ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Parag Khanna - Global strategist
Geopolitical futurist Parag Khanna foresees a world in which megacities, supply chains and connective technologies redraw the map away from states and borders.

Why you should listen

Global theorist Parag Khanna travels the world with his eyes open -- seeing patterns emerging from the chaos of today’s complex world. In his new book, Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization, he redraws the way humanity is organized according to lines of infrastructure and connectivity rather than our antiquated political borders.

At TED2016, he presented glowing maps of our hyper-connected global network civilization. Previously, at TEDGlobal 2009, Khanna spoke about "Mapping the future of countries," and at TEDGlobal 2012, he curated and guest-hosted the session "The Upside of Transparency."

More profile about the speaker
Parag Khanna | Speaker | TED.com
TED2016

Parag Khanna: How megacities are changing the map of the world

Filmed:
1,157,320 views

"I want you to reimagine how life is organized on earth," says global strategist Parag Khanna. As our expanding cities grow ever more connected through transportation, energy and communications networks, we evolve from geography to what he calls "connectography." This emerging global network civilization holds the promise of reducing pollution and inequality -- and even overcoming geopolitical rivalries. In this talk, Khanna asks us to embrace a new maxim for the future: "Connectivity is destiny."
- Global strategist
Geopolitical futurist Parag Khanna foresees a world in which megacities, supply chains and connective technologies redraw the map away from states and borders. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
I want you to reimagine
how life is organized on earth.
0
880
4640
00:18
Think of the planet
like a human body that we inhabit.
1
6920
3800
00:24
The skeleton is the transportation system
of roads and railways,
2
12160
4656
00:28
bridges and tunnels, air and seaports
3
16840
2736
00:31
that enable our mobility
across the continents.
4
19600
3216
00:34
The vascular system that powers the body
5
22840
3256
00:38
are the oil and gas pipelines
and electricity grids.
6
26120
2776
00:40
that distribute energy.
7
28920
1200
00:42
And the nervous system of communications
8
30680
3016
00:45
is the Internet cables,
satellites, cellular networks
9
33720
3696
00:49
and data centers that allow
us to share information.
10
37440
3160
00:53
This ever-expanding infrastructural matrix
11
41480
4376
00:57
already consists of 64 million
kilometers of roads,
12
45880
5016
01:02
four million kilometers of railways,
13
50920
2816
01:05
two million kilometers of pipelines
14
53760
2936
01:08
and one million kilometers
of Internet cables.
15
56720
3560
01:13
What about international borders?
16
61160
2560
01:16
We have less than
500,000 kilometers of borders.
17
64959
3561
01:21
Let's build a better map of the world.
18
69680
2200
01:24
And we can start by overcoming
some ancient mythology.
19
72720
3440
01:29
There's a saying with which
all students of history are familiar:
20
77080
3080
01:33
"Geography is destiny."
21
81160
2776
01:35
Sounds so grave, doesn't it?
22
83960
1480
01:38
It's such a fatalistic adage.
23
86120
1680
01:40
It tells us that landlocked countries
are condemned to be poor,
24
88440
4216
01:44
that small countries
cannot escape their larger neighbors,
25
92680
3216
01:47
that vast distances are insurmountable.
26
95920
2920
01:51
But every journey I take around the world,
27
99880
3576
01:55
I see an even greater force
sweeping the planet:
28
103480
3440
01:59
connectivity.
29
107960
1200
02:02
The global connectivity revolution,
in all of its forms --
30
110080
3736
02:05
transportation, energy
and communications --
31
113840
2696
02:08
has enabled such a quantum leap
in the mobility of people,
32
116560
4256
02:12
of goods, of resources, of knowledge,
33
120840
2736
02:15
such that we can no longer even think
of geography as distinct from it.
34
123600
4560
02:20
In fact, I view the two forces
as fusing together
35
128840
4096
02:24
into what I call "connectography."
36
132960
2080
02:28
Connectography represents a quantum leap
37
136280
3936
02:32
in the mobility of people,
resources and ideas,
38
140240
3416
02:35
but it is an evolution,
39
143680
1800
02:38
an evolution of the world
from political geography,
40
146280
6176
02:44
which is how we legally divide the world,
41
152480
2800
02:48
to functional geography,
42
156000
2216
02:50
which is how we actually use the world,
43
158240
2576
02:52
from nations and borders,
to infrastructure and supply chains.
44
160840
4120
02:57
Our global system is evolving
45
165720
2440
03:01
from the vertically integrated
empires of the 19th century,
46
169240
3656
03:04
through the horizontally interdependent
nations of the 20th century,
47
172920
4256
03:09
into a global network civilization
in the 21st century.
48
177200
5240
03:15
Connectivity, not sovereignty,
49
183240
3336
03:18
has become the organizing principle
of the human species.
50
186600
4216
03:22
(Applause)
51
190840
3400
03:27
We are becoming
this global network civilization
52
195480
3216
03:30
because we are literally building it.
53
198720
2776
03:33
All of the world's defense budgets
and military spending taken together
54
201520
3696
03:37
total just under
two trillion dollars per year.
55
205240
3096
03:40
Meanwhile, our global
infrastructure spending
56
208360
2376
03:42
is projected to rise
to nine trillion dollars per year
57
210760
3376
03:46
within the coming decade.
58
214160
1536
03:47
And, well, it should.
59
215720
1616
03:49
We have been living
off an infrastructure stock
60
217360
2736
03:52
meant for a world population
of three billion,
61
220120
2600
03:55
as our population has crossed
seven billion to eight billion
62
223640
3096
03:58
and eventually nine billion and more.
63
226760
1840
04:01
As a rule of thumb, we should spend
about one trillion dollars
64
229280
4696
04:06
on the basic infrastructure needs
of every billion people in the world.
65
234000
4240
04:11
Not surprisingly, Asia is in the lead.
66
239360
3040
04:15
In 2015, China announced the creation
67
243320
2616
04:17
of the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank,
68
245960
3040
04:21
which together with a network
of other organizations
69
249880
3176
04:25
aims to construct a network
of iron and silk roads,
70
253080
3415
04:28
stretching from Shanghai to Lisbon.
71
256519
2201
04:31
And as all of this topographical
engineering unfolds,
72
259640
4176
04:35
we will likely spend more
on infrastructure in the next 40 years,
73
263840
5456
04:41
we will build more infrastructure
in the next 40 years,
74
269320
3336
04:44
than we have in the past 4,000 years.
75
272680
2760
04:48
Now let's stop and think
about it for a minute.
76
276760
2200
04:51
Spending so much more on building
the foundations of global society
77
279560
4776
04:56
rather than on the tools to destroy it
78
284360
2816
04:59
can have profound consequences.
79
287200
2576
05:01
Connectivity is how
we optimize the distribution
80
289800
3056
05:04
of people and resources around the world.
81
292880
2576
05:07
It is how mankind comes to be more
than just the sum of its parts.
82
295480
4120
05:12
I believe that is what is happening.
83
300840
2600
05:17
Connectivity has a twin megatrend
in the 21st century:
84
305000
3936
05:20
planetary urbanization.
85
308960
2080
05:24
Cities are the infrastructures
that most define us.
86
312000
3280
05:27
By 2030, more than two thirds
of the world's population
87
315840
3216
05:31
will live in cities.
88
319080
1256
05:32
And these are not
mere little dots on the map,
89
320360
2736
05:35
but they are vast archipelagos
stretching hundreds of kilometers.
90
323120
3600
05:39
Here we are in Vancouver,
91
327360
1576
05:40
at the head of the Cascadia Corridor
92
328960
1856
05:42
that stretches south
across the US border to Seattle.
93
330840
2840
05:46
The technology powerhouse
of Silicon Valley
94
334600
2336
05:48
begins north of San Francisco
down to San Jose
95
336960
2856
05:51
and across the bay to Oakland.
96
339840
1776
05:53
The sprawl of Los Angeles
now passes San Diego
97
341640
2976
05:56
across the Mexican border to Tijuana.
98
344640
2256
05:58
San Diego and Tijuana
now share an airport terminal
99
346920
2976
06:01
where you can exit into either country.
100
349920
2216
06:04
Eventually, a high-speed rail network
may connect the entire Pacific spine.
101
352160
4240
06:09
America's northeastern megalopolis
begins in Boston through New York
102
357680
4136
06:13
and Philadelphia to Washington.
103
361840
1776
06:15
It contains more than 50 million people
104
363640
2176
06:17
and also has plans
for a high-speed rail network.
105
365840
2776
06:20
But Asia is where we really see
the megacities coming together.
106
368640
3920
06:25
This continuous strip of light
from Tokyo through Nagoya to Osaka
107
373280
4256
06:29
contains more than 80 million people
108
377560
2176
06:31
and most of Japan's economy.
109
379760
1680
06:34
It is the world's largest megacity.
110
382200
2320
06:37
For now.
111
385160
1200
06:38
But in China, megacity clusters
are coming together
112
386800
2536
06:41
with populations
reaching 100 million people.
113
389360
2896
06:44
The Bohai Rim around Beijing,
114
392280
1896
06:46
The Yangtze River Delta around Shanghai
115
394200
2256
06:48
and the Pearl River Delta,
116
396480
1896
06:50
stretching from Hong Kong
north to Guangzhou.
117
398400
2336
06:52
And in the middle,
118
400760
1336
06:54
the Chongqing-Chengdu megacity cluster,
119
402120
2896
06:57
whose geographic footprint
is almost the same size
120
405040
2776
06:59
as the country of Austria.
121
407840
1640
07:03
And any number of these megacity clusters
122
411263
1953
07:05
has a GDP approaching
two trillion dollars --
123
413240
3056
07:08
that's almost the same
as all of India today.
124
416320
2680
07:11
So imagine if our global diplomatic
institutions, such as the G20,
125
419560
5656
07:17
were to base their membership
on economic size
126
425240
3536
07:20
rather than national representation.
127
428800
2000
07:23
Some Chinese megacities
may be in and have a seat at the table,
128
431320
3576
07:26
while entire countries,
like Argentina or Indonesia would be out.
129
434920
4120
07:32
Moving to India, whose population
will soon exceed that of China,
130
440080
3696
07:35
it too has a number of megacity clusters,
131
443800
2296
07:38
such as the Delhi Capital Region
132
446120
2416
07:40
and Mumbai.
133
448560
1456
07:42
In the Middle East,
134
450040
1216
07:43
Greater Tehran is absorbing
one third of Iran's population.
135
451280
3136
07:46
Most of Egypt's 80 million people
136
454440
1856
07:48
live in the corridor
between Cairo and Alexandria.
137
456320
3016
07:51
And in the gulf, a necklace
of city-states is forming,
138
459360
4016
07:55
from Bahrain and Qatar,
139
463400
1456
07:56
through the United Arab Emirates
to Muscat in Oman.
140
464880
2760
08:00
And then there's Lagos,
141
468520
1480
08:02
Africa's largest city
and Nigeria's commercial hub.
142
470800
3856
08:06
It has plans for a rail network
143
474680
2056
08:08
that will make it the anchor
of a vast Atlantic coastal corridor,
144
476760
4416
08:13
stretching across Benin, Togo and Ghana,
145
481200
3056
08:16
to Abidjan, the capital
of the Ivory Coast.
146
484280
3456
08:19
But these countries are suburbs of Lagos.
147
487760
3560
08:24
In a megacity world,
148
492000
1856
08:25
countries can be suburbs of cities.
149
493880
2760
08:30
By 2030, we will have as many
as 50 such megacity clusters in the world.
150
498640
6120
08:37
So which map tells you more?
151
505400
1856
08:39
Our traditional map
of 200 discrete nations
152
507280
3136
08:42
that hang on most of our walls,
153
510440
1896
08:44
or this map of the 50 megacity clusters?
154
512360
3000
08:48
And yet, even this is incomplete
155
516159
2736
08:50
because you cannot understand
any individual megacity
156
518919
4017
08:54
without understanding
its connections to the others.
157
522960
3160
08:58
People move to cities to be connected,
158
526880
2376
09:01
and connectivity
is why these cities thrive.
159
529280
3200
09:05
Any number of them,
such as Sao Paulo or Istanbul or Moscow,
160
533320
3656
09:09
has a GDP approaching or exceeding
one third of one half
161
537000
4096
09:13
of their entire national GDP.
162
541120
2160
09:16
But equally importantly,
163
544120
1776
09:17
you cannot calculate
any of their individual value
164
545920
2856
09:20
without understanding
the role of the flows of people,
165
548800
3656
09:24
of finance, of technology
166
552480
1696
09:26
that enable them to thrive.
167
554200
1680
09:28
Take the Gauteng province of South Africa,
168
556640
2736
09:31
which contains Johannesburg
and the capital Pretoria.
169
559400
3136
09:34
It too represents just over
a third of South Africa's GDP.
170
562560
3936
09:38
But equally importantly,
it is home to the offices
171
566520
3256
09:41
of almost every single
multinational corporation
172
569800
2976
09:44
that invests directly into South Africa
173
572800
2216
09:47
and indeed, into the entire
African continent.
174
575040
2480
09:50
Cities want to be part
of global value chains.
175
578680
3696
09:54
They want to be part
of this global division of labor.
176
582400
3576
09:58
That is how cities think.
177
586000
1840
10:00
I've never met a mayor who said to me,
178
588640
1816
10:02
"I want my city to be cut off."
179
590480
1560
10:04
They know that their cities belong as much
180
592840
3056
10:07
to the global network civilization
as to their home countries.
181
595920
5320
10:14
Now, for many people,
urbanization causes great dismay.
182
602680
3640
10:18
They think cities are wrecking the planet.
183
606920
2200
10:21
But right now,
184
609960
1216
10:23
there are more than 200
intercity learning networks thriving.
185
611200
4256
10:27
That is as many as the number
of intergovernmental organizations
186
615480
3336
10:30
that we have.
187
618840
1216
10:32
And all of these intercity networks
are devoted to one purpose,
188
620080
4376
10:36
mankind's number one priority
in the 21st century:
189
624480
4696
10:41
sustainable urbanization.
190
629200
2080
10:44
Is it working?
191
632680
1200
10:46
Let's take climate change.
192
634560
1736
10:48
We know that summit after summit
in New York and Paris
193
636320
2736
10:51
is not going to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
194
639080
2800
10:54
But what we can see
is that transferring technology
195
642560
3296
10:57
and knowledge and policies between cities
196
645880
2616
11:00
is how we've actually begun to reduce
the carbon intensity of our economies.
197
648520
4616
11:05
Cities are learning from each other.
198
653160
2136
11:07
How to install zero-emissions buildings,
199
655320
2456
11:09
how to deploy electric
car-sharing systems.
200
657800
3136
11:12
In major Chinese cities,
201
660960
1216
11:14
they're imposing quotas
on the number of cars on the streets.
202
662200
3056
11:17
In many Western cities,
203
665280
1256
11:18
young people don't even
want to drive anymore.
204
666560
2320
11:21
Cities have been part of the problem,
205
669720
2216
11:23
now they are part of the solution.
206
671960
2000
11:26
Inequality is the other great challenge
to achieving sustainable urbanization.
207
674880
4600
11:31
When I travel through megacities
from end to end --
208
679960
3416
11:35
it takes hours and days --
209
683400
2096
11:37
I experience the tragedy
of extreme disparity
210
685520
3736
11:41
within the same geography.
211
689280
1920
11:44
And yet, our global stock
of financial assets
212
692080
3016
11:47
has never been larger,
213
695120
1456
11:48
approaching 300 trillion dollars.
214
696600
3496
11:52
That's almost four times
the actual GDP of the world.
215
700120
3400
11:56
We have taken on such enormous debts
since the financial crisis,
216
704520
4456
12:01
but have we invested them
in inclusive growth?
217
709000
3160
12:04
No, not yet.
218
712840
2120
12:07
Only when we build sufficient,
affordable public housing,
219
715800
3816
12:11
when we invest in robust
transportation networks
220
719640
3136
12:14
to allow people to connect to each other
both physically and digitally,
221
722800
4536
12:19
that's when our divided
cities and societies
222
727360
2376
12:21
will come to feel whole again.
223
729760
1856
12:23
(Applause)
224
731640
2840
12:27
And that is why infrastructure
has just been included
225
735840
2896
12:30
in the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals,
226
738760
2456
12:33
because it enables all the others.
227
741240
2320
12:36
Our political and economic leaders
228
744080
1816
12:37
are learning that connectivity
is not charity,
229
745920
3096
12:41
it's opportunity.
230
749040
1200
12:43
And that's why our financial community
needs to understand
231
751080
2736
12:45
that connectivity is the most
important asset class of the 21st century.
232
753840
5000
12:52
Now, cities can make the world
more sustainable,
233
760280
3680
12:56
they can make the world more equitable,
234
764600
2256
12:58
I also believe that
connectivity between cities
235
766880
2856
13:01
can make the world more peaceful.
236
769760
1760
13:04
If we look at regions of the world
with dense relations across borders,
237
772400
4016
13:08
we see more trade, more investment
238
776440
2776
13:11
and more stability.
239
779240
1416
13:12
We all know the story
of Europe after World War II,
240
780680
2496
13:15
where industrial integration
kicked off a process
241
783200
2576
13:17
that gave rise to today's
peaceful European Union.
242
785800
2560
13:21
And you can see that Russia, by the way,
243
789000
2616
13:23
is the least connected of major powers
in the international system.
244
791640
4000
13:28
And that goes a long way
towards explaining the tensions today.
245
796240
3776
13:32
Countries that have
less stake in the system
246
800040
2896
13:34
also have less to lose in disturbing it.
247
802960
2360
13:38
In North America, the lines
that matter most on the map
248
806800
2816
13:41
are not the US-Canada border
or the US-Mexico border,
249
809640
3776
13:45
but the dense network of roads
and railways and pipelines
250
813440
3376
13:48
and electricity grids
and even water canals
251
816840
2856
13:51
that are forming an integrated
North American union.
252
819720
3816
13:55
North America does not need more walls,
it needs more connections.
253
823560
4696
14:00
(Applause)
254
828280
2640
14:07
But the real promise of connectivity
is in the postcolonial world.
255
835880
4336
14:12
All of those regions where borders
have historically been the most arbitrary
256
840240
4336
14:16
and where generations of leaders
257
844600
1936
14:18
have had hostile relations
with each other.
258
846560
2616
14:21
But now a new group of leaders
has come into power
259
849200
2376
14:23
and is burying the hatchet.
260
851600
1560
14:25
Let's take Southeast Asia,
where high-speed rail networks
261
853760
3176
14:28
are planned to connect
Bangkok to Singapore
262
856960
2296
14:31
and trade corridors
from Vietnam to Myanmar.
263
859280
2896
14:34
Now this region of 600 million people
coordinates its agricultural resources
264
862200
5536
14:39
and its industrial output.
265
867760
1400
14:41
It is evolving
into what I call a Pax Asiana,
266
869720
4656
14:46
a peace among Southeast Asian nations.
267
874400
2840
14:50
A similar phenomenon
is underway in East Africa,
268
878040
3136
14:53
where a half dozen countries
269
881200
1376
14:54
are investing in railways
and multimodal corridors
270
882600
3296
14:57
so that landlocked countries
can get their goods to market.
271
885920
3136
15:01
Now these countries
coordinate their utilities
272
889080
2576
15:03
and their investment policies.
273
891680
2096
15:05
They, too, are evolving
into a Pax Africana.
274
893800
3800
15:11
One region we know could
especially use this kind of thinking
275
899200
2896
15:14
is the Middle East.
276
902120
1280
15:16
As Arab states tragically collapse,
277
904000
2456
15:18
what is left behind
but the ancient cities,
278
906480
2736
15:21
such as Cairo, Beirut and Baghdad?
279
909240
2480
15:24
In fact, the nearly
400 million people of the Arab world
280
912400
4736
15:29
are almost entirely urbanized.
281
917160
2096
15:31
As societies, as cities,
282
919280
1896
15:33
they are either water rich or water poor,
283
921200
2256
15:35
energy rich or energy poor.
284
923480
1760
15:38
And the only way
to correct these mismatches
285
926040
2896
15:40
is not through more wars and more borders,
286
928960
2616
15:43
but through more connectivity
of pipelines and water canals.
287
931600
3840
15:48
Sadly, this is not yet
the map of the Middle East.
288
936040
3936
15:52
But it should be,
289
940000
1200
15:54
a connected Pax Arabia,
290
942760
3040
15:58
internally integrated
291
946640
1696
16:00
and productively connected
to its neighbors: Europe, Asia and Africa.
292
948360
4296
16:04
Now, it may not seem like connectivity
is what we want right now
293
952680
3096
16:07
towards the world's most turbulent region.
294
955800
2040
16:10
But we know from history
that more connectivity is the only way
295
958600
3616
16:14
to bring about stability in the long run.
296
962240
2496
16:16
Because we know
that in region after region,
297
964760
2696
16:19
connectivity is the new reality.
298
967480
2936
16:22
Cities and countries
are learning to aggregate
299
970440
3136
16:25
into more peaceful and prosperous wholes.
300
973600
2480
16:29
But the real test is going to be Asia.
301
977760
2320
16:33
Can connectivity overcome
the patterns of rivalry
302
981040
2936
16:36
among the great powers of the Far East?
303
984000
2576
16:38
After all, this is where World War III
is supposed to break out.
304
986600
4360
16:43
Since the end of the Cold War,
a quarter century ago,
305
991920
3136
16:47
at least six major wars
have been predicted for this region.
306
995080
3376
16:50
But none have broken out.
307
998480
1600
16:53
Take China and Taiwan.
308
1001160
1560
16:55
In the 1990s, this was everyone's
leading World War III scenario.
309
1003560
4616
17:00
But since that time,
310
1008200
1496
17:01
the trade and investment volumes
across the straits have become so intense
311
1009720
4496
17:06
that last November,
312
1014240
1216
17:07
leaders from both sides
held a historic summit
313
1015480
2856
17:10
to discuss eventual
peaceful reunification.
314
1018360
2840
17:13
And even the election
of a nationalist party in Taiwan
315
1021960
2816
17:16
that's pro-independence earlier this year
316
1024800
2776
17:19
does not undermine
this fundamental dynamic.
317
1027599
2480
17:23
China and Japan have
an even longer history of rivalry
318
1031359
2897
17:26
and have been deploying
their air forces and navies
319
1034280
2415
17:28
to show their strength in island disputes.
320
1036720
2160
17:31
But in recent years,
321
1039520
1216
17:32
Japan has been making
its largest foreign investments in China.
322
1040760
4136
17:36
Japanese cars are selling
in record numbers there.
323
1044920
2720
17:40
And guess where
the largest number of foreigners
324
1048440
2936
17:43
residing in Japan today comes from?
325
1051400
2120
17:46
You guessed it: China.
326
1054120
1800
17:49
China and India have fought a major war
327
1057520
1896
17:51
and have three outstanding
border disputes,
328
1059440
2056
17:53
but today India is the second
largest shareholder
329
1061520
2456
17:56
in the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank.
330
1064000
2416
17:58
They're building a trade corridor
stretching from Northeast India
331
1066440
3256
18:01
through Myanmar and Bangladesh
to Southern China.
332
1069720
3920
18:06
Their trade volume has grown
from 20 billion dollars a decade ago
333
1074320
3856
18:10
to 80 billion dollars today.
334
1078200
1600
18:12
Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan
have fought three wars
335
1080600
3016
18:15
and continue to dispute Kashmir,
336
1083640
2216
18:17
but they're also negotiating
a most-favored-nation trade agreement
337
1085880
3536
18:21
and want to complete a pipeline
338
1089440
1736
18:23
stretching from Iran
through Pakistan to India.
339
1091200
3976
18:27
And let's talk about Iran.
340
1095200
1560
18:29
Wasn't it just two years ago
that war with Iran seemed inevitable?
341
1097880
3200
18:33
Then why is every single major power
rushing to do business there today?
342
1101760
4720
18:40
Ladies and gentlemen,
343
1108560
1256
18:41
I cannot guarantee
that World War III will not break out.
344
1109840
4000
18:46
But we can definitely see
why it hasn't happened yet.
345
1114640
3000
18:50
Even though Asia is home
to the world's fastest growing militaries,
346
1118680
3696
18:54
these same countries
are also investing billions of dollars
347
1122400
3576
18:58
in each other's infrastructure
and supply chains.
348
1126000
2936
19:00
They are more interested
in each other's functional geography
349
1128960
3816
19:04
than in their political geography.
350
1132800
2456
19:07
And that is why their leaders think twice,
step back from the brink,
351
1135280
5056
19:12
and decide to focus on economic ties
over territorial tensions.
352
1140360
4560
19:18
So often it seems
like the world is falling apart,
353
1146440
2600
19:21
but building more connectivity
354
1149760
1936
19:23
is how we put Humpty Dumpty
back together again,
355
1151720
3120
19:27
much better than before.
356
1155480
1760
19:29
And by wrapping the world
357
1157960
1256
19:31
in such seamless physical
and digital connectivity,
358
1159240
3456
19:34
we evolve towards a world
359
1162720
2176
19:36
in which people can rise
above their geographic constraints.
360
1164920
3520
19:40
We are the cells and vessels
361
1168920
3176
19:44
pulsing through these global
connectivity networks.
362
1172120
3216
19:47
Everyday, hundreds of millions
of people go online
363
1175360
3656
19:51
and work with people they've never met.
364
1179040
2616
19:53
More than one billion people
cross borders every year,
365
1181680
3496
19:57
and that's expected to rise
to three billion in the coming decade.
366
1185200
3920
20:02
We don't just build connectivity,
367
1190200
2496
20:04
we embody it.
368
1192720
1320
20:06
We are the global network civilization,
369
1194960
3336
20:10
and this is our map.
370
1198320
1880
20:13
A map of the world in which
geography is no longer destiny.
371
1201240
4400
20:18
Instead, the future
has a new and more hopeful motto:
372
1206560
4040
20:23
connectivity is destiny.
373
1211400
1960
20:26
Thank you.
374
1214040
1216
20:27
(Applause)
375
1215280
6229

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Parag Khanna - Global strategist
Geopolitical futurist Parag Khanna foresees a world in which megacities, supply chains and connective technologies redraw the map away from states and borders.

Why you should listen

Global theorist Parag Khanna travels the world with his eyes open -- seeing patterns emerging from the chaos of today’s complex world. In his new book, Connectography: Mapping the Future of Global Civilization, he redraws the way humanity is organized according to lines of infrastructure and connectivity rather than our antiquated political borders.

At TED2016, he presented glowing maps of our hyper-connected global network civilization. Previously, at TEDGlobal 2009, Khanna spoke about "Mapping the future of countries," and at TEDGlobal 2012, he curated and guest-hosted the session "The Upside of Transparency."

More profile about the speaker
Parag Khanna | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee