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Session Submission Type: Organized Session
Fifteen years after the Royal Society and AAAS first defined science diplomacy (2010), both organisations have returned to the subject to reassess its role amid ongoing geopolitical upheaval. In an era marked by plural worldviews and contested scientific authority, they, alongside actors such as the European Commission, have acknowledged that science diplomacy has too often been framed through an overly optimistic lens that privileges cooperation while downplaying enduring realities of contestation, competition, and crisis. Moments of geopolitical disruption reveal not only the necessity of scientific cooperation but also its fragility, exposing asymmetries of power, divergent national priorities, and tensions embedded within transnational scientific exchange.
This symposium examines how science diplomacy has operated historically across shifting geopolitical landscapes: from the power dynamics and national interests that shaped scientific internationalism in the pre-WWII era (Session 1), to the historic roles and limits of international organisations in mediating scientific cooperation (Session 2), to the diplomatic trajectories of East Asia (Session 3), and finally to historical cases, contemporary challenges and ongoing lessons (Session 4). Together, the panels foreground how diplomatic discourse intersects with national priorities, scientific authority, and global power struggles, illuminating the plural worldviews, perspectives and interests that have shaped scientific engagement.
By combining deep historical perspectives with contemporary conceptual shifts, this four-panel symposium offers a comprehensive reconsideration of science diplomacy as a site of negotiation, competition, and adaptation. It highlights how crises, whether geopolitical, social, or technological, expose the power dynamics embedded in international scientific engagement across more than two centuries.
Southern Skies, Global Rivalries: Chile, the IGY, and Science Diplomacy in the Cold War - Barbara Kirsi Silva, Universidad Catolica de Chile
A decade of health détente. WHO influenza surveillance as a terrain of Cold War between the late 1960s and the late 1970s. - Giacomo Simoncelli, Sapienza University of Rome
International Conflicts and Technoscientific Diplomacy: The Role of the US, the Food and Agriculture Organization and the Inter-American Development Bank in Argentine Fisheries Research (1974–1982) - Ezequiel Sosiuk, CCTS-Maimónides
Science Diplomacy and the United Nations: Governing Knowledge through Crisis and Contestation - Julia Battistuzzi Penachioni, Institute for Advanced Studies (IEA-USP) University of São Paulo