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International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

The International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) is an independent international research institute located in Laxenburg, near Vienna, in Austria. Through its research programs and initiatives, the institute conducts policy-oriented interdisciplinary research into issues too large or complex to be solved by a single country or academic discipline. This includes pressing concerns that affect the future of humanity, such as climate change, energy security, population aging, and sustainable development. The results of IIASA research and the expertise of its researchers are made available to policymakers worldwide to help them make informed and evidence-based policies.

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
IIASA is housed in the Blauer Hof Palace in Laxenburg, Austria
AbbreviationIIASA
Formation1972; 51 years ago (1972)
TypeINGO
Location
Coordinates48°04′06″N 16°21′29″E / 48.068272°N 16.358171°E / 48.068272; 16.358171
Region served
Worldwide
Official language
English
Parent organization
National Member Organizations (NMOs)
Websitewww.iiasa.ac.at

Organization

IIASA has over 400 researchers from 52 countries that work in Laxenburg, and an extensive network of collaborators, alumni, and visitors from across the globe.

The institute is currently directed by Albert van Jaarsveld. Wolfgang Lutz is the current Interim Deputy Director General for Science.[1] Past directors have included Howard Raiffa, professor at Harvard Business School and Kennedy School of Government, Roger Levien, former vice president for Strategy at Xerox, Leen Hordijk, former Director at the Institute for Environment and Sustainability, Joint Research Centre, European Commission, Ispra, Italy, and Detlof von Winterfeldt, professor at the University of Southern California.[2]

IIASA is a non-governmental institution funded by scientific organizations in its member countries, which currently include: Austria, Brazil, China, Egypt, Finland, Germany, India, Indonesia, Iran, Israel, Japan, The Republic of Korea, Malaysia (Observer), Mexico, Norway, Russia, Slovakia, South Africa, Sweden, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, the US, and Vietnam.[3] Funding for the institute also comes from contracts, grants, and donations from governments, international organizations, academia, business, and individuals.[4] Its research is independent and completely unconstrained by political or national self-interest.

History

On 4 October, 1972 representatives of the Soviet Union, United States, and ten other countries from the Eastern and Western blocs met at The Royal Society in London to sign the charter establishing IIASA.[5] It was the culmination of six years’ effort driven forward by both the US President Lyndon Johnson and the USSR Premier Alexei Kosygin. For IIASA it was the beginning of a remarkable project to use scientific cooperation to build bridges across the Cold War divide and to confront growing global problems on a truly international scale.[6] The first scientist arrived at IIASA in June 1973.[7]

IIASA built international multidisciplinary teams to confront innumerable global challenges, both long-standing and emerging. For example, a study on water pollution carried out in the 1980s by a team of IIASA chemists, biologists, and economists still form the basis of modern water policy design in Japan, USA, and the former USSR.[citation needed]

IIASA had shown the scientific benefits of bringing together different nationalities and disciplines to work toward common goals. Indeed, this approach has been widely imitated, for example, in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme.

Instead of closing in the 1990s, the institute broadened its mandate from the East and West to a truly global focus. Today, IIASA brings together a wide range of scientific skills to provide science-based insights into critical policy issues in international and national debates on global change.[8]

Current research

The IIASA mission is to provide scientific guidance to policymakers by finding solutions to global problems through applied systems analysis in order to improve human well-being and protect the environment.

In 2010, IIASA launched a new strategic plan for the next ten years, which focuses on three general problem areas: Energy and Climate Change, Food and Water, and Poverty and Equity.[9]

There are currently nine IIASA research programs carrying out research into the dynamics of global change. These programs use holistic approaches and effective, interdisciplinary collaborations to identify the multiple solutions needed to bring about a global transformation to true sustainability: Advanced Systems Analysis, Air Quality and Greenhouse Gases, Ecosystem Services and Management, Energy, Evolution and Ecology, Risk and Resilience, Transitions to New Technologies, Water, and World Population.[citation needed]

Major projects

Ten IIASA scientists were among the authors of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (the work of the IPCC, including the contributions of many scientists, was recognized by the joint award of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize).[11] IIASA researchers are major contributors to Working Groups II and III of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report[10] and are invited contributors to Working Groups I, II and III of the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report.[11]

The Greenhouse Gases – Air Pollution Interactions and Synergies (GAINS) model was launched in 2006 as an extension to the RAINS model which is used to assess cost-effective response strategies for combating air pollution, such as fine particles and ground-level ozone. The Chinese Government officially adopted GAINS in 2019 to strengthen air quality management in the country.[12]

The IIASA led Arctic Futures Initiative (AFI), in collaboration with the Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs culminated in a report, which, considered how different Arctic actors define and address issues around the human dimension, governance, international cooperation, environmental protection, pollution, climate change, security, safety, economy, tourism, infrastructure, and science and education.

IIASA is a core member of the Food and Land Use (FOLU) Coalition that brings together stakeholders from academia and the public and private sectors to identify and advance solutions that deliver food security, healthy and affordable diets, halt biodiversity loss, restore and protect ecosystem services, and mitigate climate change and environmental pollution.

A partnership with the Global Environment Facility and the UN Industrial Development Organization - the Integrated Solutions for Water, Energy, and Land (ISWEL) project developed tools and capacities for the cohesive management of water, energy, and land resources in the Indus and Zambezi basins.

Together with the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), IIASA initiated the Food Agriculture Land Use Biodiversity and Energy (FABLE) Consortium as a knowledge platform. FABLE brings together research and policy teams from 20 developed and developing countries to advance analytical tools and model-aided decision support to analyze the ability of development pathways to meet national aspirations, while also collectively aligning with, among others, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement.

The IIASA Challenges and Opportunities for Economic Integration within a wider European and Eurasian Space project served as a unique, depoliticized platform where key stakeholders could engage in evidence-based dialogue. In 2018, the project published three reports containing analyses and recommendations in several important areas: the first report compared product standards and technical regulations in the region and revealed that the EAEU has already adopted international standards more fully than previously realized, the second report on foreign direct investment highlighted that capital flows between the EU and Russia are declining. In the short-term, reducing administrative barriers could realistically help to improve the situation, and the third report looked at trans-Eurasian land transport corridors and argued that enhancing trade between Europe and Asia will require increased capacity, the removal of infrastructure bottlenecks, harmonization of regulatory environments, and enhanced associated investments.

Since 2010, IIASA is also one of the three "pillar institutions" of the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital.[13]

The Global Energy Assessment was released in 2012. The report was a result of the collaborative and integrated work of over 500 authors, analysts and reviewers worldwide who contributed independent, scientifically based and policy-relevant analysis of current and emerging energy issues and options. The assessment provides an analysis of energy-related issues including sustainable development, poverty eradication, climate change mitigation, health, energy security, and energy access.[14]

Further reading

  • Rindzevičiūtė, Eglė (15 November 2016). The power of systems: how policy sciences opened up the cold war world (PDF). Ithaca, New York, USA: Cornell University Press. doi:10.7591/cornell/9781501703188.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-5017-0318-8. Retrieved 13 June 2022.  
  • Johansson, Thomas (2012). Global Energy Assessment (GEA. Cambridge Laxenburg, Austria: Cambridge University Press International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. ISBN 978-0-521-18293-5. OCLC 810924682.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Interim IIASA Deputy Director General for Science appointed". IIASA - International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  2. ^ (PDF). VI Congreso Nacional Bibliotecas Publicas. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
  3. ^ "Full List of Members". IIASA. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  4. ^ IIASA Funding
  5. ^ Profile of IISA appended to summary of "Energy in a Finite World" (1981) http://www.iiasa.ac.at/publication/more_XB-81-202.php
  6. ^ McDONALD, ALAN (1998). "Scientific Cooperation as a Bridge Across the Cold War Divide: The Case of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) 1". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Wiley. 866 (1): 55–83. Bibcode:1998NYASA.866...55M. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1998.tb09147.x. ISSN 0077-8923. PMID 12088010.
  7. ^ Jermen Gvishiani and Roger E. Lewis (1981). "Foreword". Energy in a Finite World.
  8. ^ "History of IIASA - History". IIASA. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  9. ^ "Overview of research at IIASA - Research Overview". IIASA. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  10. ^ "Climate Change 2013/2014: Fifth Assessment Report - 5th Assessment Report". IIASA (in Malay). Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  11. ^ "Climate Change 2021/2022: IPCC Sixth Assessment Report". IIASA. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  12. ^ "The GAINS Model". IIASA. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  13. ^ "Wittgenstein Centre 5-year Report". Wittgenstein Centre. Retrieved 4 December 2020.

External links

  • Official site of IIASA

international, institute, applied, systems, analysis, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis IIASA is an independent international research institute located in Laxenburg near Vienna in Austria Through its research programs and initiatives the institute conducts policy oriented interdisciplinary research into issues too large or complex to be solved by a single country or academic discipline This includes pressing concerns that affect the future of humanity such as climate change energy security population aging and sustainable development The results of IIASA research and the expertise of its researchers are made available to policymakers worldwide to help them make informed and evidence based policies International Institute for Applied Systems AnalysisIIASA is housed in the Blauer Hof Palace in Laxenburg AustriaAbbreviationIIASAFormation1972 51 years ago 1972 TypeINGOLocationLaxenburg AustriaCoordinates48 04 06 N 16 21 29 E 48 068272 N 16 358171 E 48 068272 16 358171Region servedWorldwideOfficial languageEnglishParent organizationNational Member Organizations NMOs Websitewww wbr iiasa wbr ac wbr at Contents 1 Organization 2 History 3 Current research 4 Major projects 5 Further reading 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrganization EditIIASA has over 400 researchers from 52 countries that work in Laxenburg and an extensive network of collaborators alumni and visitors from across the globe The institute is currently directed by Albert van Jaarsveld Wolfgang Lutz is the current Interim Deputy Director General for Science 1 Past directors have included Howard Raiffa professor at Harvard Business School and Kennedy School of Government Roger Levien former vice president for Strategy at Xerox Leen Hordijk former Director at the Institute for Environment and Sustainability Joint Research Centre European Commission Ispra Italy and Detlof von Winterfeldt professor at the University of Southern California 2 IIASA is a non governmental institution funded by scientific organizations in its member countries which currently include Austria Brazil China Egypt Finland Germany India Indonesia Iran Israel Japan The Republic of Korea Malaysia Observer Mexico Norway Russia Slovakia South Africa Sweden Ukraine the United Kingdom the US and Vietnam 3 Funding for the institute also comes from contracts grants and donations from governments international organizations academia business and individuals 4 Its research is independent and completely unconstrained by political or national self interest History EditOn 4 October 1972 representatives of the Soviet Union United States and ten other countries from the Eastern and Western blocs met at The Royal Society in London to sign the charter establishing IIASA 5 It was the culmination of six years effort driven forward by both the US President Lyndon Johnson and the USSR Premier Alexei Kosygin For IIASA it was the beginning of a remarkable project to use scientific cooperation to build bridges across the Cold War divide and to confront growing global problems on a truly international scale 6 The first scientist arrived at IIASA in June 1973 7 IIASA built international multidisciplinary teams to confront innumerable global challenges both long standing and emerging For example a study on water pollution carried out in the 1980s by a team of IIASA chemists biologists and economists still form the basis of modern water policy design in Japan USA and the former USSR citation needed IIASA had shown the scientific benefits of bringing together different nationalities and disciplines to work toward common goals Indeed this approach has been widely imitated for example in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the International Geosphere Biosphere Programme Instead of closing in the 1990s the institute broadened its mandate from the East and West to a truly global focus Today IIASA brings together a wide range of scientific skills to provide science based insights into critical policy issues in international and national debates on global change 8 Current research EditThe IIASA mission is to provide scientific guidance to policymakers by finding solutions to global problems through applied systems analysis in order to improve human well being and protect the environment In 2010 IIASA launched a new strategic plan for the next ten years which focuses on three general problem areas Energy and Climate Change Food and Water and Poverty and Equity 9 There are currently nine IIASA research programs carrying out research into the dynamics of global change These programs use holistic approaches and effective interdisciplinary collaborations to identify the multiple solutions needed to bring about a global transformation to true sustainability Advanced Systems Analysis Air Quality and Greenhouse Gases Ecosystem Services and Management Energy Evolution and Ecology Risk and Resilience Transitions to New Technologies Water and World Population citation needed Major projects EditTen IIASA scientists were among the authors of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report the work of the IPCC including the contributions of many scientists was recognized by the joint award of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize 11 IIASA researchers are major contributors to Working Groups II and III of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report 10 and are invited contributors to Working Groups I II and III of the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report 11 The Greenhouse Gases Air Pollution Interactions and Synergies GAINS model was launched in 2006 as an extension to the RAINS model which is used to assess cost effective response strategies for combating air pollution such as fine particles and ground level ozone The Chinese Government officially adopted GAINS in 2019 to strengthen air quality management in the country 12 The IIASA led Arctic Futures Initiative AFI in collaboration with the Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs culminated in a report which considered how different Arctic actors define and address issues around the human dimension governance international cooperation environmental protection pollution climate change security safety economy tourism infrastructure and science and education IIASA is a core member of the Food and Land Use FOLU Coalition that brings together stakeholders from academia and the public and private sectors to identify and advance solutions that deliver food security healthy and affordable diets halt biodiversity loss restore and protect ecosystem services and mitigate climate change and environmental pollution A partnership with the Global Environment Facility and the UN Industrial Development Organization the Integrated Solutions for Water Energy and Land ISWEL project developed tools and capacities for the cohesive management of water energy and land resources in the Indus and Zambezi basins Together with the Sustainable Development Solutions Network SDSN IIASA initiated the Food Agriculture Land Use Biodiversity and Energy FABLE Consortium as a knowledge platform FABLE brings together research and policy teams from 20 developed and developing countries to advance analytical tools and model aided decision support to analyze the ability of development pathways to meet national aspirations while also collectively aligning with among others the Sustainable Development Goals SDGs and the Paris Agreement The IIASA Challenges and Opportunities for Economic Integration within a wider European and Eurasian Space project served as a unique depoliticized platform where key stakeholders could engage in evidence based dialogue In 2018 the project published three reports containing analyses and recommendations in several important areas the first report compared product standards and technical regulations in the region and revealed that the EAEU has already adopted international standards more fully than previously realized the second report on foreign direct investment highlighted that capital flows between the EU and Russia are declining In the short term reducing administrative barriers could realistically help to improve the situation and the third report looked at trans Eurasian land transport corridors and argued that enhancing trade between Europe and Asia will require increased capacity the removal of infrastructure bottlenecks harmonization of regulatory environments and enhanced associated investments Since 2010 IIASA is also one of the three pillar institutions of the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital 13 The Global Energy Assessment was released in 2012 The report was a result of the collaborative and integrated work of over 500 authors analysts and reviewers worldwide who contributed independent scientifically based and policy relevant analysis of current and emerging energy issues and options The assessment provides an analysis of energy related issues including sustainable development poverty eradication climate change mitigation health energy security and energy access 14 Further reading EditRindzeviciute Egle 15 November 2016 The power of systems how policy sciences opened up the cold war world PDF Ithaca New York USA Cornell University Press doi 10 7591 cornell 9781501703188 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 5017 0318 8 Retrieved 13 June 2022 Johansson Thomas 2012 Global Energy Assessment GEA Cambridge Laxenburg Austria Cambridge University Press International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis ISBN 978 0 521 18293 5 OCLC 810924682 See also EditAll Union Scientific Research Institute for Applied Automated Systems VNIIPAS VNIIPAS Club of RomeReferences Edit Interim IIASA Deputy Director General for Science appointed IIASA International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis Retrieved 31 October 2022 Dr Roger E Levien PDF VI Congreso Nacional Bibliotecas Publicas 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 24 July 2015 Retrieved 19 March 2022 Full List of Members IIASA Retrieved 4 December 2020 IIASA Funding Profile of IISA appended to summary of Energy in a Finite World 1981 http www iiasa ac at publication more XB 81 202 php McDONALD ALAN 1998 Scientific Cooperation as a Bridge Across the Cold War Divide The Case of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis IIASA 1 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Wiley 866 1 55 83 Bibcode 1998NYASA 866 55M doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1998 tb09147 x ISSN 0077 8923 PMID 12088010 Jermen Gvishiani and Roger E Lewis 1981 Foreword Energy in a Finite World History of IIASA History IIASA Retrieved 4 December 2020 Overview of research at IIASA Research Overview IIASA Retrieved 4 December 2020 Climate Change 2013 2014 Fifth Assessment Report 5th Assessment Report IIASA in Malay Retrieved 4 December 2020 Climate Change 2021 2022 IPCC Sixth Assessment Report IIASA Retrieved 17 March 2021 The GAINS Model IIASA Retrieved 17 March 2021 Wittgenstein Centre 5 year Report Wittgenstein Centre Retrieved 4 December 2020 External links EditOfficial site of IIASA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis amp oldid 1162588440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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