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- Q7248597 subject Q6462129.
- Q7248597 abstract "A progress trap is the condition human societies experience when, in pursuing progress through human ingenuity, they inadvertently introduce problems they do not have the resources or political will to solve, for fear of short-term losses in status, stability or quality of life. This prevents further progress and sometimes leads to collapse.The term gained attention following the historian and novelist Ronald Wright's 2004 book and Massey Lecture series A Short History of Progress, in which he sketches world history so far as a succession of progress traps. With the documentary film version of Wright's book "Surviving Progress," backed by Martin Scorsese, the concept achieved wider recognition. The syndrome appears to have been first described by Prof. Walter Von Krämer, in his series of 1989 articles under the title Fortschrittsfalle Medizin. Daniel O'Leary's proposal for The Progress Trap and how to avoid it was accepted by McGill Queen's University Press in 1992.".
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- Q7248597 wikiPageExternalLink at_what_point_does_progress_turn_into_its_opposite+%22progress+trap%22&hl=nl&start=6.
- Q7248597 wikiPageExternalLink progresstrap.blogspot.com.
- Q7248597 wikiPageExternalLink article.php?id=1591&issue=57&s=0.
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- Q7248597 wikiPageExternalLink article.cfm?id=spheres-of-influence.
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- Q7248597 wikiPageWikiLink Q6462129.
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- Q7248597 comment "A progress trap is the condition human societies experience when, in pursuing progress through human ingenuity, they inadvertently introduce problems they do not have the resources or political will to solve, for fear of short-term losses in status, stability or quality of life.".
- Q7248597 label "Progress trap".