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Learn & Be Inspired at the 2nd Annual Modern Vision

Ethics in planning
with a particular focus on sustainability and energy planning

Ethical questions are basic ingredients in planning: What are the ultimate goals of the planning process? Which short-term and long-term considerations ought to be included? How should alternative goods and consequences be weighted against each other? Should individuals' needs and aspirations be treated equally in spite of differences in culture or in their position in time and place? By whom and how should weightings be made? Who should be involved in the decision making process? Etc.

Despite such obvious thematic convergences, ethics and planning discourses are not very often combined explicitly. Typically, ethics work as an underlying thematic stream running through the planning process, and ethical issues are often dealt with under different headings, mainly because they have often already been partly encoded in rules and laws, methodologies and procedures, habits and practices.

In this course, however, a direct focus is put on the presence – and importance – of ethical considerations in planning. The general purpose is to make the participants aware of the ethical elements and considerations involved in planning processes, in order to be able to deal with them more explicitly. This need to be aware of, and to deal explicitly with, the ethical elements becomes particularly important in cases, where rules, procedures and practices are under transition.

The need for transition is substantial of the case, which the course puts a special emphasis on: the question of sustainability in energy planning. This is an area where ethical questions play extremely important roles in planning and decision-making processes on all levels, from individual actions to the global agreements.

The course is organised around four themes. The first theme is the general one of the role of ethics in planning. Second theme is the ethics of global warming, including the questions of equity across generations and across nations. A third theme consists in the relation between ethics, economics and planning. The fourth theme concerns the relation of energy planning to biodiversity and non-human organism, e.g. in relation to use of biomass.

Develop the knowledge to better collect and process hman biospecimens to enhance research credibility

How to plan a successful research study using biospecimens

How to properly store and manage biospecimen data

Understand the ethical and privacy issues related to biobanking

Gain applicable hands-on techniques related to informed consent, data management, biospecimen collection and storage

Day One

14/5

7:45pm

Kickoff Party

Location - Venue ABC

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Day Two

15/5

9:30am

Breakfast

10am - 11am

Vanessa Carson

Design Lead, Topia Technologies

11am - 12pm

Kya Rawlings

Head of Product Design, Ways

12pm - 1pm

Lunch Time

1pm - 2pm

Joan McGowan

CEO, Starquake

2pm - 3pm

Olivier Bisset

Creative Director, Sharkz

3pm - 4pm

Erin Wells

Designer & Creative Director, Bowl

7pm - 10pm

Drinks & Networking

Day Three

16/5

10am - 11am

Corbin Donnelly

Creative Director, Leap

11am - 12pm

Arya Meza

Digital Art Director, Paper

12pm - 1pm

Lunch Time

1pm - 2pm

Tre Timms

Digital Art Director, Paper

7pm - 10pm

Closing Party

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