall challenge is indicated by the fact that the emerging agenda requires thinking across decades, generations and, in some instances, centuries.

The long-timers of the past thought in a very different way. When the architects and stonemasons designed and started to build St George’s Chapel in Windsor, they had a clear vision of what it would look like, although they knew that they would not see it themselves. They were handing on their project and vision to generations to come.

Some of the questions to be addressed in 2003, in the Values & Time programme, will include:

  • What are the links between our values and time?
  • How can companies and their value chains take different time-scales into account in their decision-making?
  • How can society better value and represent the needs of future generations in today’s decision-making?
  • How will internet time affect society’s values?
  • What impact will the media have on the durability of values?
The Windsor Consultations:
1992-1995 Windsor Consultations
1992
Medicine
1992
Rio
1993
Energy
1995
Biotech
1996
Banking
1996-2000 Windsor Consultations
1996
Social Reporting
1997
Lifestyles
1998
Human
Rights
1999
Social
Investment
2000
Business
Education
2001
Changing
Values
2002
Values &
Money
2003
Values &
Time
2004
Values &
Technology
2005
Values &
Leadership









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