Calestous Juma Environment and Natural Resources Program; Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program Professor of the Practice of International Development Office: Littauer 362 Telephone: (617) 496-8127 Email: calestous_juma@harvard.edu | |
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Calestous is Professor
of the Practice of International Development and Director of the Science,
Technology and Innovation Program.He is former Executive Secretary of the
United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity secretariat.
He is former Executive Director of the African Centre for Technology
Studies in Nairobi (Kenya) which he founded in 1988, and serves
as Chancellor of the University of Guyana. He is Visiting Professor at the
University of Strathclyde (UK), Fellow of the Royal
Society of Arts (UK) and Member of the Kenya National Academy
of Sciences. He directed the International Diffusion of Biotechnology
Programme of the International Federation of Institutes of Advanced
Study and was senior research fellow of the United Nations
Institute for Training and Research. He was a member of the Gulbenkian Commission on the Restructuring of the Social Sciences and several other international initiatives. He serves or has served on the governing and advisory bodies of several international organizations including World Resources Institute (WRI), United Nations University's Institute for New Technologies, Center for International Environmental Law and Earthwatch Institute. He has consulted for, among others, the World Bank, United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme, World Intellectual Property Organization, Food and Agriculture Organisation, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation, United Nations Industrial Development Organisation, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and International Development Research Centre. He holds a PhD in Science and Technology Policy Studies from the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex (UK). He has won several awards, including the 1991 Pew Scholars Award in conservation and the Environment and the 1993 United Nations Global 500 Award. His research interests include: science and technology studies; biotechnology, biological diversity and public policy; and international trade and environmental policy. He is currently working on a book on biotechnology and comparative public policy. His earlier works include Long-Run Economics: An Evolutionary Approach to Economic Growth (1987); The Gene Hunters: Biotechnology and the Scramble for Seeds (1989); Biodiplomacy: Genetic Resources and International Relations (1994); Coming to Life: Biotechnology in African Economic Recovery (1994) and In Land We Trust: Private Property, Environment and Constitutional Change (1996). |