Science diplomat Sir Peter Gluckman has been enlisted to head a new thinktank created to address challenges âwhich get buried in acute political cyclesâ.
Sir Peter, president-elect of the International Science Council, said the Koi Tƫ Centre for Informed Futures will exploit the insights that New Zealand can furnish as a diminutive nation with an advanced economy.
âBy studying small countries you can see the same dynamics going on in bigger countries,â said Sir Peter, who was New Zealandâs chief science adviser for nine years. âBut itâs harder to see them [in large countries] because there are too many actors. Itâs more complex but the same principles are at stake.
âCountries like New Zealand have been able to be more innovative, responsive and strategic for that reason. They become the headlights for the path ahead.â
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The University of Auckland thinktank will focus on national and global issues arising from rapid and far-reaching social, economic, technological and environmental change. Sir Peter said society craved information it could trust.
âThe contest of ideas is increasingly taking place in an unhealthy environment of misinformation and â in many places â declining public trust in democratic, scientific and societal institutions,â he said.
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âTransformations are happening around us at a scale and speed which is unique in human history. As scientists, we have a crucial role to play in ensuring decision-makers [are] armed with robust evidence.â
Sir Peter told Times Higher Education that the centre would ignore the âpolitical cycleâ to focus on middle and long-term issues. âMost thinktanks tend to get caught up in short-term transactional issues with a political focus,â he said. âResearch centres tend also to do that.â
He said his centre would focus on âbig issuesâ such as how to engage citizens in the âmisinformation ageâ, how to promote individual resilience in the context of rapid and inevitable change, and how to make âbig decisionsâ like the trade-offs needed to achieve sustainability.
The centreâs deputy director, Anne Bardsley, said it would help communities and governments understand complex issues in ways that led to ârobust, societally accepted decisionsâ.
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Sir Peter said New Zealand was âin a very unique positionâ as an advanced economy with a diverse society characterised by Indigenous people and Polynesian and Asian migration. âItâs fair to say weâve been more willing to confront these issues than many countries,â he said.
âWeâve been innovative in our social policy; weâve been innovative in our environmental policy. Weâve managed to be a good global citizen without relying on geostrategic power because we donât have any geostrategic power. Therefore, weâre well respected.â
Sir Peter helped establish the  in 2014. âCould that have been done if Iâd come from the US or Britain? I suspect not.â
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