Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas (Dec 2009)
UNESCO’s Natural Sciences Department and Latin American scientists in the end of the 1940s
Abstract
When United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) was established by the end of 1945, Joseph Needham (1900-1995) and some progressive scientists were recruited to build the Natural Sciences Department. Needham was supported by Julian Huxley (1887-1975), the first Director general, also issued from the social relations of Science Movement of the 1930s. Needham’s agenda was a complete re-foundation of the international scientific relations, applying in particular a ‘Periphery Principle’, according to which UNESCO’s priority was to be turned towards the countries which needed the most a scientific development. Such a principle opened a space within UNESCO’s Secretariat for scientists coming from Latin America, India or China, a conscious political geographically-oriented action. This principle also lead UNESCO to attempt the creation of an international research institute in the Amazon Region; to establish a Field Scientific Co-operation Office (firstly in Rio, afterwards in Montevideo); and finally to organize in Montevideo (September 1948) the first Latin American Conference for the Development and the Organization of Science (LACDOS).