Simon Anholt: Which country does the most good for the world?
أي دولة تفعل الخير أكثر للعالم؟
After 20 years working with the presidents and prime ministers of 54 countries, Simon Anholt has a plan to make the world work better. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
سنة الماضية.
لو أن بنكا في شمال أمريكا
the Millennium Development Goals,
للألفية التابعة للأمم المتحدة،
وحاولوا بكل مقدرتهم.
لا نهاية لهذا الحديث...
أن نتامالك أنفسنا ونوحد طريقة عملنا
way that those laws are made
التي نشأت بها تلك القوانين
solution of global problems,
each other from country to country,
من بلد لآخر،
على حد النظر إلى الداخل؟
أول سبب وأكثرها وضوحًا...
things tend not to change.
لعدم قدرتنا على التغيير.
بالأشخاص المختلفين عنا،
a lot of time complaining
الذين يقضون وقتهم بالتذمر
خلق مشكلة كبيرة من ذلك.
sometimes to look outwards.
ولكن لننظر إلى الخارج أحيانًا.
على امتداد السنوات
think about other countries
the governments that I advise
لأن الحكومات التي قمت بإرشادها
primarily because they're rich,
because they're successful,
أو لأنها ناجحة،
they're technologically advanced.
أو لأنها متقدمة تكنولوجيًا.
وغالبًا ما أقوله للحكومات،
كلما أصبحت أفكاري أكثر بساطة
of very serious and clever people,
الأذكياء والجادين،
المعتمدة الموجودة في العالم
tell you which one comes top.
من حل في المركز الأول.
لا أعني الأفضل.
جيد أو أفضل أو الأفضل.
تساهم أكثر لعالمنا
before we drift off to sleep,
من النوم العميق،
your international obligations
lower than Ireland's lowest score.
من أدنى علامة لإيرلندا.
notice about the top 10 there
very, very important thing.
الذين يهتمون
of the lower-lying countries.
الدول المتأخرة في الترتيب.
والولايات المتحدة تأتي في المرتبة 21،
the big developing countries,
والصين في المرتبة 107.
to be on goodcountry.org,
في: goodcountry.org
level of the individual datasets.
لكل دولة أيضًا.
مؤشر الدول الخيّرة.
كلمة "خَيّر"
and our companies behave,
نستطيع أن نغير العالم.
thinking about these things.
منذ أن بدأت بالتفكير في هذه الأمور.
wanted to live in a happy country,
في دولة سعيدة،
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Simon Anholt - Policy advisorAfter 20 years working with the presidents and prime ministers of 54 countries, Simon Anholt has a plan to make the world work better.
Why you should listen
For 20 years, Simon Anholt has worked with the presidents, prime ministers and governments of more than fifty nations, devising strategies and policies to help them to engage more imaginatively and productively with the international community.
In 2014, impatient to do better, Anholt founded the Good Country, a project aimed at helping countries work together to tackle global challenges like climate change, poverty, migration and terrorism, by mobilizing "the only superpower left on the planet: global public opinion."
According to The Independent, Anholt's aim is to change the way countries, cities and companies work "...by us all encouraging their leaders to think about the global impact of their actions, rather than cut-throat self-interest."
Measurement of Good Country progress is done through Anholt's Good Country Index, the only survey to rank countries according to their contribution to humanity and the planet rather than their domestic performance. According to The Guardian, "He has built his career in part as a formidable cruncher of data." Since 2005, his research into global perceptions of nations and cities has collected and analyzed over 300 billion data points.
In 2016, Anholt launched the Global Vote, a project that enables anybody in the world to vote in other countries' elections, choosing the candidate who is likely to do most for humanity and the planet: three months later over 100,000 people from 130 countries took part in the Global Vote on the US Presidential Election. The Global Vote now covers an election somewhere in the world almost every month.
Anholt is an Honorary Professor of Political Science and the author of five books about countries, cultures and globalisation. He is the founder and Editor Emeritus of a leading academic journal focused on public diplomacy and perceptions of places.
Simon Anholt | Speaker | TED.com