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institute news
27
news at iiasa
www.iiasa.ac.at winter 2017/18 ◼ options
I
n June, IIASA celebrated the 40th anniversary of its Young
Scientists Summer Program (YSSP). Over 80 people, including
YSSP alumni from 1977 to 2017 attended the event at IIASA in
Laxenburg. The two-day program focused on the impact the
YSSP has had on alumni careers and how these experiences can
be used to shape the future of the program.
After introductory remarks by YSSP dean JoAnne Linnerooth
Bayer and former IIASA Director Roger Levien, who founded the
YSSP, the program made way for some interesting panel discussions,
as well as social and networking opportunities. The focus was
on themes central to IIASA research: the evolution of climate
governance and research; key challenges for social sciences in the
context of new technology and old global problems; population
projections and why education matters; and living in the age of
adaptation.
The air was abuzz with new ideas and innovative solutions for
global issues.
For example, Jeanne Anderer, who worked with the Energy
Systems Program at IIASA in 1978 and was the editor of the 1981
book Energy in a Finite World, recalled how the energy group at
IIASA applied systems analysis back in the seventies when most
researchers were only beginning to understand the benefits of such
methods for solving complex problems. She also spoke about the
need to use natural resources more judiciously and strategically for
a transition of the global energy systems. Another panel spoke about the shift to newer technologies that has
taken place in the last couple of decades and hence the expectation
of a similar yet more rapid shift in world trade likely to be seen in
the next decade. This could mean more sustainable and greener
businesses as industries seem to be ready to switch to cleaner
technologies, the panelists said.
Olha Danylo, a 2012 YSSP fellow and current IIASA researcher,
spoke about a citizen-powered app for disaster response. This
tool, called Picture Pile, allows people from any part of the world
to provide crucial information about a disaster as long as they
have access to smartphones and an internet connection. The data
provided informs relief or recovery efforts and has wider application
for humanitarian organizations such as the Red Cross. The sessions
ended with Adil Najam, a 1994 YSSPer, now the dean of the Pardee
School of Global Studies at Boston University sharing his views on
climate adaptation focusing on climate equity and justice.
The anniversary event highlighted the success of the YSSP, which
is widely seen as one of the institute’s greatest accomplishments,
and the celebration provided a unique opportunity for alumni to
network and reconnect. PT
40th anniversary celebrations of the YSSP
Further info The IIASA alumni office has produced a YSSP class book, which is
available to YSSP alumni. To receive a copy or contribute a page, please contact
alumni@iiasa.ac.at
www.iiasa.ac.at/events/40yssp
YSSP founder Roger Levien takes part in the celebrations
along with current organizers of the YSSP.
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Buch options, Band winter 2017/2018"
options
Band winter 2017/2018
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2017/2018
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine