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Chemists and IUPAC: Taking Responsibility and Taking Action

29 August - 2 September 2017, Trondheim, Norway
Published/Copyright: March 7, 2017
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Since its foundation in 1919, many famous chemists have contributed to the International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), fueling the drive to improve standardisation of methods, nomenclature, units and standards, among other things. Without a doubt, progress has been made, despite power struggles, uncompleted projects, and unproductive commissions.

A special session titled, “Chemists and IUPAC: Taking Responsibility and Taking Action,“ to be held during the 11th International Conference on the History of Chemistry, will aim at shedding light on the activity of chemists invested with responsibilities in IUPAC, whose actions are often overlooked in national biographical dictionaries. This session falls into the broader project on the centennial of the IUPAC in 2019. Each paper will focus on the responsibilities and actions of individual chemists, alone or combined in a small national or disciplinary group, inside IUPAC. The case study can, however, expand to roles in other international organisations (e.g. IRC, ICSU, SDN or UNESCO). A first survey is provided by the books of R. Fennell (1994) and S. S. Brown (2001). By focusing on individual actions, the aim is to get a better sense of the articulation between the local and the international, and how this articulation was constructed through the work and actions of chemists dispersed across the world.

For more information, please contact Danielle Fauque () or Brigitte Van Tiggelen ()

Online erschienen: 2017-3-7
Erschienen im Druck: 2017-1-1

©2017 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead - Full issue pdf
  2. Contents
  3. President’s Column
  4. On the Path to Rewarding Times
  5. Features
  6. Taking IUPAC Literally: Woodward’s Pure and Applied Chemistry Words
  7. The Periodic Table (continued?): Eka-francium Et Seq.
  8. Chemistry Organizations in a Changing World
  9. IUPAC Wire
  10. IUPAC and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Take Partnership to New Level
  11. IUPAC Announces the Names of the Elements 113, 115, 117, and 118
  12. IUPAC Periodic Table of the Elements—Updated Release
  13. Gender-based Harassment in the Practice of Science
  14. ICSU to Merge with ISSC
  15. Remembering Peter Greaves Taylor Fogg (1929-2016)
  16. Stamps International
  17. Woodward’s Birth Centennial
  18. Project Place
  19. Environmental Fate and Risks of Nano-enabled Pesticides
  20. Ecological Risk Assessment Workshop for Central America
  21. A Critical Review of Reporting and Storage of NMR Data for Spin-Half Nuclei in Small Molecules
  22. Guides in Metrology
  23. Bookworm
  24. Successful Drug Discovery
  25. Making an imPACt
  26. Source-based Nomenclature for Single-strand Homopolymers and Copolymers (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  27. Comprehensive Definition of Oxidation State (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  28. Glossary of Terms Used in Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  29. IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
  30. Terminology of Bioanalytical Methods
  31. Nomenclature and Terminology for Dendrimers with Regular Dendrons and for Hyperbranched Polymers
  32. Conference Call
  33. WMFmeetsIUPAC
  34. Chemistry Education
  35. Green Chemistry
  36. Solid State Chemistry
  37. Where 2B & Y
  38. Macro- and Supramolecular Architectures and Materials
  39. POLYCHAR World Forum on Advanced Materials
  40. Coordination and Bioinorganic Chemistry
  41. Chemists and IUPAC: Taking Responsibility and Taking Action
  42. Small Satellites for Space Research
  43. Mark Your Calendar
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