Global Outlook 2018: The Return of Tribes
Technology, Nationalism and the Social Divide
Technology, Nationalism and the Social Divide
Photo: Bob Wick, BLM California
Nation states are divided, the EU is under fire and ideological fringe groups are gaining in influence across the world. Instead of dialogue, opposing parties’ wars of belief now dominate politics. What matters is belonging, rather than facts. We are experiencing the return of premodern tribal thinking.
At the heart of this tribal attitude lie struggle and survival in a hostile environment. Forty years ago, the visionary media theorist Marshall McLuhan said, ‘The tribal world is not friendly. One of tribal people’s main kinds of sport is butchering each other.’
The new tribes of like-minded individuals offer a sense of belonging. Identity arises through exclusion: us against them. The goal is interruption and destruction – without future perspectives and without history. Today is what counts. And the social media that should be bringing us together is in fact intensifying the formation of tribes.
The peaceful world has passed its peak.
What are the new major tribes and who are their chiefs?
Uprooted global elites versus local populations: who’s winning?
Are we returning to an archaic premodern state?
Is moderate nationalism the only alternative to tribal Darwinism?
Will the things that divide us soon become more significant than the things that unite us?
Speakers
David Goodhart
Great Britain
Journalist, author and head of the demography unit at the Policy Exchange think tank. Founder and former editor of "Prospect magazine" and former director of the centre-left think tank “Demos“. His book “The British Dream” was runner up for the Orwell book prize. His new book “The Road to Somewhere” explains the Brexit vote and the rise of populism.
Peter Sloterdijk
Germany
Influential German philosopher, cultural scientist and writer. His book "Critique of Cynical Reason" is one of the best-selling philosophical writings of the 20th century. From 2001 to 2015, Sloterdijk was rector of the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design, where he taught philosophy and aesthetics.
Olivier Alexandre
France
Sociologist and research associate at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris and former guest researcher at Northwestern University and Stanford University. Alexandre's research focuses on media and culture. His forthcoming book discusses the Silicon Valley tribes.
David Bosshart
Switzerland
Sociologist and research associate at the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris and former guest researcher at Northwestern University and Stanford University. Alexandre's research focuses on media and culture. His forthcoming book discusses the Silicon Valley tribes.
Florian Inhauser
Switzerland
Journalist and moderator. Florian Inhauser presents the main newscast at Swiss Broadcasting Corporation, SRF and he is also the anchor of the foreign news magazine «#SRFglobal». With a master in history and anglistics he speaks English fluently. He has also an excellent reputation as an international correspondent, covering conflicts and crises around the globe.
Programme
17.00
Introduction
David Bosshart (CH), GDI Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute
Tribal Behaviour: Why Now and What it Means for the Economy, Society and Politics
David Goodhart (UK), journalist, author and Head of the Demography, Immigration and Integration Unit, Policy Exchange
Somewheres and Anywheres: New Tribes and the Social Divide
- Populist success is based on differing values and economic divisions.
- The population’s more rooted and conservative 50 % of «Somewheres» like social openness less than the educated and mobile 20 to 25 % «Anywheres»
- Yet Anywheres have come to dominate the agenda in most developed countries
- Now the Somewheres have used their political voice to challenge that Anywhere domination
Olivier Alexandre (FR), sociologist and research fellow, The National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Decoding the Silicon Valley Mindset: Will Nerds Be Tomorrow's Elite?
- Silicon Valley is primarily an economy of game and investments
- Its inhabitants: mostly high-wave, leisure-seeking young men
- The truth of this new entrepreneurial society is ambiguous at best
- The winners: only a handful
Panel discussion with David Goodhart and Olivier Alexandre
Tomorrow's Tribes: Common Traits, Common Threats
Break
Peter Sloterdijk (DE), philosopher, cultural scientist and writer
Prehuman and Late Culture - Revisited
- On the reproduction of the old in the new
- Approaching the phenomenon of tribalism from the perspective of philosophical anthropology
Conversation with Peter Sloterdijk and David Bosshart
Tribes and Cultures: Who Has Power Tomorrow?
20.00
Apéro Riche
Information
Date
22 January 2018
Further
Language
Presentations in German and English. German presentations will be simultaneously translated into English.
Changes of the programme
The programme is subject to change. If an event does not take place, fees will be refunded. Further claims are ruled out.
Cancellation
If you are unable to attend, please let us have your cancellation in writing. The fee will be reimbursed on cancellation until 18 December 2017. After this term and until five full working days prior to the event we will charge 75% of the fee. In the event of later cancellations we will charge the full participation fee. Substitute participants welcome. Please name these under: tribes(at)gdi.ch
Venue
Fees
CHF 190
Participants registering less than two weeks before the event can pay by credit card only.
Partner
Swiss-American Chamber of Commerce
British Swiss Chamber of Commerce
Location
GDI Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute
8803 Rüschlikon
Switzerland