1.
UNU marks
25th anniversary with global values conference
2.
Founders honoured at silver anniversary symposium
3. UNU
Rector to lead International Association of Universities
4. UNU
stages conference on value of forests
5. Report
on El Niño: Fix the roof while the sun shines
6.
Annual WIDER lecture focuses on globalization and governance
7. Dr.
José Luis Ramirez named Director of UNU/BIOLAC
8. Developing
countries 'must invest in IT' - new book
9. Calendar
of events and meetings
UNU marks 25th
anniversary with
international conference on global values, ethics
Controversial issues such as gene research and the
profound impact modern science and technology are having on the evolution
of values and ethics worldwide will form a major focus of a three-day
conference of hosted by UNU and its Institute
of Advanced Studies, Oct. 24-26 at UNU Center, Tokyo.
The International
Conference on Global Ethos will convene renowned international
academics, practitioners and thinkers for a global conversation on
dramatic shifts underway in such areas as science, politics, international
justice, religion, and women’s rights and how these forces are
transforming society everywhere.
The rapid and enormous changes in progress have the
potential to produce a new world system that is stable, equitable and
just. Managed poorly, however, they may instead add strain to an already
stressed natural environment, widen the global gap between rich and poor,
and further concentrate access to knowledge and influence over
international decision making.
The conference will help celebrate UNU’s landmark 25th
anniversary and form part of world observances of UN Day 2000 (Oct. 24).
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UN
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan (top) and
former U.S. President
Carter will address
the conference. |
The conference themes will be:
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Global Capitalism and Sustainable Development
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Science, Knowledge and Ethics
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International Society, Justice and Equity
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Religion, Gender and Culture will be
Specific topics for 10 panels taking place over three days
include: National Reconciliation and the Internationalization of Justice;
Science and Ethics -- Gene Research; and Gender and Women’s Rights
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter will address the conference by videotape. Keynote
speakers include:
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Hans Küng, Director Emeritus, Institute for
Ecumenical Research, University of Tübingen (Germany);
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Thomas Axworthy, Interaction Council, John F. Kennedy
School of Government (USA);
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Yersu Kim, Former Director, Universal Values Project,
UNESCO Division of Philosophy and Ethics; Vigdis Finnbogadottir,
former President, Republic of Iceland, and Chair, Council of Women
World Leaders, Harvard; and
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Abdul Salam Majali, former Prime Minister and Defense
Minister, Jordan, and Chairman, World Affairs Council.
The conference is supported by the UN
Development Programme, Tokyo Forum, Kikkoman
Corporation, and Omron
Corporation.
More information is online at the conference
web site where proceedings will also be broadcast live. Or
contact the UNU Public Affairs Section,
tel. (03) 5467 1243, -1246, fax (03) 3406 7346.
UNU to Honour Founders at
Silver
Anniversary Symposium Oct. 23
|
UNU headquarters in
Tokyo, venue for
the 25th anniversary symposium |
UNU will celebrate its 25th anniversary with an
international symposium: UNU at 25: Reaching Out to Japan and the
World, at UNU Center, Tokyo, Oct. 23, 3 p.m.
The three-hour event will feature the first Michio Nagai
Lecture, named after a leading figure behind the Japanese Government’s
invitation to host UNU’s headquarters. The lecture will serve as an
annual forum for eminent persons of the international community. Prof.
Justin Thorens, former Rector of the University of Geneva, former
President of the International Association of Universities (IAU), and
former Chair of UNU’s Governing Council, will deliver the inaugural
Nagai lecture.
UNU will also mark the occasion by naming its main
conference halls after two other key figures in the university’s
creation – former UN Secretary General U Thant and Elisabeth Rose of
America, whose vision and commitment was vital to UNU’s establishment.
Mrs. Rose, now in her 90s, will join the celebration of UNU’s silver
anniversary. Among other guest speakers: James Hester, UNU’s
first Rector and Heitor Gurgulino De Souza, UNU’s third Rector.
Messages about UNU -- its role in the past, present and
future, its accomplishments and areas for improvement -- are being
requested for display during the Symposium and to help plan for the
future. The Symposium will combine a review of UNU’s historical
development and examine its current role and position
For more information: UNU
Public Affairs, tel. (03) 5467-1243, -1246; fax (03) 3406-7346.
UNU Rector to lead
International
Association of Universities
|
Hans van Ginkel |
UNU Rector Hans van Ginkel has been elected to a four year
term as President of the International
Association of Universities.
Founded in 1950, the UNESCO-based IAU convenes
institutions and organizations from 150 countries for reflection and
action on common concerns and collaborates with international, regional
and national bodies active in higher education.
Its services are available to organizations, institutions
and authorities concerned with higher education, as well as to individual
policy and decision makers, specialists, administrators, teachers,
researchers and students.
IAU’s mission is based on four principles:
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the right to pursue knowledge for its own sake,
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to follow wherever the search for truth may lead,
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tolerance of divergent opinion, and
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freedom from political interference.
The Association also aims to give expression to the
obligation of universities as social institutions to promote, through
teaching and research, the principles of freedom and justice, of human
dignity and solidarity, and contributes, through international
cooperation, to the development of material and moral assistance for the
strengthening of higher education in general.
The multiple values of forests in promoting sustainable
development will be highlighted at an upcoming conference organized by
United Nations University. Delegates will discuss the proposal for an
international year of forests, future forest management practices and
valuation and awareness building.
The event, "The Values of Forests – International
Conference on Forests and Sustainable Development", will be held
October 12 and 13 at UNU Centre in Tokyo. It is being co-organized by the World
Commission on Forests and Sustainable Development (WCFSD) and the
Japanese Environment and Forestry agencies.
Speakers will include: Wakako Hironaka, Member, House of
Councillors, Japanese Diet; Ola Ullsten, Former Prime Minister of Sweden
and Co-Chair of the WCFSD; Matti Palo of the Finnish
Forest Research Institute; George Woodwell, President of the Woods
Hole Research Center; naturalist and writer C.W. Nicol; and other
distinguished scholars.
For more information, visit the conference
web site or contact UNU Public
Affairs, tel. (03) 5467-1243, -1246; fax (03) 3406-7346
Report on El Niño: Fix
the
roof while the sun shines
|
NASA
satellite photo of the 1997 El Niño
shows the large warm water mass
off the west coast of the Americas |
UNU is among a group of UN agencies that, together with
the US-based National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR), will release a new report this month that
spells out lessons drawn from 16 countries during the “El Niño of the
Century” in 1997-98.
The study looked at experiences in 16 countries -- Cuba,
Costa Rica, Panama, Ecuador, Peru, Paraguay, Mozambique, Kenya, Ethiopia,
Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Philippines, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Fiji
– and warns that thousands of deaths and tens of billions of dollars in
economic damage will continue to befall the world’s developing countries
every two to seven years until an investment is made to improve
forecasting and preparedness against El Niño.
Financed by the United Nations Fund for International
Partnerships, the study is scheduled for release in Washington DC Oct. 26
and will be online at http://www.esig.ucar.edu/un/.
For more information contact Zafir Adeel.
Annual WIDER Lecture
Focuses on
Globalization and Governance
|
Jagdish Bhagwati |
Noted economist Jagdish Bhagwati will speak about the need
to devise domestic and international policy frameworks to offset the
negative effects of globalization when he gives the WIDER
Annual Lecture Nov. 27.
Professor Bhagwati contends that globalization has come in
for indiscriminate attack from critics who do not distinguish between
different types of globalization (e.g. freer trade, freer capital flows,
freer direct investment, and freer immigration) or between very different
but often-confused questions such as: is globalization bypassing the poor
or is it actually harming them. Arguing that, in the main, globalization
has a human face, the Lecture will then focus on Appropriate Governance to
devising domestic and international institutional policy frameworks to
offset the downsides that define the few warts on that human face.
Jagdish Bhagwati is the Arthur Lehman Professor of
Economics and of Political Science at Columbia University and the Andre
Meyer Senior Fellow in International Economics at the Council on Foreign
Relations, New York. He was Ford International Professor of Economics at
MIT and served as
the Economic Policy Adviser to the Director General of GATT (1991-93).
Professor Bhagwati is a leading economist, best known for
contributions to the theory of international trade policy. He also writes
frequently on public policy in leading newspapers and magazines. He has
received many Honorary Degrees and Prizes, among them the Bernhard Harms
Prize (Germany), the Freedom Prize (Switzerland), the Seidman
Distinguished Award for Political Economy (USA) and the Mahalanobis
Memorial Medal (India).
Click here
to register for the lecture and reception.
Dr. José Luis Ramirez
named
new Director of UNU/BIOLAC
|
Dr.
José Luis Ramirez |
Venezuelan geneticist Dr. José Luis Ramirez Ochoa has
been appointed Director of the UNU's Programme
for Biotechnology in Latin America and the Caribbean (UNU/BIOLAC).
Dr. Ramirez, 56, is a professor of Genetics at the Central
University of Venezuela where he heads both the Department of Graduate
Studies in Cell Biology and the Molecular Genetics Groups. He is a Ph.D.
in molecular biology from Johns Hopkins University.
An expert on tropical diseases, Dr. Ramirez has published
numerous papers on Leishmaniasis, Chaga's disease and other parasitic
infections and serves as a high level Advisor and permanent collaborator
of the Central American Network of Tropical Diseases.
Developing countries
must
invest in IT - new book
The use of information technology (IT) is
now so widely spread in the world economy that no country can ignore any
longer the need to invest in these technologies if it wants to improve the
standard of living of its citizens, according to a new book from UNU's World
Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER).
In recent years, information technology has
had a strong influence on economic growth in industrial countries and at
least some newly industrialised countries. However, developing countries
seem to have neither invested in IT not benefited from such investments to
the same extent as industrial countries.
Investment in infrastructure, physical
capital and education is an old policy prescription in the economics of
development, says editor Marri Pohjola in his introduction to
Technology, Productivity and Economic Growth: International Evidence and
Implications for Economic Growth. What is new in the analyses
presented in this book is the recommendation that the information
technology component of these investments should be high.
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