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This chapter elaborates upon the latter part of the Stockholm Conference preparation period, including key Swedish science diplomacy interventions and the production of three landmark scientific reports on climate change, acid rain, and environmental monitoring. It also recounts the efforts of Maurice Strong and Barbara Ward to reconcile the emerging North–South divide ahead of Stockholm by organizing a meeting of development economists in Founex, Switzerland. The drafting of the Stockholm Declaration, as well as other aspects of the actual Conference, its parallel events, and its final outcomes, are examined. The chapter also explores other important early-1970s developments in Stockholm related to the Conference and the ongoing institutionalization of international climate science. These include the environmental turn at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences embodied by the launch of the journal Ambio in 1972, a large donation to the Academy by a Swedish industrialist that led to the establishment of the influential Beijer Institute, and the convening of another major GARP Conference in Stockholm in 1974.
This unique history examines global environmental governance through the lens of Stockholm, which has played an outsized role in shaping its development. Fifty years before Greta Thunberg started her School Strike for Climate, Swedish diplomats initiated the seminal 1972 U.N. Conference on the Human Environment that propelled Stockholm to the forefront of international environmental affairs. Stockholm has since become a hub for scientific and political approaches to managing the environmental and climate crisis. Utilizing archival materials and oral histories, Sörlin and Paglia recount how, over seventy years, Stockholm-based actors helped construct the architecture of environmental governance through convening decisive meetings, developing scientific concepts and establishing influential institutions at the intersection of science and politics. Focusing on this specific yet crucial location, the authors provide a broad overview of global events and detailed account of Stockholm's extraordinary impact. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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