Reinventing the workplace, yawn.

officespace

There has been a lot of noise about the future of work and the reimagining or reinventing of workspace.

But is it really being transformed or has it just been prettified with beer on tap, hammocks, Fussball tables and a name change to sooth the real agenda of efficiencies?

Since people chiseled stones in caves around a fire until more recent times, the workplace was social and human. Then the industrial machine came, stripped out inefficiency, de-humanised it and made it the anti-social workplace.

Perhaps if we put the human factor back to the top of the list of priorities and not cost-effectiveness, then work could become a social and humane place/activity that inspires rather than enslaves or coerces people to perform shallow tasks to build other people’s dreams in a miserable emotional and physical environment.

When round and round the same circle is good

circular-economy-i-i_0

Often we think when we go round and round the same circle that it is a bad thing. Like we are stuck and in the normal way we think about this, then it is true.

Doing the same thing again, and again, gives us the same outcome which does not enable improvement.

However, on day 2 of the OuiShare Fest 16, I listened to a talk about the circular economy given by Luisa of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.

Cabaret Sauvage, Paris - OuiShare Fest 16 by Philip Dodson
Cabaret Sauvage, Paris – OuiShare Fest 16 by Philip Dodson

Over the last few hundred years during the industrialised age, we have become increasingly conditioned to the linear process of taking raw materials from the planet and industrially processing them into stuff for us to consume and then throw away into an incinerator or landfill.

This process has lead to the complete depletion of resources, destruction and poisoning of the planet in which the 7 billion of us live.

The circular economy is a process of regenerating and restoring by re-using and by cutting out waste. Essentially don’t take new resources when you can use what is already there.

This is a challenge to our culture of throwing everything away and this is a threat to the industrial economy that has created the throwaway culture. For example, ‘use by’ date codes on food that has made many throw away perfectly good food due to believing the myth that we are all going to die from deadly bacteria lurking.

We have been sold this myth of throwing away rather than properly recycling or reusing or repairing something. Why because it makes money and that is what has driven us throughout the industrial age.

Thankfully the industrial age is dying and this means that we now have to look at what will replace it and how will we live, work and govern ourselves beyond this age.

Going round and round the same circle with our resources is a truly essential process for the future of the human race.

Sustainability, openness, collaboration, sharing, self-governance, cooperation, and many more themes are coming out from this OuiShare Fest.

This is hope and this is the circle to be going round.