A collaborative international undertaking in the form of an open, global 'virtual conference' organized over the months of August and September 1997 under the leadership of Eric Britton (EcoPlan) and Robert Ayres (INSEAD). The conference was co-sponsored and funded in part by the United Nations University (UNU) and its Institute of Advanced Studies (IAS), the Programme, Preparation and Monitoring Unit (Directorate XIII/B/1) of the European Commission , the European Telework Development Initiative, the OECD Environment Directorate, and the Ministère de l'Environnement (France). The Conference was also supported by the Teles Group (Germany), and The Center@Hamline (USA). (The main source of financial backing for the conference was EcoPlan International.)
The first half of the conference's agenda in the pilot stage over the month of August aimed to use these new means to try to provide expert counsel to the UNU and the IAS concerning their eventual future activities in this important science policy area over the next several years. The second part attempted to use this experience as a trial to probe the potential for making innovative use of the "new media" (i.e., computer-mediated communications) to create an expanded shared knowledge base and a yet stronger community of interest on this and similar important technology and society policy issues. The objective was to see if we could make use of these technologies to group forces, in order to guide government and the other major actors concerned toward more informed, more broadly supported, and more effective policies and actions. As is appropriate given its concerns, the conference was organized as a travel-free, no-fee, resource-sparing, low-emissions, and, we certainly hoped, convivial, undertaking. [For access to the 1997 conference's Web site click here.]