SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN NATO AND OECD 



"AT OECD: Meeting of the Committee for Scientific and Technological Policy." 

 OEOD Observer, October 1972 : 40-41. 



Describes activities relating to research and development statistics; 

 research and developmeht in the service sector; development and utilization 

 of the social sciences; completion of studies on "research systems," organiza- 

 tion of information, computer, and communications systems: stimulation of 

 innovation in private and public sectors; technology assessment; international 

 cooperation in R and D; and science and technology for developing countries." 

 Blaney, Harry C. "NATO's New Challenges to the Problems of Modern Society." 

 Atlantic Comviunity Quarterly, v. 11, summer 1973: 236-247. 



Assesses the work and potentialities of NATO's Committee on the Chal- 

 lenges of Modern Society which attempts to deal with problems that plague 

 modern society such as environmental purity. 

 "CCMS Plenary Session Inaugurates Three New Pilot Studies." NATO Review, 

 V. 21, 1973: 16-18. 



The Committee on the Challenges of Modern Society (CCMS) inaugurated 

 3 pilot studies in 1973 on disposal of hazardous substances, solar energy and 

 geothermal energy. 

 Davignon, Etienne. "The New International Energy Agency of OECD." OECD 

 Observer, no. 73, Jan.-Feb. 1975: 20-25. 



"OECD's International Energy Agency, set up on 15th November, will 



carry out a comprehensive programme of co-operation — both in the event of 



emergency and over the longer term — among 16 oil consumer countries 



belonging to OECD." 



Doran, Charles F. "Can NATO Defend the Environment?" Environmental 



Affairs, v. 2, spring 1973: 667-684. 



"Which perspective is the valid one — the view on the one hand that NATO 

 can supply a credible defense of clean air and water and a higher quality of 

 life, or, on the other, the view that the machinery and purposes of military 

 security are incompatible with environmental values? A hard look at insti- 

 tutional priorities continues to be in order while the process of commitment is 

 still reversible." 

 Furniss, Edgar S., Jr. "Western Alliance Development and Technological Co- 

 operation." Written for the U.S. House of Representatives Republican Com- 

 mittee on NATO and the Atlantic Community. International Studies Quarterly, 

 v. 11, no. 4, December 1967: 339-52. 



Review by the late director of the Mershon Center for Education in 

 National Security, Ohio State University, an authority . on NATO of 

 organizational and program needs for technological programs in the Western 

 alliance community. "Each country should be included ..." in the con- 

 tribution, administration and distribution phases of a Western alliance 

 program of technological cooperation. , Such programs might involve the 

 following substantive fields: communication, "war on poverty," transit and 

 transport, agricultural productive techniques, education, and space. Impli- 

 cations of such a program for American policy are also discussed. 

 Huntley, James R. Man's Environment and the Atlantic Alliance. 2d ed. Brussels 

 NATO Information Service, 1972. 63 p. 



Details the environmental activities of NATO's Committee on the Chal- 

 lenges of Modern Society (CCMS) . 

 "The Influence of Science and Technology in Present Day Foreign Policy", 

 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, France, 

 Science Policy Information 3, 1967: 47-48. 



"An analysis of the interaction of science and foreign policy in industrialized 

 nations, by Manfred Schreiterer, a member of the German Delegation to 

 the OECD. Nowadays foreign policy, economic policy, military policy, and 

 science policy are interdependent; numerous examples of the important role 

 of science and technology in modern foreign policy are given (e.g., French 

 agreement on technical cooperation with Eastern European countries, and 



(1941) 



