Recent orders

200852 Innovation, Creativity and Foresight

200852 Innovation, Creativity and Foresight

Quarter 1, 2020 – WSU SCC

Group Report

“Sustaining, Regenerating, and Innovating Australia, 2035-45”

<<Working Theory Framework>>

First name Surname (student id.), WSU email address

Working Theory Framework

Towards the renaissance, innovation, and sustainability of Australia, 2030-45, land use will require critical considerations because sustainability and regeneration initiatives will require the proper utilisation of land resources. The working theory framework relating to land use in the Australia context derives from the theories of sustainable land use. These theories are founded on the premise that land-use practices should be economical, uphold environmental conservation, and encourage the use of contemporary technologies that drive effective and sustainable land utilisation. So, the working theory framework emphasises land management efficiency, land economics, land-use evaluation, land-use technologies and methodologies, land markets, and adherence to land-use regulations and policies as shown below.

Land-use Working Theory Framework

Land management efficiency

Land-use technologies and methodologies

Land-use evaluation

Land economics

Land markets

Land-use regulations and policies

Land-use Working Theory Framework

Land management efficiency

Land-use technologies and methodologies

Land-use evaluation

Land economics

Land markets

Land-use regulations and policies

The successful regeneration, innovation, and sustainability of Australia in the next 20-30 years will require addressing several land-use challenges. These challenges include land consumption demands and pressure on agricultural land due to population growth, land trading problems in the land markets, land management policy issues, and technology influences on land consumption. Looking at this working theory model diagram, the components of the framework will help in addressing these challenges adequately.

The establishment and deployment of effective land-use evaluation criteria will ensure that Australian land performance is assessed for specific purposes such as transport and housing infrastructure, agriculture, reaction, water management, and other purposes that need consideration during the execution and interpretation of land-use surveys (Giupponi and Zen 2016; Larsson 2010). Proper and efficient land management will involve applying a methodological paradigm of integrated models, methods, and classifications, sequential evaluation procedures, and indicator systems to determine proper land use for different purposes as Auzins, Geipele, and Stamure (2013) suggest. As regards land markets, the working theory framework emphasises that Australian land authorities should regularly update land-use regulations and policies to ensure they provide a firm foundation for ethical practices in the buying and selling of land. Land-use policies and regulations will also need revamping to provide a fundamental framework for ethical zoning, regional physical development, and efficient land resource usage towards realising as regenerated, innovated, and sustainable Australia.

This framework also highlights the need to employ land-use technologies and methodologies in land-use governance and management. New technologies in land-use governance will entail employing land consolidation and rehabilitation technologies (geographic information systems, global positioning systems, and remote sensing technologies), ecological planning and design of landscapes, and land information system to ensure optimal and socially desirable land utilisation that meet new population land demands. Other technologies will involve those used in analysing land use/cover change (LUCC). These include technologies for LUCC detection, forecasting, and monitoring, modelling LUCC spatial-temporal characteristics, predicting microclimate development, and biochemical and phenological responses to LUCC (Brown et al, 2012; Mallupattu, Reddy, and Reddy 2013).

Lastly, the framework reflects the essence of ensuring land economics. Land economics will encompass the management of land availability, prices, demand, consumption, and competition to ensure that these aspects influence the distribution, nature, and patterns of land use positively within the land market mechanisms for land sustainability.

REFERENCES

Auzins, A, Geipele, I, and Stamure, I 2013, ‘Measuring land-use efficiency in land management,’ In Advanced Materials Research (Vol. 804, pp. 205-210). Trans Tech Publications Ltd.

Brown, DG, Walker, R, Manson, S, and Seto, K 2012, ‘Modelling land use and land cover change,’ In Land change science (pp. 395-409). Springer, Dordrecht.

Giupponi, C, and Zen, M 2016, ‘Methods and tools for developing virtual territories for scenario analysis of agro-ecosystems,’ Italian Journal of Agronomy, vol. 11, no. 4, p. 9.

Larsson, G 2010, Land management as public policy, University Press of America.

Mallupattu, PK, Reddy, S, and Reddy, J 2013, ‘Analysis of land use/land cover changes using remote sensing data and GIS at an Urban Area, Tirupati, India,’ The Scientific World Journal, 2013.

In his published works, James Der Derian addresses a variety of topics, including but not limited

Question 1

In his published works, James Der Derian addresses a variety of topics, including but not limited to: diplomacy; alienation; terrorism; intelligence; national security; new forms of warfare; the significance of information technology in international relations; poststructuralist theory; and the military-entertainment-media matrix. According to Der Derian (2009), the positivist perspectives that form the basis of realism and other traditional approaches are incapable of comprehending the temporal, representational, territorial, and potentially dangerous powers of virtualism as the world enters new hyper-realms of economic penetration, technological acceleration, and new media. This is because these perspectives are rooted in the idea that space and matter are objectively existing entities that can be observed and studied. This occurs as a result of the whole world entering a new hyper-realm of rapid economic growth, advancing technology, and the proliferation of new media.

When starting a conversation, postmodernists often begin by illustrating how power has shifted into nonphysical forms. Der Derian (2009) brings up the tried-and-true tactic of moving security away in a decentralized international security structure. He asserts that the world has inherited an ontotheology of security which maintains that just one kind of protection is necessary and must exist in order to be considered adequate. When discussing the concept of decentralized security, Der Derian (2009) makes a reference to Stephen Walt as an individual who supports the alliance structure in a decentralized international security system. Under the alliance system, many parties will need to work together in order to be victorious against their other international competitors. This is a postmodernist strategy to ensuring international security, and it was put into practice during and after World War II with great effectiveness. This issue is raised due to the rapid rate of change in the international system and the inability of international theory to explain the aforementioned development (Lipschutz, 1995). In order to demonstrate just how secure the dominant paradigm in the study of international relations is, the importance of security is examined. This security assessment employs interpretative techniques to pose epistemological, ontological, and political questions. These are the kinds of inquiries that, far too often, are ignored, devalued, or replaced by the narrowly focused, technically skewed inquiry of what it takes to attain security.

The Western approach to sentinel security has come to be characterized by the notion of decentralizing security, which is a well-known concept. Even in the present day, nations such as the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Japan, together with a number of countries in Europe, continue to uphold their alliances. Presidents Barrack Obama, Donald Trump, Prime Ministers Boris Johnson, and other western leaders have all used the traditional concept of decentralizing security. These alliances not only help to distribute power more fairly, but they also make it more likely that countries will continue to cooperate with one another in the case of a threat to their safety (Lipschutz, 1995). For instance, when the United States and the United Kingdom invaded Afghanistan, more US government personnel joined the fight against terrorism. This is also the case with other military operations. This sort of postmodernist agenda illustrates how the use of traditions is crucial to ensuring world security.

Question 2

Regional organizations are essential to the United Nations’ ability to achieve its global objectives. They may be essential in ensuring that these promises are kept in addition to helping member countries create action plans for sustainable development. Regional organizations are expected to make it simpler to put legislation promoting sustainable development into action (Ravenhill, 2017). By aiding the member states in the creation of national action plans, they help the member states achieve this aim. It will not be able to accomplish Goal 16, which is to make communities more welcoming and peaceful, without the help of regional organizations. Contributing to the peace, prosperity, and democratic processes that include everyone in each region is a priority for each regional organization as well as their individual and collective duty. They have done this by establishing strong institutional and legal frameworks.

Strong regional organizations are essential important to preserve justice, peace, and the credibility of our institutions. The risks of international homicide, violence against children, human trafficking, and sexual assault must be addressed if we are to create communities that are welcoming and conducive to long-term success. These problems are connected and provide particular difficulties. They also make it possible for everyone to get justice and for institutions at all levels to be held accountable (Amin & Palan, 2001). High levels of violent conflict and insecurity are harmful to a country’s development because they impede economic growth and often result in long-lasting instability. While some communities seem to be trapped in violent cycles that never seem to end, other communities have managed to sustain high levels of safety while simultaneously reaching high levels of prosperity and peace.

To achieve sustainable development, it is crucial to expand access to justice, provide safety and security, and uphold human rights. Sustainable Growth The 2030 Agenda includes the preservation of peace under Goal 16 of the document. In order for the ideas of comparative advantage, complementarity, and sharing the load to become universally accepted, it is essential to intensify this cooperation. The 2030 Agenda is based on the idea that human rights, peace, and development all coexist and are mutually beneficial. There is no such thing as an island country, and every country has needs, threats, and problems that are closely related to those of its neighbors. The United Nations and other regional and subregional organizations have produced results that may be evaluated when they have worked closely together. Due to their specific knowledge and superior understanding of the ways in which things work in their respective fields, these organizations are especially important to improving the effectiveness of the United Nations (Amin & Palan, 2001). Additionally, they may quickly communicate this knowledge with one another due to their proximity geographically. Additionally, they are more aware of and concerned about the many local stakeholders. As a result, they are able to leverage their local connections, expertise, and resources to support criminal justice and crime prevention activities. The global viewpoint, considerable experience, and enormous influence of the United Nations may be of assistance to organizations on a regional and even sub-regional scale.

Question 3

Liberals believe that markets should be unrestrained since interference by the government jeopardizes stability and economic progress. However, the debate over the concept of “embedded liberalism” and the possibility for macroeconomic and regulatory activism has lately returned in light of the ongoing global financial crisis. Governments may adopt domestic policies aimed at lessening the severity of economic shocks under the embedded liberalism system of global trade (Strange, 1996). It is a free market that is based on social needs, in other words. Market competition is often treated as if it were a natural occurrence. The framework was developed to allow nations to trade freely while simultaneously enhancing their social welfare initiatives and managing their economy to reduce unemployment. The system’s expansion was fueled by this. Liberal integrated concepts emphasize the necessity for controls to restrain market excesses. Reviving free trade was the primary goal. In order to preserve the greatest possible employment levels, the second goal was to provide national governments the leeway to interfere in their economies and create comprehensive social programs. The restoration of the free market economy as it existed in the late nineteenth century was seen as being incompatible with the second goal. This was primarily because investors would find it easy to withdraw their money from countries that pursued interventionist and redistributive policies in a world with a free international money market.

Neoliberalism is a political philosophy that seeks to transfer control of economic issues from government to business, including both politics and economics. Libertarianism and conventional liberalism are combined to create neoliberalism. Numerous neoliberal programs aim to increase the effectiveness of capitalism’s free market while decreasing government expenditure, regulation, and ownership. Neoliberalism is another term for market liberalism. The laissez-faire school of thought holds that the government should only become involved in a small number of the economic problems that affect the people and the society (Strange, 1996). A theory related to free-market economics is neoliberalism. Laissez-faire economics postulates that for ongoing economic progress to occur, there must be greater levels of technical advancement, a wider spectrum of free market activity, and less governmental intervention.

Embedded liberalism promotes individual liberty while elucidating all facets of society, including how the government functions. But philosophy is not limited to one field of study. Neoliberal policies, on the other hand, are totally centered on the individual. They prioritize both the financial markets and the rules and norms of the economy. Regarding trade barriers, embedded liberalism performs better than neoliberalism. The state’s influence on and control over capital may be said to be similar. Business norms are robust in an integrated liberal framework, but they have significantly declined under a neoliberal economic system (Mikler, 2018). State-owned businesses have been eliminated in countries that have adopted neoliberalism, but they nevertheless thrive in countries with liberal governments that have been in power for a long period. The government’s biggest concerns are neoliberal economies competing with one another and the geopolitical tension brought on by entrenched liberalism.

References

Amin, A., & Palan, R. (2001). Towards a non-rationalist international political economy. Review of international political economy, 8(4), 559-577.

Cronin, A. K. (2002). Behind the curve: Globalization and international terrorism. International security, 27(3), 30-58.

Der Derian, J. (2009). The value of security: Hobbes, marx, nietzsche, and baudrillard. In Critical Practices in International Theory (pp. 161-178). Routledge.

Lipschutz, R. D. (1995). On security. Columbia University Press.

Mikler, J. (2018). The political power of global corporations. John Wiley & Sons.

Ravenhill, J. (Ed.). (2017). Global political economy. Oxford University Press.

Strange, S. (1996). The retreat of the state: The diffusion of power in the world economy. Cambridge university press.

Introduction to Biblical Studies

Introduction to Biblical Studies

Name

Institution

Year

Question 1

John’s gospel is different from the other three in the New Testament. That fact has been recognized since the early church itself. Whereas in the three synoptic gospels Jesus actually eats a Passover meal before he dies, in John’s gospel he doesn’t. The last supper is actually eaten before the beginning of Passover. John’s gospel that is rooted in the revival of the post Pentecostal church derives its teachings on the life of Jesus and majors on the aspect of repentance. The synoptic gospel is rooted in the life and acts of Jesus that looks at the various aspects of faith and Grace and also borrows from Paul’s ideas. There is a great sense of correlation between the Synoptic gospel and the deeds of the apostles that talk about and prepared what Jesus would emphasize in his teachings and works. In particular, the John’s gospel narrates the life and works of faith that are derived in the need to stay pure. John as an apostle thus majors on the works of grace and faith that are what covers a large part of the New Testament.

The synoptic gospel is more conservative and focuses on works that would prepare key figures like Paul further what Jesus would leave behind. Throughout the New Testament, the words of Jesus are well documented and shows an application of grace. According to John’s gospel, there are distinct aspects of faith and grace that amounts to one’s state of spirituality. While it is true that the gospel of John is rooted in grace and works of purity, the narrations given talk more of the life of Jesus as a son of God. The synoptic gospel mainly in he Acts and Luke lays the foundation for the works that the promised messiah would accomplish. The two sets of gospels however strike the core value of repentance that was the main message that John talked of in his gospel. John seen as the one sent to call on people to “prepare the way” invites a new direction into the teachings of faith and holiness. Just like in the acts of the Apostles, John links the meaning for holiness to repentance as the gateway to welcoming the messiah into the heart. One of the main ways the derived message resonates with other gospel is that John worked through various teachings to show how grace and holiness are compatible and dependent on each other.

Looking at the synoptic gospel, it is cereal that the message is derived from what would become the teaching of faiths and holiness that came through repentance. The aspect of Jesus eating Passover meal before he dies also differentiates the synoptic from john’s gospel. In the synoptic gospel, Jesus as the central figure in the teachings eats Passover before he is crucified. However, there is not account of Jesus taking the Passover before his death in the John’s gospel. These differences accounts what and how Jesus led his life and the foundation to what and how he derived his teachings. The value to holiness, repentance, and works of faith are largely empathized in the synoptic gospel as mentioned in the four books.

Question 2

The Bible records key instances and calls that define the relationship between mankind and God that was base don promises and covenants. In Abraham’s call through his strong faith in God, there is an incredible narration of how God wanted to establish a nation that would form a new chapter in creation. Abraham’s call by God to be the father of many nations under the name Israelites compares to the Messianic expectations because both signify God establishing a new race that would rule over the earth. Likewise, the genealogy of Jesus that runs through many generations traces back to Abraham’s call that ties many aspects of faith and covenants thus fulfilling what God told Abraham about a new nation under his name as the father.

In Nathan’s Oracle depicted in 2nd Samuel 7:4-17, the Bible records how God intended to make a covenant that would a establish a firm relationship and birth a new generation. Nathan announced to David how God was making a covenant with him that would last forever and usher in a new phase of direction through kingdoms and faith. There is similarity between Nathan’s Oracle and Abrahams’s call because both instances depict God striking a new agreement bae don faith and belief that would alter the course of events.

David who would lay the foundation to a new beginning running from the Old to New Testament is hereby the pillar that connects mankind to a new phase through Jesus that came through the Messianic fulfillment. Likewise, the messianic expectations that are depicted in the Gospel of Mathew have outlined the various aspects of derived holistic approach to God’s promise of establishing a new generation. The messianic expectations are also a reflection of what God promised Abraham that he would give him a new generation based on faith and grace. Through the New Testament, the Abraham’s call is fulfilled with the birth of a messiah that would affirm a strong promise that God through David’s line showed that he was working a new phase on his relationship with mankind.

The messianic expectations in the Gospel of Mathew defines a long-awaited messiah that would come from the lineage of David. In addition, the gospel of Mathew depicts a King who would come to unify the old and the New. Considering that the promised King would come from the lineage of David, this thus connects to Abraham call that was foretold in the Old Testament. Linking g both Abraham’s call and Nathan’s Oracle lays the foundation to the events that would shape the New Testament in terms of the coming of a new king. The promise given to Abraham about the coming of a new Kind through his decedents is thus revealed through David. Nathan who by this time is just a normal person is used to bring the news of a covenant that God would make to usher in a new age of faith, grace, and holiness.

Through the promises made in the Old Testament mainly to Abraham, more is revealed into what and how God would structure the life of his decedents who would undergo persecution and suffering. These events are also narrated in the book of Isaiah where the fulfillment the promises made in the earlier days would be launched. Abraham’s call and the depicted events that shape the messianic coming are thus the foundation to the new testament and the fulfilment of the God-Abraham covenant. God establishes various covenants that abide and fulfil through the events that unfolded both in the old and new testament. More is revealed though the coming of the messiah and thus the book of Mathew that ushers in a new age thus affirms the Abraham’s covenant and call.