Beyond zero-sum thinking: 3 international collaborations that helped the world

Beyond zero-sum thinking: 3 international collaborations that helped the world

Warp Curated News
Warp Curated News

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In a zero-sum game, one person’s win means another person’s loss. Luckily, we are living in a positive-sum world, meaning one person’s achievement can benefit and contribute to the success of those around them, and even all of humanity. This concept applies to scientific innovation, creativity, and even major political initiatives. This week we loved an article from Forbes that highlights three examples of collaborative international projects that benefited the entire globe:

Banning CFCs to protect the ozone

After the 1985 discovery that chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were extremely damaging to the ozone layer, the Montreal Protocol was created via the collaboration of 197 nations to ban these chemicals. The result? The world avoided 180 million cases of skin cancer that would have occurred without the protection of the ozone. 

The Human Genome Project

This project involved researchers from six countries and mapped out the entire genome of the Homosapien in order to better…
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