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UofT China US & Competition for Resources that Enable Emerging Technologies Summary

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four separate reading summaries

Meadows,D.2008.Chapters1and2.ThinkingInSystems:APrimer.ChelseaGreenPublishing.

Read until the car sales example (“A systems with delays – Business Inventory”) Read to page 25
of the PDF.

Williams, E. 2011. Environmental effects of information and communications technologies.
Nature 479: 354?358. DOI: 10:1038/nature10682.

Reller, A., Bublies, T., Staudinger, T., Oswald I., Meißner S., Allen, M. 2009. The mobile phone:
powerful communicator and potential metal dissipator. GAIA 18/2: 127?135.
OR
Gulley, A.L., Nassar, N.T., Xun, S. 2018. China, the United States, and competition for resources
that enable emerging technologies. Proc Nat Acad Sci 115(16): 4111?4115. DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1717152115

Greenwald, J.M. and Kornhauser, A. 2019. It’s up to us: Policies to improve climate outcomes
from automated vehicles. Energy Policy 127: 445?451.

Toyama, K. 2011. Technology as amplifier in international development. iConference 2011, Feb
8?11, Seattle, WA. ACM ACM 978?1?4503?0121?3/11/02

Twenge, J.M. 2017. Have smartphones destroyed a generation? The Atlantic September edition.
com/magazine/archive/2017/09/has”>https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/…?the?smartphone?destroyed?a?
generation/534198/

Deibert, R.M. 2020. Reset: Reclaiming the Internet for Civil Society. House of Anansi, Toronto.
Chapter 1, pp. 45?75.

Homer?Dixon, T. 2020. Commanding Hope: The Power We have to Renew a World in Peril.
Alfred A. Knopf Canada, Toronto. Excerpts from Chapter 13, pp. 217?230; and Chapter 14, pp.
237?250.

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