fbpx
Wikipedia

World Academy of Art and Science

The World Academy of Art and Science (WAAS), founded in 1960, is an international non-governmental scientific organization and global network of more than 800 scientists, artists, and scholars in more than 90 countries.[1][2]

World Academy of Art & Science
AbbreviationWAAS
FormationDecember 24, 1960 (1960-12-24); 62 years ago
TypeNon-profit & NGO
PurposeTransnational, transdisciplinary approach to apply knowledge for global issues
Location
Region served
Worldwide
FieldsNatural and social sciences, humanities, technology, business, governance, law and diplomacy
Membership
750+ members
President
Garry Jacobs
Websiteworldacademy.org

It serves as a forum for scientists, artists, thinkers, political and social leaders to address global challenges from a transnational, transdisciplinary perspective independent of political boundaries and prevailing orthodoxies.[3] Fellows are elected for their accomplishments in the sciences, arts and the humanities.[4][5]

It has been granted special consultative status by the UN Economic and Social Council[6] and consultative status by UNESCO.[7] Originally established in Geneva, Switzerland in 1960, the academy was founded with the aim of creating an informal world association of the highest scientific and ethical norms and standards.[8] In 2011 WAAS was incorporated as a 501(c)(3) public benefit charitable organization in the State of California. The Academy maintains offices in Napa, Bucharest, and Pondicherry, and has a special division for southeastern Europe.

History Edit

An early concept for the foundation of the academy, and a set of world scientific and youth scientist and science journalist associations, was proposed in an article in Time magazine on October 1, 1938, by philosopher Etienne Gilson in the 1940s, and echoed in the 1950s by scientists who were concerned about the potential for misuse of scientific discoveries.

In the immediate aftermath of World War II, numerous scientists and intellectuals, who had witnessed the potential of humankind to destroy itself, began to explore the idea of an international, non-governmental body that could address the major concerns of humanity. Conversations began between prominent individuals such as Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer and Joseph Rotblat, who had each played a role in the creation of the atomic bomb and were disturbed about the potential misuse of these new, powerful scientific discoveries. Einstein, in a foreword (in German) to the book "Science and the Future of Mankind," by former WAAS President Hugo Boyko in 1964, expresses a wish that “The discovery of the atomic chain reaction needs to bring about as little annihilation as the invention of matches.”[9]

The origins of the association can be traced back to a letter drafted by Leo Szilard which Einstein sent to Franklin D. Roosevelt on August 2, 1939,[10] warning him that recent research on fission chain reactions utilizing uranium made it probable that large amounts of power could be produced by a chain reaction and that, by harnessing this power, the construction of "extremely powerful bombs" was conceivable. He also suggested that Germany may already be working to develop such a weapon.[11]

The letter resulted in the establishment of the Manhattan Project in 1942 under the leadership of Oppenheimer and to the development of the weapons that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.[12]

These events were followed by the development of the first Soviet atomic bomb in 1949 and the first Hydrogen bombs by the USA in 1952 — a step soon followed by the USSR. Concern grew as the Cold War turned into a nuclear arms race.[13] In 1955 Einstein and Bertrand Russell joined with nine other scientists — four of whom later went on to found The World Academy of Art and Science — to issue the Russell–Einstein Manifesto, warning of the dire threat of global nuclear destruction.[14]

The informal discussions taking place between these distinguished scientists and intellectuals evolved into a more serious commitment — toward the responsible and ethical advances of science. The First International Conference on Science and Human Welfare[15] was held in Washington DC., and organized by two American scientists with experience in this field: Richard Montgomery Field[16] of Princeton University, former chairman of an international committee that focused on the social values of science, and John A. Fleming,[17] former President of the International Council of Scientific Unions, today known as the International Council for Science, founded in 1931.

At the conclusion of the conference, it was agreed that a World Academy would be formed, and a committee was elected to begin the first steps towards its formation. The International Preparatory Committee consisted of (from France) Pierre Chouard, George Laclavére and G. Le Lionnaise; (from the United Kingdom) Ritchie Calder, H. Munro Fox and Joseph Needham; and (from the United States) Robert Oppenheimer.

The Academy was officially founded on December 24, 1960.

Among the 42 charter members of WAAS were several individuals who had played significant roles in creating other major global organizations: Joseph Needham, a cofounder of UNESCO, Lord Boyd Orr, first Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and G. Brock Chisholm, first Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Past fellows Edit

Research programs Edit

WAAS conducts research, conferences and other activities in collaboration with a global network of partner organizations, including UN agencies and other international organizations, academies and research institutions, universities and civil society organizations.

The Academy has an on-going focus on issues related to peace, nuclear disarmament and global governance.

Global Challenges Edit

A major focus of WAAS is an examination of the root causes of the multidimensional challenges that confront humanity today. The academy and fellows search for policy frameworks that offer solutions and opportunities for the 21st century. A view commonly expressed by WAAS President Garry Jacobs is that if these challenges are seen from a global evolutionary perspective, it can help identify the characteristics,[18][19] which they all share. Fellows of WAAS work to address crises that are global in scope and that have a chance of being resolved through cooperative global action. In numerous papers by leading intellectuals, they have called for a paradigm change in thinking that is synthetic and integrated.

The Global Challenges project commenced officially at an international conference in Geneva in 2013, in collaboration with the United Nations Office. It aimed to consider in-depth the multiple challenges before the international community with a view to identifying the elements necessary for fundamental paradigm change. The Geneva conference (UNOG),[20] hosted notable speakers such as Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, Emil Constantinescu, Peter Maurer, Herwig Schopper, Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker, and Anders Wijkman. The project ideas have been represented at more than a dozen conferences and have brought hundreds of diplomats, politicians, scientists and social leaders together, representing a wide range of organizations. Some of these include the Institute for Cultural Diplomacy, Club of Madrid, Club of Rome, European Leadership Network, European Movement International, Future World Foundation, Green Cross International, Library of Alexandria, Nizami Ganjavi International Centre, Partnership for Change, Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts, Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and the World University Consortium. The meetings have led to the publication of more than 100 notable papers on a wide range of issues.

A collaboration between WAAS and Club of Rome resulted in an exploration of how humanity could work toward a new civilization initiative[21] — one that recognizes the systemic interconnectedness of people, nations, sectors, activities, challenges, forces and consequences presiding over global development.[22]

Global Leadership in the 21st Century Edit

In 2019 WAAS launched a project called Global Leadership in the 21st Century (GL21) in conjunction with the United Nations Office at Geneva (UNOG) that sought to redefine the multilateral system and identify catalytic strategies to address pressing global challenges. The project consulted with CSOs, youth networks, IGOs, think tanks and educational institutions.[23][24][25][26][27]

A five-day international conference In June 2020. organized by WAAS and UNOG hosted 20 partner organizations[28] to examine the findings and recommendations of fIfteen working groups focused on specific challenges. A final conference at UNOG followed in December 2020 with more than 800 participants and 60 speakers from more than 100 countries. In total more than 70 organizations of the UN system, academia, civil society and 400 experts contributed to the program.[29][30] Notable participants included Micheline Calmy-Rey, Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, Yukio Takasu, Elisabeth Tichy-Fisslberger, Sandrine Dixson-Declève, Ismail Serageldin, Hazel Henderson, Remus Pricopie, Irina Bokova, Dušan Vujović, Emil Contantinescu, Michael Møller, Gabriela Cuevas Barron, Noel Curran, Kehkashan Basu, Jeffrey Sachs, Jane Fonda, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, María Fernanda Espinosa, Federico Mayor Zaragoza, Dorothy Tembo and Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker.

GL-21 proposed catalytic strategies to address a number of pressing challenges through promoting the active role of civil society and social movements. Other solutions proposed at the event included fostering a shift from competitive national security to an inclusive human security paradigm; developing an accessible global delivery system for higher education; restoring trust in the media via a global news media rating system; coordinating global research on COVID-19 and other areas related to security and sustainability; the integration of scientific research, policy-making and implementation; employment guarantee programs; direct central bank funding of the SDGs; accelerating the shift from private financial capital to sustainable investments; accelerating the shift to renewable energy; and a global platform for highlighting the views of humanity on pressing societal issues.

Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Edit

Since its founding, WAAS has expressed concern over the role of science in the development and application of technologies that might endanger lives and threaten the ecosystem of Earth. Multiple papers on the topic have been published by academy fellows, such as John Scales Avery.[31] Nuclear weapons have been a central concern based on the prominent role of some of the founding members of WAAS — J. Robert Oppenheimer, Joseph Rotblat, Albert Einstein and Bertrand Russell.  Much of the technical work was taken up by Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs — a parallel organization to WAAS in which several scientists were founding members of both organizations. This included Rotblat, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize together with Pugwash in 1995, “for their efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms.” [32]

Following the end of the Cold War, WAAS promoted initiatives that supported the complete abolition of nuclear weapons under the leadership of Harlan Cleveland (WAAS President 1990-98). Cleveland had previously served as US Assistant Secretary of State for International Relations during the Cuban Missile Crisis under President Kennedy and the UN Ambassador to NATO during the Johnson Administration.[33]

In October 1994, the report of the International Commission on Peace and Food entitled "Uncommon Opportunities: Agenda for Peace & Equitable Development" [34] called for the complete abolition of nuclear weapons and was first released by Cleveland at the Academy’s General Assembly at Minneapolis. His call was then adopted by multiple agencies that helped spread the idea: James Gustave Speth, Administrator of UNDP in New York, and Federico Mayor Zaragoza, Director-General of UNESCO in Paris, before the official presentation to Boutros Boutros-Ghali, UN Secretary-General in New York in December 1994.

This was followed by a collaboration with the International Commission on Peace and Food on another conference in Delhi (2004),[35] a NATO-funded workshop in Zagreb (2005) [36] a meeting in Washington DC (2006) co-chaired by former US Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, a meeting at the UN in New York in association with the Global Security Institute (2007), a special session on nuclear abolition at the World Futures Conference, Toronto (2006) and participation in an international conference convened by the Government of India and organized by WAAS trustee Jasjit Singh (June 2008).

Research by WAAS has examined the legal implications of nuclear weapons within the context of the global rule of law,[37][38] its impact on national sovereignty, nuclear threats to global security [39] and nuclear abolition,[40] actions to enhance global security,[41] disarmament Initiatives, evaluations around universal nuclear disarmament, and control of the international arms trade.[42]

Human Security Edit

In 2016 WAAS began examining Human Security as an integrated principle for peace and security, including the 17 Sustainable Development Goals.[43] In 2020 WAAS and the UN Office in Geneva examined the relevance of the idea of human security in the 21st century at two international conferences and proposed the establishment of a Global Institute for Human Security.[44][45] A survey by WAAS, on behalf of the United Nations Human Security Unit (HSU), explored the awareness and understanding of human security among UN agencies, member states, parliamentarians, NGOs, and youth organizations. [1][46][47] Based on these findings, WAAS and the Global Security Institute (GSI) adopted an integrated concept of security, that incorporates peace, security and human development. This pioneering work seeks to place the idea of human security on the mainstream agenda of how conflicts might be resolved, especially with regard to complex issues such as the war in Afghanistan (2021) and the war in Ukraine (2022).[48]

On June 14, 2022 the Consumer Technology Association and WAAS announced that human security would be the main theme for CTA’s 2023 annual Consumer Electronics Show to highlight the central role technological innovation can play in improving the personal security of people around the world.[49]

WAAS Innovative Finance Initiatives (WIFI) Edit

The Future Capital Initiative (FCI), was launched in New York on September 11, 2019 [50] at the [United Nations] headquarters on the initiative of the United Nations Office for Partnerships (UNOP), United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and WAAS. FCI is an alliance of thought leaders, economic and financial experts convened to promote initiatives which enhance investments in the 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs) and related sustainable development objectives. The NY launch was followed by a workshop organized by WAAS at the World Bank the following week in collaboration with Fridays for the Future.[51]

FCI served as a focal point for bringing together several other WAAS-supported financial initiatives. Capital as a Force for Good: Transforming Capitalism for a Sustainable Future,[52] was, co-founded by WAAS Fellow and Trustee Ketan Patel, was established to support financing of the UN Agenda 2030 by channeling higher levels of private financial investment into the SDGs. The first report [2] was released at the WAAS-UN conference in December 2020 was based on a study of the investment portfolios of 30 of the world’s largest banks. The second report released in 2021 expanded the research to 60 banks and estimated that the SDGs face a financing gap of up to $100 trillion as a result of COVID-19 and other developments.[53]

The Academy’s Tao of Finance project was initiated in 2015[54] to examine the feasibility of creating direct central bank complementary currencies for investment in the SDGs. Its findings have been 2021 published as a Report to the World Academy entitled Financing our Future [3] by Stefan Brunnhuber, project leader and WAAS Trustee.

The Integral Investing Project addresses investment in businesses as a dimension of an integral approach to overall business management, with special focus on achieving the SDGs within the planetary boundaries. [4] Integral Investing: From Profit to Prosperity[55] was published in 2020 as a report to WAAS by WAAS Fellow Mariana Bozesan[56] based on decades of research as an entrepreneur-investor and interviews with more than 20 leading financial experts.

A fourth offshoot project is focused on the feasibility of financing the Sustainable Development Goals through the insurance and pension fund system by special public bonds with subsidized yields which reflect the true value and overall return to society of the positive and negative externalities associated with investments in the SDGs. The project is headed by Yehuda Kahane, founder of the YK Center[57] in Israel and Moshe Bareket, Director General of the Israeli Capital Market Insurance & Savings Authority (CMISA).[58],[59] WAAS Fellows participated in numerous events at COP27 Egypt, including a panel on DATE organized by the UNFCCC’s Global Innovation Hub and YK Center at the Global Financial Solutions Summit. Panelists included Massamba Thioye of UNFCCC, Yehuda Kahane, Ketan Patel, Stefan Brunnhuber, Phoebe Koundouri, Jeffrey Sachs, Moshe Bareket and YKC co-founder Tal Ronen, presenting innovative financial solutions for addressing climate change and other essential investments in the Sustainable Development Goals.

Science, Society and Sustainability Edit

WAAS is exploring the impact of science and technology on society and human knowledge. A science and technology project focuses on the social consequences and implications of knowledge and science policy-making, a central tenet on which the academy was originally founded.[60] In 2015, WAAS hosted an international conference at CERN in Geneva in collaboration with the UN Office at Geneva, to explore the impact of science and technology across different sectors and the responsibility of science in social outcomes.[61] Inspired by the successful example of CERN and the Sesame project (Synchrotron-Light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East) in the Middle East on the model of “Science for peace”, the Board of WAAS decided in 2016, in Dubrovnik, to start a similar initiative to promote peaceful cooperation in the former Yugoslavia. It called for the creation of a large international research institute for South-East Europe to promote scientific, political, and social cooperation among the countries of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Kosovo, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. Croatia agreed in principle, while Greece participated as an observer.[62] The project facilitated conferences at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste in 2013,[63] and two conferences on artificial intelligence and cognitive computing in association with IEEE in Milan[64] and Bari, Italy, in 2019. WAAS, in collaboration with UNESCO, The Club of Rome, Vinča Institute of Nuclear Sciences (VINS), the Serbian Association of Economists and other organizations conducted an international conference titled "Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development" on September 20-22, 2022 [65][66] In June 2022, WAAS and the Consumer Technology Association announced collaboration focusing on the role of technology in addressing human security needs by conducting conference sessions and announcing special awards for innovative technology at the January 2023 Consumer Electronics Show.[49]

Economy and Employment Edit

The global financial crisis of 2007-08 wiped out trillions of dollars in financial assets. It led to the adoption of what became known as Quantitative easing, the unprecedented creation and injection of funds by central governments to support financial institutions, markets, and the general economy. As the true magnitude of this multidimensional crisis and its long-term impacts on employment, incomes, and environmental sustainability became more apparent, a team of WAAS researchers embarked on a research project and created Cadmus, a journal founded by Fellows of the Academy, to reexamine the fundamental facts of prevailing economic theory in an article entitled "The Wealth of Nations Revisited."[67][68] Over the next six years, this led to a series of international conferences and colloquia at Trieste (2013),[69][70] San Paolo (2014),[71] Gainesville, Florida (2015),[72] Lisbon (2016),[73][74][75] Cape Town, (2017) [76] and Paris (2018).[77]

These discussions led to the establishment of an international multidisciplinary working group on new economic theory consisting of more than fifty researchers from WAAS, the Club of Rome, and other institutions working on issues related to economy, finance, business, psychology, sociology, law, political science, ecology, and environment. It led to more than 100 research papers on the economy, ecology, employment, money, and finance.[78][79][80] Prominent members of the transdisciplinary working group included Tomas Björkman,[81] Stefan Brunnhuber (economy & finance), Orio Giarini (economy and environment), Enrico Giovannini (economy and statistics), Heitor Gurgulino de Souza (education), Hazel Henderson (economy and ecology), Bernard Lietaer (finance), Garry Jacobs (business, development, and employment), Hunter Lovins (environment), Winston Nagan (law, human rights, and sustainable development),[82][83][84] Gunter Pauli (economy and entrepreneurship), Kate Pickett (social equity), Carlos Alvarez-Pereira (computer modeling, ecology, technology, and systems theory),[85] Ivo Slaus (politics and science), Mark Swilling (sustainable development),[86] Joanilio Teixeira (economy) [87] and Alberto Zucconi (psychology).[88]

An initial effort to synthesize the findings of the project led to the publication of ”Quest for a New Paradigm in Economics - A Synthesis of Views of the New Economics Working Group” in 2017.[89] The paper presents a value-based, transdisciplinary, human-centered, ecologically sustainable, theoretical framework for economic theory and public policy to promote sustainable human security and wellbeing. A parallel initiative by the Club of Rome that addressed similar issues led to the publication of "Come On! Capitalism, Short-Termism, Population and Destruction of the Planet" in 2017 and to the formation of the Transformational Economics Commission in 2021.[90][91]

Since 2019 the research has been integrated into a more comprehensive transdisciplinary project on Global Leadership in the 21st Century, that examines the commonalities and interdependencies between all major sectors of global social existence. A second focus has been on Human Security as an integrating perspective for all dimensions of human welfare and wellbeing, and a third on innovative financial initiatives to fund investments around the UN Sustainable Development Goals.[92][93]

Employment has occupied a central place in the work of WAAS. Research has been done on economic theory and policy and has included a number of conferences and numerous published papers.[94] WAAS has built on the recommendation originally made in the Report of the International Commission on Peace and Food to the UN in 1994: "Uncommon Opportunities: Agenda for Peace & Equitable Development." The report states that: “Recognizing the right of every citizen to employment is the essential basis and the most effective strategy for generating the necessary political will to provide jobs for all.” [95] WAAS has argued that employment within a market economy can be compared to the right to vote within a democracy because access to paying jobs provides the means to exercise other economic and social rights.[96][97][98][99] Randall Wray and others argue that the cost of unemployment in terms of lost skills and capacities, degeneration of physical and mental health, crime, drug use, and social unrest exceeds the cost of public sector employment generation programs, such as demonstrated by India’s Rural Employment Programs.[100][101][102][103]

Global Higher Education--World University Consortium Edit

The founders of WAAS were committed to the idea of establishing a World University under the auspices of the Academy, with the aim of fostering the growth of knowledge and cultivating enlightened judgment around the needs and aspirations of people. The idea was to identify and serve the common interest of humankind by offering inquiring minds a way to relate their intellectual specialties to the idea of human dignity — a process that would be open to continual clarification in a changing social environment. The original Declaration of the World University in 1960 [104] stated that “the timeliness of the idea of a world university is beyond reasonable reservation. The expansion of science and technology has put at our disposal an unparalleled instrument of fulfillment or destruction; if man is to take the future evolution of body, mind and civilization in his own hands it is imperative to find more effective ways of integrating what he knows with what he does.” The founders developed a management structure and executive committee, and established a set of operational centers in leading educational and research institutes in several countries.

Inspired by the original vision of the Academy’s founders and reshaped by the global challenges and emerging opportunities at the time, the Academy established the World University Consortium (WUC) [105] in 2013 in association with eminent international institutions. The organizations mission was to evolve and promote the development of accessible, affordable, quality higher education worldwide based on a human-centered approach. Their approach was to shift from specialized expertise to contextualized knowledge within a trans-disciplinary conceptual framework — that better reflected the complexity and integration of the real world.

At the UNOG-WAAS conference at Geneva in 2013, WAAS President Garry Jacobs posed the question: "If you were trying to create a global system of world-class higher education accessible and affordable to everyone, how would you do it?" [106]

Mind, Thinking and Creativity Edit

The Academy has concluded that current pressing global challenges reflect fundamental limitations in prevailing modes of intellectual thinking and analysis.[107] It has called for radical advances in the approach to major social problems from fragmented, disciplinary analysis and piecemeal policies which address each issue as separate and independent of the others and mechanistic systems thinking which links together and aggregates phenomena without considering their underlying social dynamics.[108] WAAS proposes a shift to integrated thinking that recognizes the underlying deeper level factors, forces and processes at work in all social dynamics.[109] It approaches individual aspects and dimensions of social reality in relation to the whole and examines the interdependences as well as the deeper level of transdisciplinary principles at work.[110] It also seeks to reconcile the objectivity of the natural sciences with the subjective value-based and ethical dimensions so central to the social sciences.[111]

This project is tied to the Academy’s central mission of integration of art and science,[112] and its work developing new pedagogy, transdisciplinary social theory and an integrated organization of knowledge in education.[113] As mathematician and deep thinker William Byers stated, "Learning is also about moving from one way of thinking about a situation to another, more complex, way of thinking."[114] Earlier stages in the project included events on Limits to Rationality Hyderabad, India, 2008,[115] two roundtables on Mind, Thinking and Creativity, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 2016 and 2017.[116][117][118]

The Academy’s research has drawn on insights regarding mental processes by Einstein, William Byers, Sri Aurobindo and other renowned thinkers from around the world. Its approach is based on the idea that "Mind is an instrument of analysis and synthesis, but not of essential knowledge."[119] The Project has explored implicit assumptions and barriers that confine our thinking within narrow social and conceptual boundaries, the consequent errors and limitations, ways in which we can learn to consciously broaden the range and enhance the quality of rational thinking and develop the capacity for more intuitive creative mental processes.[120] Research includes analysis of the inherent limitations and blindspots implicit in the prevailing fragmentary, rationalist, materialistic, mechanistic approach to understanding and solving human problems, including an exploration of new ways of knowing generated by the emerging sciences of systems theory, complexity, autopoiesis and recent discoveries in the physical, biological and social sciences. It has applied this approach in the formulation of new thinking in fields such as economy, social transformation and a transdisciplinary theory of society.,[121]

Societal Transformation Edit

WAAS has been concerned with the underlying forces and processes affecting global social evolution since the time of its founding.[122] It has examined the process of social change from various perspectives, in different contexts and fields of activity, and concluded that what is required is clear and complete knowledge of the process of conscious social evolution.[123] Former President of WAAS Harlan Cleveland coined the phrase “revolution of rising expectations”[124] to reflect the subjective social and psychological forces that were underlying the objective technological and institutional dimensions of development observed in fast growing East Asian countries after WWII.[125] Through meetings, roundtable discussions and publications, WAAS has sought to identify these forces and the ways in which to convert the long, slow trial and error process of social evolution into a conscious process of social transformation with emphasis on the catalytic role of values, ideas, organizations, technologies and leadership in this process.[126]

The Academy’s research seeks to identify the common underlying social processes applicable to all fields and levels of society, with the aim of evolving a trans-disciplinary science of society.,

A special session at the 1998 WAAS General Assembly in Vancouver emphasized the need for formulation of comprehensive, multidimensional theory of social development incorporating political, legal, economic, technological, social, cultural and psychological dimensions.[127],[128] Building on this, a conference in Chennai in 1999 advocated a global social movement to mobilize the underlying social forces for a reinvention of the multilateral institutions to recognize the inseparable global unity of global society.[129] The WAAS publication Human Choice: Genetic Code of Social Development (1999) examines the powers of mind to organize the physical materials, social energies and mental ideas of humanity to achieve greater material, social, mental and spiritual advancement.[130]

Two five-day workshops on the role of the individual and the process of social accomplishment were conducted at Dubrovnik in 2014.[131], [132] They explored the role of the characteristics and social impact of original thinkers, pioneers and innovators, and the process by which these leaders act as catalysts of social innovation.

WAAS also conducted two sessions on social transformation during the WAAS@60 conference (2020-21) and published a collection of articles in Cadmus Journal examining the deep systemic change and societal transformation needed to protect humanity and all life on Earth.[133][134]

Publications Edit

  • Cadmus Journal: a twice yearly print and electronic journal focusing on issues related to economy, security and global governance.[135]
  • Eruditio Journal: a twice yearly electronic journal for examination of ideas and perspectives that fall beyond the purview of traditional academic publications.[136]
  • WAAS Papers: Articles, papers and presentations by Fellows of the academy.[137]
  • Reports to the World Academy of Art & Science: Books by WAAS Fellows accepted by the Board of Trustees as official reports to the academy[138]

Management Edit

The academy is managed by a 21-member board of trustees and an eight-member executive committee. The principal officers are Garry Jacobs, President & Chief Executive Officer, Alberto Zucconi, chairman of the Board.

Past presidents Edit

  1. Lord John Boyd Orr
  2. Hugo Boyko
  3. Stuart Mudd
  4. Marion Mushkat
  5. Detlev Bronk
  6. Harold Lasswell
  7. Walter Isard
  8. Ronald St. John Macdonald
  9. Carl-Göran Hedén
  10. Harlan Cleveland
  11. Walter Truett Anderson
  12. Jeffrey Schwartz
  13. Ivo Slaus[139]
  14. Heitor Gurgulino de Souza

References Edit

  1. ^ Boyko, Hugo (1966). "The World Academy of Art and Science and the Creation of the World University". Conflict Resolution and World Education. pp. 211–222. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-6269-4_23. ISBN 978-94-017-5823-9. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  2. ^ "World Academy of Art and Science records". Archives at Yale. Yale University Library.
  3. ^ Boyko, Hugo (1961). Science and the Future of Mankind. Indiana University Press. p. 7.
  4. ^ "Noam Lior Elected to World Academy of Art and Science". Penn Engineering News. University of Pennsylvania.
  5. ^ "Assie-Lumumba named to World Academy of Art and Science". Cornell Chronicle. Cornell University.
  6. ^ "List of non-governmental organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council as at 1 September 2019 - Page 124" (PDF). UN - Department of Economic and Social Affairs. United Nations Economic and Social Council.
  7. ^ "Committee on Non-Governmental Partners, Relations with non-governmental partners - Page 3". UNESDOC Digital Library. UNESCO.
  8. ^ "Ivo Slaus president of the world academy of art & science". English.republika.mk. 24 December 2013.
  9. ^ ""Science and the Future of Mankind," by Hugo Boyko" (PDF). p. 13.
  10. ^ "Manhattan Project: Einstein's Letter, 1939". www.osti.gov. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  11. ^ "Manhattan Project: Einstein's Letter, 1939". www.osti.gov. US Department of Energy. Retrieved 6 June 2022.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. ^ "The Manhattan Project". nuclearweaponarchive.org. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  13. ^ "The Soviet-American Arms Race | History Today". www.historytoday.com. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  14. ^ "Russell-Einstein Manifesto". Atomic Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  15. ^ Boyko, Hugo (2013-11-21). Science and the Future of Mankind. Springer. ISBN 978-94-017-6010-2.
  16. ^ "Richard Montgomery Field (1885-1961)". Smithsonian Institution Archives. 1923. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  17. ^ Boyko, Hugo (2013-11-21). Science and the Future of Mankind. Springer. p. 6. ISBN 978-94-017-6010-2.
  18. ^ "New Paradigm | Cadmus Journal".
  19. ^ Naveen Madishetty. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-07-16.
  20. ^ ANNUAL REPORT 2013: Supporting a World in Transformation (PDF) (Report). UNITED NATIONS OFFICE AT GENEVA.
  21. ^ "Emerging New Civilization Initiative (ENCI) - Engagement Paper". Club of Rome. 2019-06-19. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  22. ^ "Conscious Capital". www.consciouswealth.global. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  23. ^ "Strategies for Global Food Security – COSA | Committee on Sustainability Assessment". thecosa.org. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  24. ^ Koundouri, Prof. Phoebe. "Cluster for Sustainability Transition" (PDF).
  25. ^ "Lessons of the Pandemic | Institut Levant". 2020-12-26. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  26. ^ Chuchalin, A. G. (2021). "COVID-19 and human security". Terapevticheskii Arkhiv (in Russian). 93 (3): 253–254. doi:10.26442/00403660.2021.03.200717. PMID 36286691. S2CID 234874463.
  27. ^ "Environmental Sustainability Solutions - Security & Sustainability Guide". Security & Sustainability. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  28. ^ "United Nations Office at Geneva and World Academy of Art & Science Organize a Conference on Global Leadership for the 21st Century | UN GENEVA". www.ungeneva.org. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  29. ^ ""We are not doomed, unless we choose to be"—Speakers urge political courage to tackle pressing global issues | UN GENEVA". www.ungeneva.org. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  30. ^ "Opening of the WAAS – UNOG Conference: Global Leadership for the 21st century | UN GENEVA". www.ungeneva.org. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  31. ^ Avery, John Scales (2016-07-02). "The Complete Abolition of Nuclear Weapons". Peace Review. 28 (3): 302–308. doi:10.1080/10402659.2016.1201943. ISSN 1040-2659. S2CID 151787389.
  32. ^ "The Bertrand Russell Society". www.lehman.edu. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  33. ^ Saull, Richard (2012-02-09), "4. American foreign policy during the Cold War", US Foreign Policy, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/hepl/9780199585816.003.0004, ISBN 978-0-19-958581-6, retrieved 2022-06-17
  34. ^ International Commission on Peace and Food (1994). Uncommon opportunities: an agenda for peace and equitable development: report of the International Commission on Peace and Food. London: Zed Books. ISBN 1-85649-305-9. OCLC 31411760.
  35. ^ Matthews DE, Farewell VT (2007). "Contents / Preface 4th Edition, Preface 3rd Edition, Preface 2nd Edition / Preface 1st Edition". Using and Understanding Medical Statistics. Basel: KARGER. pp. I–XX. doi:10.1159/000099416. ISBN 978-3-8055-8189-9.
  36. ^ Stanicic, Mladen (November 2006). "Security in a Knowledge-based Society: The Role of the South-East European Division of the WAAS".
  37. ^ "Re-examining the 1996 ICJ Advisory Opinion: Concerning the Legality of Nuclear Weapons | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  38. ^ "Simulated ICJ Judgment : Revisiting the Lawfulness of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  39. ^ "Nuclear Threats and Security | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  40. ^ CADMUS (April 2011). "The Wealth of Nations Revisited" (PDF).
  41. ^ ""Actions to Enhance Global Security" | UN GENEVA". www.ungeneva.org. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  42. ^ Singh, Jasjit; Sethi, Manpreet; Jacobs, Garry (2007-10-01). "Dangerous knowledge: Can nuclear weapons be abolished?". Futures. Knowledge Futures. 39 (8): 963–972. doi:10.1016/j.futures.2007.03.008. ISSN 0016-3287.
  43. ^ "Integrated Approach to Peace & Human Security in the 21st Century* | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  44. ^ "Science as a Social Good | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  45. ^ "Approaching Human Security | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  46. ^ "UNTFHS-WAAS-IAP survey on Human Security". www.interacademies.org. InterAcademy Partnership (IAP). Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  47. ^ "World Association of Non-Governmental Organizations - About WANGO". www.wango.org. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  48. ^ Granoff, Jonathan; Jacobs, Garry (2021-08-28). "Building human security for Afghanistan". The Hill. Retrieved 2022-06-10.
  49. ^ a b "CES 2023 Will Focus on How Innovation is Addressing Global Challenges". CES (Press release). New York. June 15, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  50. ^ "Future Capital initiative seeks common solutions to common challenges". UNCTAD. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  51. ^ "Founders Report". www.futureofcapital.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  52. ^ "Force for Good - Sustainable Finance, Sustainable Development Goals". forcegood.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  53. ^ "Force for Good - Sustainable Finance, Sustainable Development Goals". forcegood.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  54. ^ "Innovative Financial Engineering to Fund the SDGs - A WAAS Initiative* | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  55. ^ "Mariana Bozesan — Integral Investing: From Profit to Prosperity". AQAL • Integral Investing. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  56. ^ "The Investment Turnaround Podcast Series". AQAL • Integral Investing. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  57. ^ "YKCenter". YKCenter. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  58. ^ "The New Economy: A Financial Climate for Climate Finance | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  59. ^ "TransFormNation: A Suggestion for Rapid Top-Down Transformation | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  60. ^ "Yale Archives".
  61. ^ "CERN Website event page".
  62. ^ "CERN Website News item".
  63. ^ "Trieste Forum".
  64. ^ "IEEE Event, Milan".
  65. ^ "World Conference on Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development". International Year of Basic Sciences for Development. Retrieved 2022-11-16.
  66. ^ "World Conference on Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development". www.interacademies.org. Retrieved 2022-11-16.
  67. ^ "A Project on The Wealth of Nations Revisited | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  68. ^ Jacobs, Garry (2015-01-01). "The need for a new paradigm in economics". Review of Keynesian Economics. 3 (1): 2–8. doi:10.4337/roke.2015.01.01.
  69. ^ "Trieste Forum on the "Impact of Science and Technology on Society and Economy" | UN GENEVA". www.ungeneva.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  70. ^ ”Giorgio. "WAAS Trieste Forum: Impact of Science and Technology on Society and Economy | (smr H328) (05-6 March 2013)". Indico - Conferences and Events. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  71. ^ Palley, Thomas I. (2015-01-01). "Symposium introduction: Global Crisis and the Need for Paradigm Change". Review of Keynesian Economics. 3 (1): 1. doi:10.4337/roke.2015.01.00.
  72. ^ XII INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM Visions of Sustainable Development: Theory and Action (PDF).
  73. ^ Gorica, Univerzitet Donja. "UDG - Univerzitet Donja Gorica". UDG - Univerzitet Donja Gorica. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  74. ^ XIII INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM. Post-2008 Global Dynamics & Structural Changes: Economic, Political and Eco- Societal Transitions.
  75. ^ "XIII International Colloquium ISEG-ULisboa". Lisbon School of Economics & Management.
  76. ^ XIV INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM. TOWARDS A HUMAN-CENTERED SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL SYSTEM FOR THE 21ST CENTURY (PDF).
  77. ^ "XIII International Colloquium". XIII International Colloquium. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  78. ^ "New Economic Theory". neweconomictheory.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  79. ^ "Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  80. ^ Jacobs, Garry (2015-01-01). "The need for a new paradigm in economics". Review of Keynesian Economics. 3 (1): 2–8. doi:10.4337/roke.2015.01.01.
  81. ^ "The market myth - Tomas Björkman - inbunden (9789187935633) | Adlibris Bokhandel". www.adlibris.com. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  82. ^ "Human Rights and Employment | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  83. ^ "Human Rights, Liberty & Socio-Economic Justice: Economic Theory and the Ascent of Private Property Values | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  84. ^ "Nuclear Threats and Security | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  85. ^ "Disruptive Technologies, A Critical Yet Hopeful View | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  86. ^ "About". Mark Swilling. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  87. ^ "Joanilio Rodolpho Teixeira | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  88. ^ "Alberto Zucconi | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  89. ^ "Quest for a New Paradigm in Economics - A Synthesis of Views of the New Economics Working Group* | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  90. ^ "Reframing economics". Club of Rome. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  91. ^ von Weizsäcker, Ernst Ulrich; Wijkman, Anders (2018). Come On!. doi:10.1007/978-1-4939-7419-1. ISBN 978-1-4939-7418-4. S2CID 199492894.
  92. ^ "Conferences | New Economic Theory". neweconomictheory.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  93. ^ "Webinars | New Economic Theory". neweconomictheory.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  94. ^ "Papers | New Economic Theory". www.neweconomictheory.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  95. ^ "Uncommon Opportunities - IV Full Employment". www.icpd.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  96. ^ "Theory & Strategies for Full Employment | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  97. ^ "Global Prospects for Full Employment | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  98. ^ "An Aging Workforce: Employment Opportunities and Obstacles | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  99. ^ "Policy for Full Employment | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  100. ^ "Search | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  101. ^ "Money, Markets and Social Power | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  102. ^ "Global Prospects for Full Employment | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  103. ^ "Book review — Money and Sustainability: The Missing Link | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-18.
  104. ^ Boyko, Hugo (2013-11-21). Science and the Future of Mankind. Springer. pp. VII. ISBN 978-94-017-6010-2.
  105. ^ "Reflections on the Future of Global Higher Education - WAAS Conference Report | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
  106. ^ "Retrospective and Reflections on WAAS@60 | Cadmus Journal (8. Person-Centered Education)". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
  107. ^ "20 | MIND, THINKING AND CREATIVITY". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  108. ^ "Mind, Thinking and Creativity WAAS Playlist". YouTube.
  109. ^ "New Paradigm in Human Development: A Progress Report | Cadmus Journal". www.cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  110. ^ "A Brief History of Mind and Civilization" (PDF).
  111. ^ "Unifying Subjectivity and Objectivity".
  112. ^ Oppenheimer, Robert (1955). "Prospects in the Arts and Sciences". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. 11 (2): 42–44. doi:10.1080/00963402.1955.11453555 – via DOI: 10.1080/00963402.1955.11453555.
  113. ^ "CFP: Anticipation, Agency and Complexity :: Center for Science, Technology, Medicine, & Society". Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  114. ^ "Webinar on Mind, Thinking & Creativity | World University Consortium". wunicon.org. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  115. ^ "Krunoslav Pisk CV" (PDF).
  116. ^ "21.1 | MIND, THINKING AND CREATIVITY". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  117. ^ "20 | MIND, THINKING AND CREATIVITY". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  118. ^ "Report on Mind, Thinking and Creativity" (PDF). The World Academy of Art and Science.
  119. ^ "The Supermind as Creator". The Incarnate Word. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  120. ^ "The international webinar "Mind, Thinking and Creativity" with the participation of Professor Winston Nagan was held at the Department of International Relations | Al-Farabi Kazakh National University". www.kaznu.kz. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  121. ^ "Mind, thinking and Creativity || Cadmus Journal".
  122. ^ Boyko, Hugo, ed. (1965). Science and the future of mankind. Indiana University Press.
  123. ^ WAAS Social Transformation Working Group (November 29, 2021). "11 essays on Social Transformation, The most important challenge facing humanity". Cadmus.
  124. ^ Cleveland, Harlan (1965). "The evolution of rising responsibility". International Organization. 19 (3): 828–834. doi:10.1017/S0020818300012601. S2CID 154289526.
  125. ^ Susan Ratcliffe, ed. (2017). "Harlan Cleveland 1918–2008 American government official". Oxford Essential Quotations (5th ed.). doi:10.1093/acref/9780191843730.001.0001. Retrieved 2022-09-17 – via Oxford Reference.
  126. ^ "16.1 | WAAS". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
  127. ^ Daniel Wolfish, Gordon Smith and, ed. (2001). Who is afraid of the State? Canada in a world of Multiple Centers of Power. University of Toronto Press. p. 344.
  128. ^ Singh, Manoj Kumar (2021). Introduction to Development Psychology. KK Publications. p. 146.
  129. ^ "Projects". icpd.org. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
  130. ^ Cleveland, Harlan; Jacobs, Garry (1999-11-01). "Human Choice: the genetic code for social development". Futures. 31 (9): 959–970. doi:10.1016/S0016-3287(99)00055-5. ISSN 0016-3287.
  131. ^ "3 | ACCOMPLISHMENT, GROWTH, SOCIAL EVOLUTION AND THE CHARACTER OF LIFE". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
  132. ^ "7 | TOWARD A TRANSDICIPLINARY SCIENCE OF SOCIETY". iuc.hr. Inter University Centre Dubrovnik. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
  133. ^ "Retrospectives and Reflections WAAS@60" (PDF).
  134. ^ "11 Essays on Societal Transformation: The Most Important Challenge Facing Humanity | Cadmus Journal". cadmusjournal.org. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
  135. ^ "Cadmus Journal". Cadmus Journal. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  136. ^ "Eruditio | World Academy of Art & Science". Eruditio.worldacademy.org. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  137. ^ "Index of Monographs & Papers by Fellows | World Academy of Art & Science". Worldacademy.org. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  138. ^ "Books | World Academy of Art & Science". Worldacademy.org. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  139. ^ "Presentation of the World Academy of Art & Science". www.icdhouse.org. 15 April 2013.

External links Edit

  • The World Academy of Art and Science: History and Manifesto.- J. "CADMUS", Vol. I, Issue 2, 2011, pp. 151–152
  • new.worldacademy.org, official website

world, academy, science, waas, founded, 1960, international, governmental, scientific, organization, global, network, more, than, scientists, artists, scholars, more, than, countries, world, academy, scienceabbreviationwaasformationdecember, 1960, 1960, years,. The World Academy of Art and Science WAAS founded in 1960 is an international non governmental scientific organization and global network of more than 800 scientists artists and scholars in more than 90 countries 1 2 World Academy of Art amp ScienceAbbreviationWAASFormationDecember 24 1960 1960 12 24 62 years agoTypeNon profit amp NGOPurposeTransnational transdisciplinary approach to apply knowledge for global issuesLocationNapa California U S Bucharest Romania Pondicherry IndiaRegion servedWorldwideFieldsNatural and social sciences humanities technology business governance law and diplomacyMembership750 membersPresidentGarry JacobsWebsiteworldacademy wbr orgIt serves as a forum for scientists artists thinkers political and social leaders to address global challenges from a transnational transdisciplinary perspective independent of political boundaries and prevailing orthodoxies 3 Fellows are elected for their accomplishments in the sciences arts and the humanities 4 5 It has been granted special consultative status by the UN Economic and Social Council 6 and consultative status by UNESCO 7 Originally established in Geneva Switzerland in 1960 the academy was founded with the aim of creating an informal world association of the highest scientific and ethical norms and standards 8 In 2011 WAAS was incorporated as a 501 c 3 public benefit charitable organization in the State of California The Academy maintains offices in Napa Bucharest and Pondicherry and has a special division for southeastern Europe Contents 1 History 2 Past fellows 3 Research programs 3 1 Global Challenges 3 2 Global Leadership in the 21st Century 3 3 Abolition of Nuclear Weapons 3 4 Human Security 3 5 WAAS Innovative Finance Initiatives WIFI 3 6 Science Society and Sustainability 3 7 Economy and Employment 3 8 Global Higher Education World University Consortium 3 9 Mind Thinking and Creativity 3 10 Societal Transformation 4 Publications 5 Management 5 1 Past presidents 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditAn early concept for the foundation of the academy and a set of world scientific and youth scientist and science journalist associations was proposed in an article in Time magazine on October 1 1938 by philosopher Etienne Gilson in the 1940s and echoed in the 1950s by scientists who were concerned about the potential for misuse of scientific discoveries In the immediate aftermath of World War II numerous scientists and intellectuals who had witnessed the potential of humankind to destroy itself began to explore the idea of an international non governmental body that could address the major concerns of humanity Conversations began between prominent individuals such as Albert Einstein Robert Oppenheimer and Joseph Rotblat who had each played a role in the creation of the atomic bomb and were disturbed about the potential misuse of these new powerful scientific discoveries Einstein in a foreword in German to the book Science and the Future of Mankind by former WAAS President Hugo Boyko in 1964 expresses a wish that The discovery of the atomic chain reaction needs to bring about as little annihilation as the invention of matches 9 The origins of the association can be traced back to a letter drafted by Leo Szilard which Einstein sent to Franklin D Roosevelt on August 2 1939 10 warning him that recent research on fission chain reactions utilizing uranium made it probable that large amounts of power could be produced by a chain reaction and that by harnessing this power the construction of extremely powerful bombs was conceivable He also suggested that Germany may already be working to develop such a weapon 11 The letter resulted in the establishment of the Manhattan Project in 1942 under the leadership of Oppenheimer and to the development of the weapons that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 12 These events were followed by the development of the first Soviet atomic bomb in 1949 and the first Hydrogen bombs by the USA in 1952 a step soon followed by the USSR Concern grew as the Cold War turned into a nuclear arms race 13 In 1955 Einstein and Bertrand Russell joined with nine other scientists four of whom later went on to found The World Academy of Art and Science to issue the Russell Einstein Manifesto warning of the dire threat of global nuclear destruction 14 The informal discussions taking place between these distinguished scientists and intellectuals evolved into a more serious commitment toward the responsible and ethical advances of science The First International Conference on Science and Human Welfare 15 was held in Washington DC and organized by two American scientists with experience in this field Richard Montgomery Field 16 of Princeton University former chairman of an international committee that focused on the social values of science and John A Fleming 17 former President of the International Council of Scientific Unions today known as the International Council for Science founded in 1931 At the conclusion of the conference it was agreed that a World Academy would be formed and a committee was elected to begin the first steps towards its formation The International Preparatory Committee consisted of from France Pierre Chouard George Laclavere and G Le Lionnaise from the United Kingdom Ritchie Calder H Munro Fox and Joseph Needham and from the United States Robert Oppenheimer The Academy was officially founded on December 24 1960 Among the 42 charter members of WAAS were several individuals who had played significant roles in creating other major global organizations Joseph Needham a cofounder of UNESCO Lord Boyd Orr first Director General of the Food and Agriculture Organization FAO and G Brock Chisholm first Director General of the World Health Organization WHO Past fellows EditKnute Bjarne Buttedahl educator and researcher an expert on global education and international development Arthur C Clarke author of 2001 A Space Odyssey Sir John C Eccles Nobel laureate in medicine Buckminster Fuller architect and systems theorist Hazel Henderson environmental activist and futurist Andre Michel Lwoff Nobel laureate in medicine Abraham Maslow psychologist Yehudi Menuhin violinist Margaret Mead cultural anthropologist Alva Myrdal Nobel laureate in economics Gunnar Myrdal Nobel laureate in economics Philip Noel Baker Nobel peace laureate Linus Pauling Nobel laureate in chemistry and peace Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan president of India elected as honorary fellow Jonas Salk developer of the Salk polio vaccine Vikram Sarabhai chairman of the Indian Atomic Energy Commission Arne Tiselius Nobel laureate in chemistryResearch programs EditWAAS conducts research conferences and other activities in collaboration with a global network of partner organizations including UN agencies and other international organizations academies and research institutions universities and civil society organizations The Academy has an on going focus on issues related to peace nuclear disarmament and global governance Global Challenges Edit A major focus of WAAS is an examination of the root causes of the multidimensional challenges that confront humanity today The academy and fellows search for policy frameworks that offer solutions and opportunities for the 21st century A view commonly expressed by WAAS President Garry Jacobs is that if these challenges are seen from a global evolutionary perspective it can help identify the characteristics 18 19 which they all share Fellows of WAAS work to address crises that are global in scope and that have a chance of being resolved through cooperative global action In numerous papers by leading intellectuals they have called for a paradigm change in thinking that is synthetic and integrated The Global Challenges project commenced officially at an international conference in Geneva in 2013 in collaboration with the United Nations Office It aimed to consider in depth the multiple challenges before the international community with a view to identifying the elements necessary for fundamental paradigm change The Geneva conference UNOG 20 hosted notable speakers such as Kassym Jomart Tokayev Rolf Dieter Heuer Emil Constantinescu Peter Maurer Herwig Schopper Ernst Ulrich von Weizsacker and Anders Wijkman The project ideas have been represented at more than a dozen conferences and have brought hundreds of diplomats politicians scientists and social leaders together representing a wide range of organizations Some of these include the Institute for Cultural Diplomacy Club of Madrid Club of Rome European Leadership Network European Movement International Future World Foundation Green Cross International Library of Alexandria Nizami Ganjavi International Centre Partnership for Change Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and the World University Consortium The meetings have led to the publication of more than 100 notable papers on a wide range of issues A collaboration between WAAS and Club of Rome resulted in an exploration of how humanity could work toward a new civilization initiative 21 one that recognizes the systemic interconnectedness of people nations sectors activities challenges forces and consequences presiding over global development 22 Global Leadership in the 21st Century Edit In 2019 WAAS launched a project called Global Leadership in the 21st Century GL21 in conjunction with the United Nations Office at Geneva UNOG that sought to redefine the multilateral system and identify catalytic strategies to address pressing global challenges The project consulted with CSOs youth networks IGOs think tanks and educational institutions 23 24 25 26 27 A five day international conference In June 2020 organized by WAAS and UNOG hosted 20 partner organizations 28 to examine the findings and recommendations of fIfteen working groups focused on specific challenges A final conference at UNOG followed in December 2020 with more than 800 participants and 60 speakers from more than 100 countries In total more than 70 organizations of the UN system academia civil society and 400 experts contributed to the program 29 30 Notable participants included Micheline Calmy Rey Vaira Vike Freiberga Yukio Takasu Elisabeth Tichy Fisslberger Sandrine Dixson Decleve Ismail Serageldin Hazel Henderson Remus Pricopie Irina Bokova Dusan Vujovic Emil Contantinescu Michael Moller Gabriela Cuevas Barron Noel Curran Kehkashan Basu Jeffrey Sachs Jane Fonda Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Maria Fernanda Espinosa Federico Mayor Zaragoza Dorothy Tembo and Ernst Ulrich von Weizsacker GL 21 proposed catalytic strategies to address a number of pressing challenges through promoting the active role of civil society and social movements Other solutions proposed at the event included fostering a shift from competitive national security to an inclusive human security paradigm developing an accessible global delivery system for higher education restoring trust in the media via a global news media rating system coordinating global research on COVID 19 and other areas related to security and sustainability the integration of scientific research policy making and implementation employment guarantee programs direct central bank funding of the SDGs accelerating the shift from private financial capital to sustainable investments accelerating the shift to renewable energy and a global platform for highlighting the views of humanity on pressing societal issues Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Edit Since its founding WAAS has expressed concern over the role of science in the development and application of technologies that might endanger lives and threaten the ecosystem of Earth Multiple papers on the topic have been published by academy fellows such as John Scales Avery 31 Nuclear weapons have been a central concern based on the prominent role of some of the founding members of WAAS J Robert Oppenheimer Joseph Rotblat Albert Einstein and Bertrand Russell Much of the technical work was taken up by Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs a parallel organization to WAAS in which several scientists were founding members of both organizations This included Rotblat who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize together with Pugwash in 1995 for their efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and in the longer run to eliminate such arms 32 Following the end of the Cold War WAAS promoted initiatives that supported the complete abolition of nuclear weapons under the leadership of Harlan Cleveland WAAS President 1990 98 Cleveland had previously served as US Assistant Secretary of State for International Relations during the Cuban Missile Crisis under President Kennedy and the UN Ambassador to NATO during the Johnson Administration 33 In October 1994 the report of the International Commission on Peace and Food entitled Uncommon Opportunities Agenda for Peace amp Equitable Development 34 called for the complete abolition of nuclear weapons and was first released by Cleveland at the Academy s General Assembly at Minneapolis His call was then adopted by multiple agencies that helped spread the idea James Gustave Speth Administrator of UNDP in New York and Federico Mayor Zaragoza Director General of UNESCO in Paris before the official presentation to Boutros Boutros Ghali UN Secretary General in New York in December 1994 This was followed by a collaboration with the International Commission on Peace and Food on another conference in Delhi 2004 35 a NATO funded workshop in Zagreb 2005 36 a meeting in Washington DC 2006 co chaired by former US Defense Secretary Robert McNamara a meeting at the UN in New York in association with the Global Security Institute 2007 a special session on nuclear abolition at the World Futures Conference Toronto 2006 and participation in an international conference convened by the Government of India and organized by WAAS trustee Jasjit Singh June 2008 Research by WAAS has examined the legal implications of nuclear weapons within the context of the global rule of law 37 38 its impact on national sovereignty nuclear threats to global security 39 and nuclear abolition 40 actions to enhance global security 41 disarmament Initiatives evaluations around universal nuclear disarmament and control of the international arms trade 42 Human Security Edit In 2016 WAAS began examining Human Security as an integrated principle for peace and security including the 17 Sustainable Development Goals 43 In 2020 WAAS and the UN Office in Geneva examined the relevance of the idea of human security in the 21st century at two international conferences and proposed the establishment of a Global Institute for Human Security 44 45 A survey by WAAS on behalf of the United Nations Human Security Unit HSU explored the awareness and understanding of human security among UN agencies member states parliamentarians NGOs and youth organizations 1 46 47 Based on these findings WAAS and the Global Security Institute GSI adopted an integrated concept of security that incorporates peace security and human development This pioneering work seeks to place the idea of human security on the mainstream agenda of how conflicts might be resolved especially with regard to complex issues such as the war in Afghanistan 2021 and the war in Ukraine 2022 48 On June 14 2022 the Consumer Technology Association and WAAS announced that human security would be the main theme for CTA s 2023 annual Consumer Electronics Show to highlight the central role technological innovation can play in improving the personal security of people around the world 49 WAAS Innovative Finance Initiatives WIFI Edit The Future Capital Initiative FCI was launched in New York on September 11 2019 50 at the United Nations headquarters on the initiative of the United Nations Office for Partnerships UNOP United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD and WAAS FCI is an alliance of thought leaders economic and financial experts convened to promote initiatives which enhance investments in the 17 sustainable development goals SDGs and related sustainable development objectives The NY launch was followed by a workshop organized by WAAS at the World Bank the following week in collaboration with Fridays for the Future 51 FCI served as a focal point for bringing together several other WAAS supported financial initiatives Capital as a Force for Good Transforming Capitalism for a Sustainable Future 52 was co founded by WAAS Fellow and Trustee Ketan Patel was established to support financing of the UN Agenda 2030 by channeling higher levels of private financial investment into the SDGs The first report 2 was released at the WAAS UN conference in December 2020 was based on a study of the investment portfolios of 30 of the world s largest banks The second report released in 2021 expanded the research to 60 banks and estimated that the SDGs face a financing gap of up to 100 trillion as a result of COVID 19 and other developments 53 The Academy s Tao of Finance project was initiated in 2015 54 to examine the feasibility of creating direct central bank complementary currencies for investment in the SDGs Its findings have been 2021 published as a Report to the World Academy entitled Financing our Future 3 by Stefan Brunnhuber project leader and WAAS Trustee The Integral Investing Project addresses investment in businesses as a dimension of an integral approach to overall business management with special focus on achieving the SDGs within the planetary boundaries 4 Integral Investing From Profit to Prosperity 55 was published in 2020 as a report to WAAS by WAAS Fellow Mariana Bozesan 56 based on decades of research as an entrepreneur investor and interviews with more than 20 leading financial experts A fourth offshoot project is focused on the feasibility of financing the Sustainable Development Goals through the insurance and pension fund system by special public bonds with subsidized yields which reflect the true value and overall return to society of the positive and negative externalities associated with investments in the SDGs The project is headed by Yehuda Kahane founder of the YK Center 57 in Israel and Moshe Bareket Director General of the Israeli Capital Market Insurance amp Savings Authority CMISA 58 59 WAAS Fellows participated in numerous events at COP27 Egypt including a panel on DATE organized by the UNFCCC s Global Innovation Hub and YK Center at the Global Financial Solutions Summit Panelists included Massamba Thioye of UNFCCC Yehuda Kahane Ketan Patel Stefan Brunnhuber Phoebe Koundouri Jeffrey Sachs Moshe Bareket and YKC co founder Tal Ronen presenting innovative financial solutions for addressing climate change and other essential investments in the Sustainable Development Goals Science Society and Sustainability Edit WAAS is exploring the impact of science and technology on society and human knowledge A science and technology project focuses on the social consequences and implications of knowledge and science policy making a central tenet on which the academy was originally founded 60 In 2015 WAAS hosted an international conference at CERN in Geneva in collaboration with the UN Office at Geneva to explore the impact of science and technology across different sectors and the responsibility of science in social outcomes 61 Inspired by the successful example of CERN and the Sesame project Synchrotron Light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East in the Middle East on the model of Science for peace the Board of WAAS decided in 2016 in Dubrovnik to start a similar initiative to promote peaceful cooperation in the former Yugoslavia It called for the creation of a large international research institute for South East Europe to promote scientific political and social cooperation among the countries of Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Kosovo the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Montenegro Serbia and Slovenia Croatia agreed in principle while Greece participated as an observer 62 The project facilitated conferences at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste in 2013 63 and two conferences on artificial intelligence and cognitive computing in association with IEEE in Milan 64 and Bari Italy in 2019 WAAS in collaboration with UNESCO The Club of Rome Vinca Institute of Nuclear Sciences VINS the Serbian Association of Economists and other organizations conducted an international conference titled Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development on September 20 22 2022 65 66 In June 2022 WAAS and the Consumer Technology Association announced collaboration focusing on the role of technology in addressing human security needs by conducting conference sessions and announcing special awards for innovative technology at the January 2023 Consumer Electronics Show 49 Economy and Employment Edit The global financial crisis of 2007 08 wiped out trillions of dollars in financial assets It led to the adoption of what became known as Quantitative easing the unprecedented creation and injection of funds by central governments to support financial institutions markets and the general economy As the true magnitude of this multidimensional crisis and its long term impacts on employment incomes and environmental sustainability became more apparent a team of WAAS researchers embarked on a research project and created Cadmus a journal founded by Fellows of the Academy to reexamine the fundamental facts of prevailing economic theory in an article entitled The Wealth of Nations Revisited 67 68 Over the next six years this led to a series of international conferences and colloquia at Trieste 2013 69 70 San Paolo 2014 71 Gainesville Florida 2015 72 Lisbon 2016 73 74 75 Cape Town 2017 76 and Paris 2018 77 These discussions led to the establishment of an international multidisciplinary working group on new economic theory consisting of more than fifty researchers from WAAS the Club of Rome and other institutions working on issues related to economy finance business psychology sociology law political science ecology and environment It led to more than 100 research papers on the economy ecology employment money and finance 78 79 80 Prominent members of the transdisciplinary working group included Tomas Bjorkman 81 Stefan Brunnhuber economy amp finance Orio Giarini economy and environment Enrico Giovannini economy and statistics Heitor Gurgulino de Souza education Hazel Henderson economy and ecology Bernard Lietaer finance Garry Jacobs business development and employment Hunter Lovins environment Winston Nagan law human rights and sustainable development 82 83 84 Gunter Pauli economy and entrepreneurship Kate Pickett social equity Carlos Alvarez Pereira computer modeling ecology technology and systems theory 85 Ivo Slaus politics and science Mark Swilling sustainable development 86 Joanilio Teixeira economy 87 and Alberto Zucconi psychology 88 An initial effort to synthesize the findings of the project led to the publication of Quest for a New Paradigm in Economics A Synthesis of Views of the New Economics Working Group in 2017 89 The paper presents a value based transdisciplinary human centered ecologically sustainable theoretical framework for economic theory and public policy to promote sustainable human security and wellbeing A parallel initiative by the Club of Rome that addressed similar issues led to the publication of Come On Capitalism Short Termism Population and Destruction of the Planet in 2017 and to the formation of the Transformational Economics Commission in 2021 90 91 Since 2019 the research has been integrated into a more comprehensive transdisciplinary project on Global Leadership in the 21st Century that examines the commonalities and interdependencies between all major sectors of global social existence A second focus has been on Human Security as an integrating perspective for all dimensions of human welfare and wellbeing and a third on innovative financial initiatives to fund investments around the UN Sustainable Development Goals 92 93 Employment has occupied a central place in the work of WAAS Research has been done on economic theory and policy and has included a number of conferences and numerous published papers 94 WAAS has built on the recommendation originally made in the Report of the International Commission on Peace and Food to the UN in 1994 Uncommon Opportunities Agenda for Peace amp Equitable Development The report states that Recognizing the right of every citizen to employment is the essential basis and the most effective strategy for generating the necessary political will to provide jobs for all 95 WAAS has argued that employment within a market economy can be compared to the right to vote within a democracy because access to paying jobs provides the means to exercise other economic and social rights 96 97 98 99 Randall Wray and others argue that the cost of unemployment in terms of lost skills and capacities degeneration of physical and mental health crime drug use and social unrest exceeds the cost of public sector employment generation programs such as demonstrated by India s Rural Employment Programs 100 101 102 103 Global Higher Education World University Consortium Edit The founders of WAAS were committed to the idea of establishing a World University under the auspices of the Academy with the aim of fostering the growth of knowledge and cultivating enlightened judgment around the needs and aspirations of people The idea was to identify and serve the common interest of humankind by offering inquiring minds a way to relate their intellectual specialties to the idea of human dignity a process that would be open to continual clarification in a changing social environment The original Declaration of the World University in 1960 104 stated that the timeliness of the idea of a world university is beyond reasonable reservation The expansion of science and technology has put at our disposal an unparalleled instrument of fulfillment or destruction if man is to take the future evolution of body mind and civilization in his own hands it is imperative to find more effective ways of integrating what he knows with what he does The founders developed a management structure and executive committee and established a set of operational centers in leading educational and research institutes in several countries Inspired by the original vision of the Academy s founders and reshaped by the global challenges and emerging opportunities at the time the Academy established the World University Consortium WUC 105 in 2013 in association with eminent international institutions The organizations mission was to evolve and promote the development of accessible affordable quality higher education worldwide based on a human centered approach Their approach was to shift from specialized expertise to contextualized knowledge within a trans disciplinary conceptual framework that better reflected the complexity and integration of the real world At the UNOG WAAS conference at Geneva in 2013 WAAS President Garry Jacobs posed the question If you were trying to create a global system of world class higher education accessible and affordable to everyone how would you do it 106 Mind Thinking and Creativity Edit The Academy has concluded that current pressing global challenges reflect fundamental limitations in prevailing modes of intellectual thinking and analysis 107 It has called for radical advances in the approach to major social problems from fragmented disciplinary analysis and piecemeal policies which address each issue as separate and independent of the others and mechanistic systems thinking which links together and aggregates phenomena without considering their underlying social dynamics 108 WAAS proposes a shift to integrated thinking that recognizes the underlying deeper level factors forces and processes at work in all social dynamics 109 It approaches individual aspects and dimensions of social reality in relation to the whole and examines the interdependences as well as the deeper level of transdisciplinary principles at work 110 It also seeks to reconcile the objectivity of the natural sciences with the subjective value based and ethical dimensions so central to the social sciences 111 This project is tied to the Academy s central mission of integration of art and science 112 and its work developing new pedagogy transdisciplinary social theory and an integrated organization of knowledge in education 113 As mathematician and deep thinker William Byers stated Learning is also about moving from one way of thinking about a situation to another more complex way of thinking 114 Earlier stages in the project included events on Limits to Rationality Hyderabad India 2008 115 two roundtables on Mind Thinking and Creativity Dubrovnik Croatia 2016 and 2017 116 117 118 The Academy s research has drawn on insights regarding mental processes by Einstein William Byers Sri Aurobindo and other renowned thinkers from around the world Its approach is based on the idea that Mind is an instrument of analysis and synthesis but not of essential knowledge 119 The Project has explored implicit assumptions and barriers that confine our thinking within narrow social and conceptual boundaries the consequent errors and limitations ways in which we can learn to consciously broaden the range and enhance the quality of rational thinking and develop the capacity for more intuitive creative mental processes 120 Research includes analysis of the inherent limitations and blindspots implicit in the prevailing fragmentary rationalist materialistic mechanistic approach to understanding and solving human problems including an exploration of new ways of knowing generated by the emerging sciences of systems theory complexity autopoiesis and recent discoveries in the physical biological and social sciences It has applied this approach in the formulation of new thinking in fields such as economy social transformation and a transdisciplinary theory of society 121 Societal Transformation Edit WAAS has been concerned with the underlying forces and processes affecting global social evolution since the time of its founding 122 It has examined the process of social change from various perspectives in different contexts and fields of activity and concluded that what is required is clear and complete knowledge of the process of conscious social evolution 123 Former President of WAAS Harlan Cleveland coined the phrase revolution of rising expectations 124 to reflect the subjective social and psychological forces that were underlying the objective technological and institutional dimensions of development observed in fast growing East Asian countries after WWII 125 Through meetings roundtable discussions and publications WAAS has sought to identify these forces and the ways in which to convert the long slow trial and error process of social evolution into a conscious process of social transformation with emphasis on the catalytic role of values ideas organizations technologies and leadership in this process 126 The Academy s research seeks to identify the common underlying social processes applicable to all fields and levels of society with the aim of evolving a trans disciplinary science of society A special session at the 1998 WAAS General Assembly in Vancouver emphasized the need for formulation of comprehensive multidimensional theory of social development incorporating political legal economic technological social cultural and psychological dimensions 127 128 Building on this a conference in Chennai in 1999 advocated a global social movement to mobilize the underlying social forces for a reinvention of the multilateral institutions to recognize the inseparable global unity of global society 129 The WAAS publication Human Choice Genetic Code of Social Development 1999 examines the powers of mind to organize the physical materials social energies and mental ideas of humanity to achieve greater material social mental and spiritual advancement 130 Two five day workshops on the role of the individual and the process of social accomplishment were conducted at Dubrovnik in 2014 131 132 They explored the role of the characteristics and social impact of original thinkers pioneers and innovators and the process by which these leaders act as catalysts of social innovation WAAS also conducted two sessions on social transformation during the WAAS 60 conference 2020 21 and published a collection of articles in Cadmus Journal examining the deep systemic change and societal transformation needed to protect humanity and all life on Earth 133 134 Publications EditCadmus Journal a twice yearly print and electronic journal focusing on issues related to economy security and global governance 135 Eruditio Journal a twice yearly electronic journal for examination of ideas and perspectives that fall beyond the purview of traditional academic publications 136 WAAS Papers Articles papers and presentations by Fellows of the academy 137 Reports to the World Academy of Art amp Science Books by WAAS Fellows accepted by the Board of Trustees as official reports to the academy 138 Management EditThe academy is managed by a 21 member board of trustees and an eight member executive committee The principal officers are Garry Jacobs President amp Chief Executive Officer Alberto Zucconi chairman of the Board Past presidents Edit Lord John Boyd Orr Hugo Boyko Stuart Mudd Marion Mushkat Detlev Bronk Harold Lasswell Walter Isard Ronald St John Macdonald Carl Goran Heden Harlan Cleveland Walter Truett Anderson Jeffrey Schwartz Ivo Slaus 139 Heitor Gurgulino de SouzaReferences Edit Boyko Hugo 1966 The World Academy of Art and Science and the Creation of the World University Conflict Resolution and World Education pp 211 222 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 6269 4 23 ISBN 978 94 017 5823 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help World Academy of Art and Science records Archives at Yale Yale University Library Boyko Hugo 1961 Science and the Future of Mankind Indiana University Press p 7 Noam Lior Elected to World Academy of Art and Science Penn Engineering News University of Pennsylvania Assie Lumumba named to World Academy of Art and Science Cornell Chronicle Cornell University List of non governmental organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council as at 1 September 2019 Page 124 PDF UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs United Nations Economic and Social Council Committee on Non Governmental Partners Relations with non governmental partners Page 3 UNESDOC Digital Library UNESCO Ivo Slaus president of the world academy of art amp science English republika mk 24 December 2013 Science and the Future of Mankind by Hugo Boyko PDF p 13 Manhattan Project Einstein s Letter 1939 www osti gov Retrieved 2022 06 05 Manhattan Project Einstein s Letter 1939 www osti gov US Department of Energy Retrieved 6 June 2022 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain The Manhattan Project nuclearweaponarchive org Retrieved 2022 06 05 The Soviet American Arms Race History Today www historytoday com Retrieved 2022 06 05 Russell Einstein Manifesto Atomic Heritage Foundation Retrieved 2022 06 05 Boyko Hugo 2013 11 21 Science and the Future of Mankind Springer ISBN 978 94 017 6010 2 Richard Montgomery Field 1885 1961 Smithsonian Institution Archives 1923 Retrieved 2022 06 14 Boyko Hugo 2013 11 21 Science and the Future of Mankind Springer p 6 ISBN 978 94 017 6010 2 New Paradigm Cadmus Journal Naveen Madishetty Quest for New Paradigm in Economics and framework for addressing interrelated challenges PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2022 07 16 ANNUAL REPORT 2013 Supporting a World in Transformation PDF Report UNITED NATIONS OFFICE AT GENEVA Emerging New Civilization Initiative ENCI Engagement Paper Club of Rome 2019 06 19 Retrieved 2022 06 14 Conscious Capital www consciouswealth global Retrieved 2022 06 14 Strategies for Global Food Security COSA Committee on Sustainability Assessment thecosa org Retrieved 2022 06 16 Koundouri Prof Phoebe Cluster for Sustainability Transition PDF Lessons of the Pandemic Institut Levant 2020 12 26 Retrieved 2022 06 16 Chuchalin A G 2021 COVID 19 and human security Terapevticheskii Arkhiv in Russian 93 3 253 254 doi 10 26442 00403660 2021 03 200717 PMID 36286691 S2CID 234874463 Environmental Sustainability Solutions Security amp Sustainability Guide Security amp Sustainability Retrieved 2022 06 16 United Nations Office at Geneva and World Academy of Art amp Science Organize a Conference on Global Leadership for the 21st Century UN GENEVA www ungeneva org Retrieved 2022 06 16 We are not doomed unless we choose to be Speakers urge political courage to tackle pressing global issues UN GENEVA www ungeneva org Retrieved 2022 06 16 Opening of the WAAS UNOG Conference Global Leadership for the 21st century UN GENEVA www ungeneva org Retrieved 2022 06 16 Avery John Scales 2016 07 02 The Complete Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Peace Review 28 3 302 308 doi 10 1080 10402659 2016 1201943 ISSN 1040 2659 S2CID 151787389 The Bertrand Russell Society www lehman edu Retrieved 2022 06 17 Saull Richard 2012 02 09 4 American foreign policy during the Cold War US Foreign Policy Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 hepl 9780199585816 003 0004 ISBN 978 0 19 958581 6 retrieved 2022 06 17 International Commission on Peace and Food 1994 Uncommon opportunities an agenda for peace and equitable development report of the International Commission on Peace and Food London Zed Books ISBN 1 85649 305 9 OCLC 31411760 Matthews DE Farewell VT 2007 Contents Preface 4th Edition Preface 3rd Edition Preface 2nd Edition Preface 1st Edition Using and Understanding Medical Statistics Basel KARGER pp I XX doi 10 1159 000099416 ISBN 978 3 8055 8189 9 Stanicic Mladen November 2006 Security in a Knowledge based Society The Role of the South East European Division of the WAAS Re examining the 1996 ICJ Advisory Opinion Concerning the Legality of Nuclear Weapons Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 17 Simulated ICJ Judgment Revisiting the Lawfulness of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 17 Nuclear Threats and Security Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 17 CADMUS April 2011 The Wealth of Nations Revisited PDF Actions to Enhance Global Security UN GENEVA www ungeneva org Retrieved 2022 06 17 Singh Jasjit Sethi Manpreet Jacobs Garry 2007 10 01 Dangerous knowledge Can nuclear weapons be abolished Futures Knowledge Futures 39 8 963 972 doi 10 1016 j futures 2007 03 008 ISSN 0016 3287 Integrated Approach to Peace amp Human Security in the 21st Century Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 10 Science as a Social Good Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 10 Approaching Human Security Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 10 UNTFHS WAAS IAP survey on Human Security www interacademies org InterAcademy Partnership IAP Retrieved 2022 06 10 World Association of Non Governmental Organizations About WANGO www wango org Retrieved 2022 06 10 Granoff Jonathan Jacobs Garry 2021 08 28 Building human security for Afghanistan The Hill Retrieved 2022 06 10 a b CES 2023 Will Focus on How Innovation is Addressing Global Challenges CES Press release New York June 15 2022 Retrieved 2022 06 17 Future Capital initiative seeks common solutions to common challenges UNCTAD Retrieved 2022 06 27 Founders Report www futureofcapital org Retrieved 2022 06 27 Force for Good Sustainable Finance Sustainable Development Goals forcegood org Retrieved 2022 06 27 Force for Good Sustainable Finance Sustainable Development Goals forcegood org Retrieved 2022 06 27 Innovative Financial Engineering to Fund the SDGs A WAAS Initiative Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 27 Mariana Bozesan Integral Investing From Profit to Prosperity AQAL Integral Investing Retrieved 2022 06 27 The Investment Turnaround Podcast Series AQAL Integral Investing Retrieved 2022 06 27 YKCenter YKCenter Retrieved 2022 06 27 The New Economy A Financial Climate for Climate Finance Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 27 TransFormNation A Suggestion for Rapid Top Down Transformation Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 06 27 Yale Archives CERN Website event page CERN Website News item Trieste Forum IEEE Event Milan World Conference on Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development International Year of Basic Sciences for Development Retrieved 2022 11 16 World Conference on Basic Sciences and Sustainable Development www interacademies org Retrieved 2022 11 16 A Project on The Wealth of Nations Revisited Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Jacobs Garry 2015 01 01 The need for a new paradigm in economics Review of Keynesian Economics 3 1 2 8 doi 10 4337 roke 2015 01 01 Trieste Forum on the Impact of Science and Technology on Society and Economy UN GENEVA www ungeneva org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Giorgio WAAS Trieste Forum Impact of Science and Technology on Society and Economy smr H328 05 6 March 2013 Indico Conferences and Events Retrieved 2022 07 18 Palley Thomas I 2015 01 01 Symposium introduction Global Crisis and the Need for Paradigm Change Review of Keynesian Economics 3 1 1 doi 10 4337 roke 2015 01 00 XII INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM Visions of Sustainable Development Theory and Action PDF Gorica Univerzitet Donja UDG Univerzitet Donja Gorica UDG Univerzitet Donja Gorica Retrieved 2022 07 18 XIII INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM Post 2008 Global Dynamics amp Structural Changes Economic Political and Eco Societal Transitions XIII International Colloquium ISEG ULisboa Lisbon School of Economics amp Management XIV INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM TOWARDS A HUMAN CENTERED SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL SYSTEM FOR THE 21ST CENTURY PDF XIII International Colloquium XIII International Colloquium Retrieved 2022 07 18 New Economic Theory neweconomictheory org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Jacobs Garry 2015 01 01 The need for a new paradigm in economics Review of Keynesian Economics 3 1 2 8 doi 10 4337 roke 2015 01 01 The market myth Tomas Bjorkman inbunden 9789187935633 Adlibris Bokhandel www adlibris com Retrieved 2022 07 18 Human Rights and Employment Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Human Rights Liberty amp Socio Economic Justice Economic Theory and the Ascent of Private Property Values Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Nuclear Threats and Security Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Disruptive Technologies A Critical Yet Hopeful View Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 About Mark Swilling Retrieved 2022 07 18 Joanilio Rodolpho Teixeira Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Alberto Zucconi Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Quest for a New Paradigm in Economics A Synthesis of Views of the New Economics Working Group Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Reframing economics Club of Rome Retrieved 2022 07 18 von Weizsacker Ernst Ulrich Wijkman Anders 2018 Come On doi 10 1007 978 1 4939 7419 1 ISBN 978 1 4939 7418 4 S2CID 199492894 Conferences New Economic Theory neweconomictheory org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Webinars New Economic Theory neweconomictheory org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Papers New Economic Theory www neweconomictheory org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Uncommon Opportunities IV Full Employment www icpd org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Theory amp Strategies for Full Employment Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Global Prospects for Full Employment Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 An Aging Workforce Employment Opportunities and Obstacles Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Policy for Full Employment Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Search Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Money Markets and Social Power Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Global Prospects for Full Employment Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Book review Money and Sustainability The Missing Link Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 18 Boyko Hugo 2013 11 21 Science and the Future of Mankind Springer pp VII ISBN 978 94 017 6010 2 Reflections on the Future of Global Higher Education WAAS Conference Report Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 02 Retrospective and Reflections on WAAS 60 Cadmus Journal 8 Person Centered Education cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 07 02 20 MIND THINKING AND CREATIVITY iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 11 17 Mind Thinking and Creativity WAAS Playlist YouTube New Paradigm in Human Development A Progress Report Cadmus Journal www cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 11 17 A Brief History of Mind and Civilization PDF Unifying Subjectivity and Objectivity Oppenheimer Robert 1955 Prospects in the Arts and Sciences Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 11 2 42 44 doi 10 1080 00963402 1955 11453555 via DOI 10 1080 00963402 1955 11453555 CFP Anticipation Agency and Complexity Center for Science Technology Medicine amp Society Retrieved 2022 11 17 Webinar on Mind Thinking amp Creativity World University Consortium wunicon org Retrieved 2022 09 16 Krunoslav Pisk CV PDF 21 1 MIND THINKING AND CREATIVITY iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 11 17 20 MIND THINKING AND CREATIVITY iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 09 16 Report on Mind Thinking and Creativity PDF The World Academy of Art and Science The Supermind as Creator The Incarnate Word Retrieved 2022 11 17 The international webinar Mind Thinking and Creativity with the participation of Professor Winston Nagan was held at the Department of International Relations Al Farabi Kazakh National University www kaznu kz Retrieved 2022 11 17 Mind thinking and Creativity Cadmus Journal Boyko Hugo ed 1965 Science and the future of mankind Indiana University Press WAAS Social Transformation Working Group November 29 2021 11 essays on Social Transformation The most important challenge facing humanity Cadmus Cleveland Harlan 1965 The evolution of rising responsibility International Organization 19 3 828 834 doi 10 1017 S0020818300012601 S2CID 154289526 Susan Ratcliffe ed 2017 Harlan Cleveland 1918 2008 American government official Oxford Essential Quotations 5th ed doi 10 1093 acref 9780191843730 001 0001 Retrieved 2022 09 17 via Oxford Reference 16 1 WAAS iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 09 17 Daniel Wolfish Gordon Smith and ed 2001 Who is afraid of the State Canada in a world of Multiple Centers of Power University of Toronto Press p 344 Singh Manoj Kumar 2021 Introduction to Development Psychology KK Publications p 146 Projects icpd org Retrieved 2022 09 17 Cleveland Harlan Jacobs Garry 1999 11 01 Human Choice the genetic code for social development Futures 31 9 959 970 doi 10 1016 S0016 3287 99 00055 5 ISSN 0016 3287 3 ACCOMPLISHMENT GROWTH SOCIAL EVOLUTION AND THE CHARACTER OF LIFE iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 09 17 7 TOWARD A TRANSDICIPLINARY SCIENCE OF SOCIETY iuc hr Inter University Centre Dubrovnik Retrieved 2022 09 17 Retrospectives and Reflections WAAS 60 PDF 11 Essays on Societal Transformation The Most Important Challenge Facing Humanity Cadmus Journal cadmusjournal org Retrieved 2022 09 17 Cadmus Journal Cadmus Journal Retrieved 2012 07 01 Eruditio World Academy of Art amp Science Eruditio worldacademy org Retrieved 2012 07 01 Index of Monographs amp Papers by Fellows World Academy of Art amp Science Worldacademy org Retrieved 2012 07 01 Books World Academy of Art amp Science Worldacademy org Retrieved 2012 07 01 Presentation of the World Academy of Art amp Science www icdhouse org 15 April 2013 External links EditThe World Academy of Art and Science History and Manifesto J CADMUS Vol I Issue 2 2011 pp 151 152 new wbr worldacademy wbr org official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title World Academy of Art and Science amp oldid 1170086973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.