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Leading economist
calls for global reform.
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A leading economist has joined
his voice to the growing doubts about the capacity of existing
international institutions to tackle the world’s problems.
Augusto Lopez-Claros, the chief
economist with the World Economic Forum in Geneva, told
a conference in London organized by the Association of Bahá’í
Studies that humanity is trying to face its challenges but
its institutions are simply incapable of delivering adequate
solutions.
His address was one of the keynote
talks at the conference, held 2-4 July 2004 at the University
of London’s Institute of Commonwealth Studies, which aimed
to explore Bahá’í views on the theme of ‘Power and Responsibility’.
Mr. Lopez-Claros, who is a Bahá’í,
pointed to new challenges in the modern world like the increasing
globalization of business and the radical change in the
service industries caused by alliances between distant nations.
“Our current institutions were
not designed for these changes nor for the challenges posed
by the environmental crisis, AIDS or terrorism,” Mr. Lopez-Claros
said. “Political structures are hierarchical, rigid, and
slow. Some governments are adapting but most are struggling.”
The result, Mr. Lopez-Claros
said, is a growing public dissatisfaction with politicians
and politics. “Only a global framework and global institutions
can address certain problems,” he said.
One of the conference organizers,
Dr Nazila Ghanea-Hercock of the Institute of Commonwealth
Studies, said that “Power and Responsibility” are of concern
in a number of disciplines, including governance, science,
medicine, and the media.
“A lot of people feel disempowered
from sources of authority,” she said. “We need to discuss
how humanity deals with this issue in order to progress.”
Scholar and author Moojan Momen
described ways in which the Bahá’í community offers a promising
model for secular institutions, taking into consideration
the fact that many people feel they don’t have a say in
their society, and that a balance must be found between
individual freedoms and centralized authority.
“In the Bahá’í model, power does
not rest with individuals but institutions,” Dr. Momen said.
“Bahá’í consultative practice provides a safe and encouraging
environment for people...to express their views. Devolution
to local decision making has been the evolving hallmark
of [Bahá’í] planning processes.”
Dr Momen said that Bahá’u’lláh
explored the balance between individual freedom and central
authority in a letter to Queen Victoria.
“On the one hand He applauded
British efforts towards elected democracy but on the other
He condemned excesses of liberty. Certainly the Bahá’í experience
in these areas could be fruitfully examined as a model for
change.”
Another speaker, Nahal Mavvadat,
from the University of Birmingham, described an evolving
maturity in medical treatment where patients are being increasingly
encouraged to take an active role in their own healing.
“A new paradigm for medicine
would temper scientific knowledge and wisdom with human
virtues such as compassion, trust, and a commitment to living
according to spiritual laws,” Dr. Mavvadat said.
Among the distinguished guests
was Professor Moshe Sharon, who holds the chair for Bahá’í
studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Professor Sharon, who is not
a Bahá’í, addressed the conference on the challenges he
faced in translating Bahá’u’lláh’s Book of Laws, the Kitab-i-Aqdas,
into Hebrew.
The conference was organized
by the Association for Bahá’í Studies - English-Speaking
Europe in association with the Irfan Colloquium.
The Association of Bahá’í Studies
has 20 affiliates, each dedicated to the study and application
of Bahá’í teachings.
The Irfan Colloquia started in
1993 and aim to foster systematic studies of the scriptures
of the world’s religions from the Bahá’í perspective and
to promote scholarly studies of the belief system of the
Bahá’í Faith.
BWNS/RW
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Mr Augusto Lopez-Carlos,
the chief economist with the World Economic Foroum
In Geneva.
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