6th Open Event of FUTURE LEADERS
The event, organized by the Embassy of Australia and the Institute of Economic and Industrial Research (IOBE) in collaboration with the Hellenic-Australian Business Council, took place on Thursday, April 18, 2013, on the theme: “Structural Change: Lessons from Australia’s Successful Model”.
Workshop titled: “NKUA Researches”
The Institute for Economic and Industrial Research – IOBE in collaboration with the Embassy of Australia and the Hellenic-Australian Business Council are organizing an event, on Thursday, April 18 at 6:00 PM, at the Bank of Greece, on the occasion of the visit to our country of the former Chairman of the Australian Productivity Commission, Prof. Gary Banks.
Speakers at the event will be Prof. Gary Banks and Professors Nikos Vettas, Athens University of Economics and Business and Yiannis Kalogirou, National Technical University of Athens.
Greetings will be delivered by the Australian Ambassador to Greece, Ms. Jenny Bloomfield, and the President of IOBE, Mr. Odysseas Kyriakopoulos.
The event will be coordinated by Mr. Takis Thomopoulos, Member of the Executive Committee of IOBE.
Thirty-five years towards the “Information Society” in Greece: What can we learn from its journey?
Speaker: Giannis Kalogirou
“Thirty-five years towards the Information Society in Greece: What can we learn from its journey?”
In this presentation, an attempt is made to describe and analyze the adventure of the introduction, diffusion and ultimately the functional utilization of information and communication technologies (ICT) in Greece. Particular importance is given to the monitoring of the socio-economic developments, public policies and business strategies associated with this specific journey. More specifically, an attempt is made to identify the development cycle of the project called “Information Society” and in particular to highlight the structural obstacles and driving forces. Besides, the adoption and diffusion of new technologies, and indeed general-purpose ones, such as ICT, in various societies – and in their parts – beyond the general homogenization trends that it follows, is differentiated due to the particular – locally and temporally determined – conditions and reception processes (acceptance, resistance and inertia).
The timely positioning of post-democratic Greece at the core of European developments and the traditional interconnection of the various (political, scientific, etc.) elites of Greek society with international events allowed for the timely recognition of upcoming technological changes in the fields of information management and circulation and telecommunications. However, the path of transforming the concept into practice is proving to be long and difficult. The use of available resources, especially in Greek conditions – and in the context of excessively inflexible procedures for their utilization – is neither automatic nor easy. After all, new technologies are disruptive. Their utilization requires and presupposes accompanying organizational and institutional changes, and mainly changes in mindsets, perceptions and ways of working. Thus, the development of the Information Society is burdened with the problems and difficulties that all reforms and major institutional and technological modernizations in our country have historically faced. The country is entering the labyrinth of implementation. In addition, the difficult and slow implementation of ICT projects is accompanied by their even more difficult operational utilization.
Of particular importance for the successful implementation of such a large-scale project is the existence of a corresponding strategy and practice for capacity development, human resource management and the promotion of social learning processes, technological absorption and the necessary institutional and organizational changes that usually bring about corresponding social, economic/business and political conflicts.
Monday, April 1, 2013 | 18:00
Address:
Skoufa 45,
106 72 Athens
The meetings of the Open Seminar on Economic History
are held in the conference room of
the Historical Archive of the University of Athens.
