Home 2016 to Be the International Year of Global Understanding
Article Publicly Available

2016 to Be the International Year of Global Understanding

Published/Copyright: January 11, 2016
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Last September, on the first day of the World Social Science Forum 2015 in Durban, South Africa, the International Council for Science (ICSU), the International Social Science Council (ISSC), and the International Council for Philosophy and Human Sciences (CIPSH) jointly announced that 2016 would be the International Year of Global Understanding (IYGU). The aim of IYGU is to promote better understanding of how the local impacts the global in order to foster smart policies to tackle critical global challenges, such as climate change, food security, and migration.

“Building bridges between global thinkingand local action”

“We want to build bridges between global thinking and local action,” said Prof. Benno Werlen of the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena, Germany. “Only when we truly understand the effects of our personal choices—for example in eating, drinking and producing—on the planet, can we make appropriate and effective changes,” said Werlen, who initiated this project of the International Geographical Union (IGU).

Ways to translate scientific insight into more sustainable lifestyles will be the main focus of IYGU activities for 2016: research projects, educational programmes and information campaigns. The project seeks to go beyond a narrow focus on environmental protection and climate policy to explore quality of life issues and the sustainable, long-term use of local resources.

“Sustainable development is a global challenge, but solving it requires transforming the local —the way each of us lives, consumes, and works. While global negotiations on climate attack the sustainability crisis from above, the IYGU complements them beautifully with coordinated solutions from below, by getting individuals to understand and change their everyday habits. This twin approach elevates our chance of success against this crisis, the gravest humanity has ever seen,” said former ICSU President and Nobel Laureate Yuan-Tseh Lee.

For example, on each day in 2016, the IYGU will highlight a change to an everyday activity that has been scientifically proven to be more sustainable than current practice. Primers on everyday life which take cultural diversity and local practice into account will be compiled and distributed. “Now more than ever, it is vital that we find the strength to understand and relate to the positions, thoughts, and expectations of others and seek dialogue instead of confrontation,” said Professor Klaus Töpfer, Executive Director of the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS).

It is hoped that this focus on tangible, local action will generate ideas for research programmes and school curricula, as well as highlight best practice examples. Wherever possible, activities will be communicated in several languages. Using this bottom-up approach, the IYGU hopes to support and extend the work of initiatives such as Future Earth, the UN’s Post-2015 Development Agenda, and the UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development.

Further information at www.global-understanding.info

Published Online: 2016-1-11
Published in Print: 2016-1-1

©2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead - Full issue pdf
  2. From the Editor
  3. Contents
  4. Officer’s Column
  5. President’s Column
  6. IUPAC’s New Strategic Plan
  7. A New Approach to Calculating National Subscriptions
  8. Features
  9. Chemistry & War: How Chemistry Underpinned the Great War
  10. International Comparisons of Tertiary Chemistry Education: A Best-Practice Approach for Development and Quality Enhancement
  11. GEOTRACES: High-Quality Marine Analytical Chemistry on a Global Scale
  12. IUPAC Wire
  13. 2016 to Be the International Year of Global Understanding
  14. Green Chemistry for Life Grant Programme—Call for Applications
  15. 2016 IUPAC-Richter Prize—Call for Nominations
  16. The Hague Ethical Guidelines
  17. Crystallography for the Next Generation
  18. Light and Chemistry
  19. In Memoriam: Robert ‘Bob’ F. T. Stepto
  20. In Memoriam: Camille Georges Wermuth
  21. Project Place
  22. Brief Guide to Polymerization Terminology
  23. Can Random Motion Look the Same from Different Perspectives?
  24. Making an imPACt
  25. Physisorption of gases, with special reference to the evaluation of surface area and pore size distribution (IUPAC Technical Report)
  26. International Vocabulary of Metrology
  27. Seminal InChI Publications
  28. IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
  29. Glossary of Terms Used in Extraction
  30. Vocabulary of Concepts and Terms in Chemometrics
  31. How to Name New Chemical Elements
  32. Compendium of Terminology and Nomenclature of Properties in Clinical Laboratory Sciences
  33. Bookworm
  34. The Lost Elements: the Periodic Table’s Shadow Side
  35. Successful Drug Discovery
  36. Conference Call
  37. IUPAC-2015 World Chemistry Congress
  38. Bioinspired and Biobased Chemistry & Materials
  39. Where 2B & Y
  40. Science at Play
  41. POLYCHAR
  42. High Temperature Material Chemistry
  43. Chemical Education Sustaining Socio-economic Transformation
  44. Science, Disarmament, and Diplomacy in Chemical Education
  45. Stamps International
  46. Farewell to Uncle Tungsten’s Nephew
  47. Mark Your Calendar
Downloaded on 17.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ci-2016-0109/html
Scroll to top button