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IIASA corner
In February, IIASA Director General and CEO
Albert van Jaarsveld led a delegation from
the institute to participate at the annual
conference of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the
world's largest general scientific society.
The focus of this year’s event was on how
science can bring together people, ideas,
and solutions from across borders, disciplines,
and ideologies to address the most pressing
problems of our time. IIASA is uniquely
positioned to provide extensive expertise
on these topics, as they are fundamental to
the institute’s multidisciplinary approach and
its commitment to the promotion of scientific
cooperation at the local, regional, and
global level.
IIASA organized two conference sessions
as part of the proceedings, the first of which
focused on cross-disciplinary science,
while the second addressed science
diplomacy. Delegates from the
institute also presented a career
workshop exploring the gender
dimension in science advice.
Speakers at the session on cross-
disciplinary science emphasized that
understanding cross-disciplinary science will
be critically important to those responsible
for formulating policies and strategies to
achieve sustainable development. They
also highlighted that there is a need for an
integrative systems approach to develop
transformational pathways showing how
the simultaneous objectives of economic
development, environmental sustainability,
and social inclusion can be met. Key to
achieving such an ambitious objective will
be for the scientific community to establish
innovative partnerships with other
stakeholders. This will require bringing
together leaders from the science, policy,
business, and funding arenas to explore
the systemic dimension of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
and revitalize global partnerships. The session on science diplomacy looked
at the role that IIASA science has played in
building bridges across political divides
since its establishment in 1972, and
highlighted the institute’s increasingly
important role in the international discourse
about sustainable development, particularly
in terms of the SDGs. In light of rising tensions
between East and West in contemporary
geopolitics, speakers also reflected on how
facilitating scientific training across borders
through platforms like the IIASA Young
Scientists Summer Program can aid in
easing tensions between countries
with troubled relations.
Science advice to government is a
rapidly evolving field, but the number
of female science advisors worldwide
is still limited, as is the number of
female heads of government. The
career workshop, which was organized
and moderated by Acting Chief Operations
Officer at IIASA, Jan Marco Müller, explored
different views on why and how the gender
dimension matters in providing science
advice to government, both on the side
of those advising and those receiving the
advice. Discussions during the session, which
featured among others, Canadian Chief
Science Advisor Mona Nemer and the former
UNESCO Deputy Secretary-General Flavia
Schlegel, focused on how to encourage more
women to engage in science advice to policy.
In summarizing the institute’s engagement
at the AAAS meeting, Müller reiterated that
IIASA is uniquely positioned to provide a
neutral platform for sharing best practices
at the global level.
www.iiasa.ac.at/events/AAAS-19
INSTITUTE
NEWS
Written by: Ansa Heyl
Transcending the
boundaries of
science and policy
www.iiasa.ac.at 27OptionsSummer
2019
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Volume summer 2019
- Title
- options
- Volume
- summer 2019
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2019
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine