
For example, Prof. Christian Wietfeld and his group are looking into the future of digital infrastructure: the 6G mobile interactions requirement will open new possibilities for more intelligent, much faster, and more sustainable systems. Prof. Alice Kirchheim and Prof. Michael Henke take a look at how blockchain innovations can redefine rely on worldwide supply chains– from basic materials to the retail rack. Prof. Manuel Wiesche, among the most research‑active economists of his generation, concentrates on the digital transformation of the economy and shows how organizations can use modification tactically. Prof. Anna Isaeva, in turn, carries out standard research study on unique semiconductor products with the objective of decreasing the energy consumption of IT technology in the future.
However, improvement also has social and cultural dimensions. Scientists in spatial planning are searching for ways to make Europe more climate‑resilient– utilizing brand-new principles that likewise incorporate private land. Sociologist Prof. Bernd Sommer describes why the “Green Transition” sets off conflicts and how societies can deal with them. Prof. Barbara Welzel and Prof. Wolfgang Sonne demonstrate how the repurposing of church structures can foster new types of community. In conversation with Prof. Katja Crone, it ends up being clear that change impacts every specific personally, for example when it comes to choices, clean slates, and experiences that fundamentally change one’s own life.
Ruhr Development Laboratory: For a Future‑Ready Society
TU Dortmund University and Ruhr University Bochum, presently competing in the Quality Method as the Ruhr Development Laboratory, aim to generate even greater impact together in the future and to establish much more targeted options from science for a sustainable and future‑ready society. Real to the slogan: Believe. Attempt. Change.
To mundo (in German just)