cover image: ISSN 2583-4967 Science Diplomacy Review - Vol. 4 | No. 3 | December 2022

20.500.12592/qhbjxn

ISSN 2583-4967 Science Diplomacy Review - Vol. 4 | No. 3 | December 2022

15 May 2023

It was also around the same time that the Madrid Declaration on Science Diplomacy was launched, and that the Royal Society in London and the American Association for the Advancement of Science published New Forntiers in Science Diplomacy, which expanded the roles of science diplomacy and reoriented its relations with the state and the society (S4D4C, 2019, Royal Society and AAAS, 2010). [...] The rise of actors from the Global South, the emergence of new and disruptive technologies, and new conflicts of ambition underlines the importance of science diplomacy and complicates its delivery. [...] 3 | December 2022│1 In short, what are the old and new lessons, and what new dimensions of science diplomacy should we explore in the future? This special issue originated in a panel discussion on science diplomacy organised by the newly founded Centre for Global Science and Epistemic Justice (GSEJ) at the University of Kent for the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology’s 20. [...] 3| December 2022 article Empires of the Mind and Trickle-Down Science: COVID-19 and the History of Global Scientific Relations Greg Whitesides* When the COVAX global vaccine programme fell short of expectations, reactions varied- from astonishment on the part of the initiative’s founders to frustration on the part of certain African heads of state and dismay on the part of world leaders.1 But it s. [...] National to victory and the atomic bomb and Institutes of Health – and achieved destruction of Hiroshima testified to the success in replicating the vaccine in 2022, effectiveness of the approach.
Pages
108
Published in
India

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