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International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

Coordinates:48°04′06″N16°21′29″E / 48.068272°N 16.358171°E /48.068272; 16.358171
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International research organization in Austria

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International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
IIASA's headquarters in the Blauer Hof Palace inLaxenburg, Austria
Map
AbbreviationIIASA
Formation1972; 53 years ago (1972)
TypeINGO
Location
Coordinates48°04′06″N16°21′29″E / 48.068272°N 16.358171°E /48.068272; 16.358171
Region served
Worldwide
Official language
English
Parent organization
National and Regional Member Organizations
Websitewww.iiasa.ac.at

TheInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) is an independent International research institute located inLaxenburg, nearVienna inAustria, founded as an East-West scientific cooperation initiative during theCold War. Through its research programs and initiatives, the institute conducts policy-orientedinterdisciplinary research into issues too large orcomplex to be solved by a single country or academic discipline. These includeclimate change,energy security,population aging, andsustainable development. The results of IIASA research and the expertise of its researchers are made available to policymakers worldwide to help them make informed and evidence-based policies.

Organization

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Nearly 600 researchers from 60 countries currently work with the institute. IIASA's international and interdisciplinary network includes staff, alumni, member communities, collaborators, diplomatic partners, and visiting fellows.

Hans Joachim "John" Schellnhuber is the current IIASA Director General[1] andKaren R. Lips serves as the institute's Deputy Director General.[2] Past directors have includedHoward Raiffa, a professor atHarvard Business School andHarvard Kennedy School, Roger Levien, former vice president for Strategy atXerox, Leen Hordijk, former Director at theInstitute for Environment and Sustainability, Joint Research Centre, European Commission, Ispra, Italy, and Detlof von Winterfeldt, professor at theUniversity of Southern California.[3]

IIASA is a non-governmental institution funded by scientific organizations in its member countries, which includeAustria,China,Egypt,Finland,Germany,India,Iran,Israel,Japan,Korea,Norway,Russia,Slovakia,Sweden,Ukraine, theUnited Kingdom, theUnited States, andVietnam.[4] In 2022, IIASA increased its membership footprint through the Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Member Organization (SSARMO),[5] as part of a regional approach to participation in IIASA research and capacity building activities. SSARMO includes 18 African countries (Botswana,Burkina Faso,Côte d’Ivoire,Ethiopia,Ghana,Kenya,Malawi,Mozambique,Namibia,Nigeria,Rwanda,Senegal,Sierra Leone,South Africa,Tanzania,Uganda,Zambia, andZimbabwe) who are participating in the Science Granting Councils Initiative (SGCI) in sub-Saharan Africa. Funding for the institute also comes from contracts, grants, and donations from governments, international organizations, academia, business, and individuals.[6] Its research is independent and is not constrained by political or national self-interest of member countries.

History

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IIASA was established by a charter signed on 4 October 1972 by representatives of theSoviet Union, theUnited States, and ten other countries from the Eastern and Western blocks atThe Royal Society inLondon.[7] It was the culmination of six years’ effort driven forward by both the US PresidentLyndon Johnson and the USSR PremierAlexei Kosygin. For IIASA, it was the beginning of a project to use scientific cooperation to build bridges across theCold War divide and to confront growing global problems on a truly international scale.[8] The first scientist arrived at IIASA in June 1973.[9]

IIASA built international multidisciplinary teams to confront innumerableglobal challenges both long-standing and emerging. For example, a study on water pollution carried out in the 1980s by a team of IIASA chemists, biologists, and economists still forms the basis of modern water policy design in Japan,USA, and the former USSR.[10]

IIASA's approach of bringing together different nationalities and disciplines to work toward common goals has now been widely imitated, for example, in theIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and theInternational Geosphere-Biosphere Programme.

Instead of closing in the 1990s upon the end of the Cold War, the institute broadened its mandate from bridging East and West to a general global focus. Today, IIASA brings together a wide range of scientific skills to provide science-based insights into critical policy issues in international and national debates on global change.[11]

Current research

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The IIASA mission is to provide scientific guidance to policymakers by finding solutions to global problems through applied systems analysis in order to improve human well-being and protect the environment. The institute is at the forefront of promoting science diplomacy and fostering debates about how science can help build trust between nations and support foreign policies.

The Vienna Statement on Science Diplomacy, a document created by IIASA, advocating for a renewed global commitment to international scientific cooperation to help countries build stronger relations for the benefit of all of humanity, has been endorsed by close to two hundred eminent personalities from the academic and policymaking community, including H.E.Ban Ki-moon, 8th UN Secretary-General and Co-chair of theBan Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens, and H.E.Tarja Halonen, 11th President of the Republic of Finland and member of the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Advisory Board on Mediation.

In 2021, IIASA embarked on a new strategy to develop and apply systems science to support transformations to sustainability. Building on almost fifty years experience in systems science, the IIASA Strategy 2021-2030 positions the institute to be the  primary destination for integrated systems solutions and  policy insights to current, emerging, and novel global sustainability challenges, threats, and opportunities. The strategy combines three integrated pillars—research, impact enhancement, and implementation—to deliver on this vision.

To support the IIASA strategy, the institute also implemented a re-designed research structure to enhance the integration of scientific work across the institute and so strengthen IIASA as it navigates the global system of systems. The new structure has two tiers consisting of six research programs which are in turn split into research groups, with the option to activate or deactivate groups as priorities change: Advancing Systems Analysis, Biodiversity and Natural Resources, Economic Frontiers, Energy, Climate, and Environment, Population and Just Societies, and Strategic Initiatives.[12]

Major projects

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Ten IIASA scientists were among the authors of theIPCC Fourth Assessment Report (the work of the IPCC, including the contributions of many scientists, was recognized by the joint award of the2007 Nobel Peace Prize). IIASA researchers are major contributors to Working Groups II and III of theIPCC Fifth Assessment Report[13] and are invited contributors to Working Groups I, II and III of theIPCC Sixth Assessment Report.[14]

The Greenhouse Gases – Air Pollution Interactions and Synergies (GAINS) model was launched in 2006 as an extension to the RAINS model which is used to assess cost-effective response strategies for combating air pollution, such as fine particles and ground-level ozone. The Chinese Government officially adopted GAINS in 2019 to strengthen air quality management in the country.[15]

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

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

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

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

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

Since 2010, IIASA is one of the three "pillar institutions" of theWittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital.[16]

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

Further reading

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See also

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References

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  1. ^"Hans Joachim (John) Schellnhuber appointed as IIASA Director General".
  2. ^"Professor Karen Lips appointed as IIASA Deputy Director General".IIASA - International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Retrieved31 October 2022.
  3. ^"Dr. Roger E. Levien"(PDF).VI Congreso Nacional Bibliotecas Publicas. 2012. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved19 March 2022.
  4. ^"Full List of Members".IIASA. Retrieved11 December 2023.
  5. ^"IIASA welcomes its first regional member organization".IIASA - International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. Retrieved11 December 2023.
  6. ^IIASA Funding
  7. ^Profile of IISA appended to summary of "Energy in a Finite World" (1981)http://www.iiasa.ac.at/publication/more_XB-81-202.php
  8. ^McDONALD, ALAN (1998)."Scientific Cooperation as a Bridge Across the Cold War Divide: The Case of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) 1".Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.866 (1). Wiley:55–83.Bibcode:1998NYASA.866...55M.doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1998.tb09147.x.ISSN 0077-8923.PMID 12088010.
  9. ^Jermen Gvishiani and Roger E. Lewis (1981). "Foreword".Energy in a Finite World.
  10. ^L. Somlyody and G. van Straten. (March 1986).Modeling and Managing Shallow Lake Eutrophication: An overview of an IIASA book on the Lake Balaton Case Study. EXECUTIVE REPORT 10
  11. ^"History of IIASA - History".IIASA. Retrieved4 December 2020.
  12. ^"IIASA Research Plan 2021–2024 (HIGHLIGHTS)"(PDF).
  13. ^"Climate Change 2013/2014: Fifth Assessment Report - 5th Assessment Report".IIASA (in Malay). Retrieved4 December 2020.
  14. ^"Climate Change 2021/2022: IPCC Sixth Assessment Report".IIASA. Retrieved17 March 2021.
  15. ^"The GAINS Model".IIASA. Retrieved17 March 2021.
  16. ^"Wittgenstein Centre 5-year Report".Wittgenstein Centre. Retrieved4 December 2020.

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