======Sustainability and change process====== This report explores the relationship between sustainability, change processes, and African divination methods. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ ^ Quick Facts ^^ |Report location: |[[https://foresightfordevelopment.org/sobipro/download-file/46-740/54|source]] | |Language: |English | |Publisher: | incite sustainability \\ Cambridge Programme For Industry \\ | |Authors: |Nicola Robins | |Geographic focus: |Global | =====Methods===== The research method involves a comparative analysis of African divination practices and modern change management theories, particularly scenario-planning and complexity thinking. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Key Insights===== The report examines the parallels between African divination practices and contemporary approaches to understanding and managing change, such as scenario-planning and complexity thinking. It highlights the importance of acknowledging the interconnectedness of the future and the past, and the necessity of considering the context provided by natural laws. The discussion emphasizes the need for human laws to align with these natural laws to foster community resilience. The report also touches on the significance of recognizing, contextualizing, and ritualizing change as part of sustainable practices. \\ \\ (Generated with the help of GPT-4) \\ =====Additional Viewpoints===== Categories: {{tag>English_publication_language}} | {{tag>Global_geographic_scope}} | {{tag>african_divination}} | {{tag>change_processes}} | {{tag>community_resilience}} | {{tag>complexity_thinking}} | {{tag>contextualization}} | {{tag>human_expression}} | {{tag>natural_law}} | {{tag>ritualization}} | {{tag>scenario-planning}} | {{tag>sustainability}} ~~DISCUSSION~~