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An ESF-IIASA-NSF initiative, 3-5 December 1999, Laxenburg Austria
This international Workshop is a sequel to the IIASA-initiated International Workshop on "the Global Science System in Transition," held 23-25 May, 1997, and was organised under the sponsorship of the ESF, International Institute for Applied System Analysis, and the U.S. National Science Foundation.
The programme for the Workshop was prepared by Paul A. David (Oxford and Stanford), Dominique Foray (University of Paris Dauphine), Gordon MacDonald (Director, IIASA) and W. Edward Steinmueller (SPRU, Sussex).
Rapid advances in digital telecommunications are accelerating the global organisation of scientific inquiry. An optimistic view would depict these developments as significant steps towards the creation in virtual form of "Salomon's House," the universal research institute envisaged in the utopia of Francis Bacon's The New Atlantis: a foundation fully equipped and staffed to pursue "the knowledge of Causes, and hidden motions of Nature; and the enlarging of the bounds of Human Empire, to the effecting of all things possible."
This Workshop afforded an opportunity to examine a range of important opportunities and challenges arising from the present and prospective development, diffusion, and utilisation of electronic collaboration technologies. Of particular interest were the potential and probable consequences for European scientific research networks of the formation of global "virtual laboratories," and the problems surrounding eligibility for participation and access to information that bear crucially upon the future of "open science" and the distribution of the benefits deriving from the advancement of knowledge. Towards this end the Workshop brought together experts from the experimental and observational sciences, the information sciences, the social, behavioural and economic sciences, legal scholars and practitioners, and specialists concerned with science and technology policy formation.
The objectives of the workshop were threefold: first, to identify the main critical issues within this broad area and delineate the interrelationships among them; second, to take stock of the present state of knowledge and of ongoing research concerning collaboration technologies and factors affecting their deployment and use; third, to discuss the opportunity to form a scientific network to further analytical research and comparative case studies of co-evolution of technological, institutional and organisational infrastructures affecting the conduct of collaborative science on a global scale.
The Workshop sessions addressed three substantive themes:
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