National Council for Science and the Environment
INTRODUCTION

This report contains the recommendations of more than 450 scientists and decisionmakers who participated in the first National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment on December 7 and 8, 2000.The conference was sponsored by the National Council for Science and the Environment and was held at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC.

The conferees included individuals from more than 45 states and the District of Columbia, as well as Canadians and Europeans.They came from a broad range of disciplines and perspectives in the natural sciences, social sciences, and engineering (from agriculture to zoology), as well as the information technology and policy sectors. Among those participating were:

  • 200 academics, including administrators, faculty, staff and students from a diverse set of universities and colleges
  • 100 government employees, including Democratic and Republican elected officials, scientists, administrators, and managers at the local, state, tribal, and federal levels
  • 50 representatives of environmental and community organizations working at local, state, regional, national, and international levels
  • 25 individuals representing a diverse set of private businesses
  • 60 self-identified as “others,”including journalists, school teachers, and representatives of scientific organizations.
The overarching theme of the recommendations is the need for this nation and the world community to achieve a level of sustainability that integrates three basic elements: economic security, ecological integrity, and social equity. The concept of sustainability is typically viewed as having simultaneous and interdependent scientific, economic, social, political, psychological, ecological, ethical, and technical dimensions.

In this regard it is noted that both the conference agenda and its resulting recommendations are consistent with a recent Council of Scientific Society Presidents’ policy statement on achieving a sustainable future:

As a national priority, we must make public investments in all areas of fundamental research that can lead to more sustainable systems.The nation’s top political and corporate leaders, working closely with scientists, must develop and implement an action plan to achieve a sustainable future that involves all levels of government, academia, NGOs, and the private sector.*



*see http://www.science-presidents.org/ for the full statement



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