IAEA/ICTP Nuclear KM & Knowledge Asset Management – 11th September 2017, Trieste, Italy

Written by Ron Young on . Posted in Blog, News

Ron Young, Larry Prusak and Ashok Jashapara will be lecturing at the Joint ICTP-IAEA School on Nuclear Knowledge Management (NKM School), to be held at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), Trieste, Italy, from 11 to 15 September 2017.

Lectures will include key topics in Knowledge Management (KM), Knowledge Asset Management (KAM) and ISO Global Standards on Knowledge, Assets, Risk, Quality and Innovation.

The NKM School offers a certificate course providing specialized education and training on development and implementation of knowledge management programmes in nuclear science and technology organizations.

It is intended for young professionals in current or future leading roles in managing nuclear knowledge.

Jointly organized by ICTP and the IAEA since 2004, this Nuclear Knowledge Management (NKM) School focuses on methodologies and practices, and explores various dimensions of nuclear knowledge management. These include processes and tools, challenges and benefits, culture influence, relationship with human resource development, IT for knowledge preservation and sharing. Learning is supplemented with real life examples from NKM programmes in different types of nuclear organizations.

The aim is to encourage ‘forward thinking’ and to enable participants to apply theory and insights in their daily work.

ICTP Course details here

For more information contact: info@knowledge-associates.com

[contact-form][contact-field label=”Name” type=”name” required=”true” /][contact-field label=”Email” type=”email” required=”true” /][contact-field label=”Website” type=”url” /][contact-field label=”Message” type=”textarea” /][/contact-form]

 

68 entries
17 comments

Tags: , , , ,

Ron Young

Ron Young is the founder of Knowledge Associates International, a knowledge management consulting and solutions group based at St Johns Innovation Centre, Cambridge U.K. He is acknowledged as a leading international expert and thought leader in strategic knowledge asset management and innovation. He specializes in knowledge driven results for organizations. He advised and assisted the UK DTI Innovation Unit in 1999 in the production of the UK Government White Paper ‘UK Competitiveness in the Knowledge Driven Economy’. He regularly provides keynote presentations and workshops at leading knowledge management & innovation conferences around the world. He has chaired for several years both the British Standards Institute (BSI) Knowledge Management Standards Committee and the European Knowledge Management Standards Committee. He is a visiting lecturer for international business administration and global knowledge economy programs. He runs regular Knowledge Asset Management master classes at King’s College Cambridge University, UK. He is a consultant for the World Bank, Washington, USA, and for the European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Brussels. He is currently developing knowledge management strategies and systems, and advising and assisting major multi-national corporations, international UN agencies, National governments, military, security, and professional institutions around the world. He was a lead consultant for the European Commission 2 Million euro ‘Know-Net’ project. He is joint author of the books ‘Knowledge Asset Management’ (Springer 2003), ‘Upside Down Management’ (McGraw Hill Europe 1996), Knowledge Management: Facilitators Guide (Asian Productivity Organization, Tokyo, 2009), Knowledge Management: Case Studies for SME’s (APO, Tokyo, 2009), Knowledge Management Tools and Techniques (APO, Tokyo, 2010), Knowledge Management for the Public Sector (APO, Tokyo 2013) and APO Demonstration Projects (APO Tokyo, 2014

Comments (1)

  • Maduo Sedio

    |

    Knowledge management is very fascinating. I sometimes wonder how the world will be like if knowledge was not managed. Could you update me on new trends as well as best performing organisations that mange knowledge. The new paradigm is that knowledge must be shared and I believe that the core of knowledge management is knowledge sharing, what is your take on that?

    Reply

Leave a comment