It seems to me that people are looking too "short term" here. It is still unclear if Homo Sapien Sapien, Homo Sapien Neanderthalensis, and Homo Erectus are different species.
There's a big debate that rages between proponets of the "Out Of Africa" theory (OOA) and the "Multi Regional Evolution" (MRE) theory. OOA proposes that modern humans are a separate species originating in Africa around 150 000 years ago, and expanding throughout the world. MRE propontents submit that from the time of Homo Erectus leaving Africa and spreding across Europe and Asia, regional characteristics have developed and been affected by various "waves" of adaptive mutations. This debate is by no means settled, in spite of the mtDNA data.
From my perspective, looking for species changes amongst Homo Sapiens in the last 40 thousand years is a bit myopic. We are still in too much of a transition period....from hunter gatherers to farmers to information managers.... for any clear environmental pressure to have obviously raised its head. But this is just my opinion.
Generally, though, I feel that the more we can be jacks of all trades, as a species....highly adaptable to any environment (currently, our strength is adapting environments to suit our needs such as space, undersea, arctic, desert through use of clothing housing, etc) the greater our success. So, perhaps the 3rd world is the place to look for the "new human" in that they have the harshest conditions to exist in, and so have had to become the most robust and innovative to survive in the cusp between low tech and high tech.
The success of our species on earth, in my opinion, is guaranteed in that we have expanded across the globe in all climates using only natural products (eskimos, bedouin, pygmies and the vast range of environments between). We have survived the Toba explosion (volcano, about 70 000 yrs ago, worldwide climate effect, reduced human population to less than 100 000 people, is estimated) so I feel there will always be humans around. Perhaps not in the populations that we have at the current time, but we will always be able to find or make a niche to survive in.
Our challenge is to evolve a species that can become interplanetary and/or interstellar. This pressure, obviously, tends towards resource conservation and intelligence. If our species is to survive until the death of the universe, this is the challenge faced.....to get to places that can support our life form, as places we leave behind can no longer support our needs.