[...]
A pool of technological
information should be created
in order to better prepare governments
of developing countries for their negotiations
with transnational enterprises.
[...]
On transnational enterprises a minimum
of relevant information has to
be collected, such as capital used to
employ one person, the use made
of local capital, the nature of the
products made, etc. These enterprises
should comply with the priorities set
in the host country’s development
plan. They should also investigate
alternative ways to cooperate with
local enterprises and authorities. A
code of conduct of transnational enterprises
with legally enforceable elements
is recommended.
[...]
Arms reduction is to be furthered by
political and moral pressure on the
superpowers, eg a treaty on a comprehensive
nuclear test ban and a convention
banning chemical weapons.
The arms trade urgently needs regulation.
[...]
References
1. Reshaping the International Order (New
York, Dutton, 1976; Amsterdam, Elsevier
[in Dutch]). French (Editions du
Seuil) and German (West Deutscher
Verlag) editions are in preparation.
2. The International Development Agency,
linked to the World Bank, specialises in
soft loans to developing countries.
FUTURES December 1976
REPORTS
Reshaping the international order (RIO)
Jan Tinbergen
In October the third report to the Club of Rome was published under the title
Reshaping the International Order (RIO) .l It was formulated by a group of about
twenty experts from developing as well as developed countries, including one from
Romania. The initiative to undertake this study of the international order was
taken by the Club of Rome Board, especially by its chairman Dr Aurelio Peccei
and the study was financed by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the
initiative of the Minister for Development Cooperation, Jan Pronk. The report
was presented to the Club of Rome in a meeting at Algiers, hosted by the Algerian
Government, 25-28 October 1976.
[...]
The report is in four parts. Part 1
deals with “The need for a new
international order and the main
problem areas”; part 2 with “The
architecture of the new international
order ; initiating and steering the
process of planned change”.
Part 3, “Proposals for action”,
contains the main proposals and recommendations
which have emerged
from the working groups on the
ten main areas. Part 4 contains the
working groups’ reports-the basis for
the plenary meetings’ discussions.
[...]
In: http://leblogdelaneezelblog.blogspot.nl/2012/12/1976-reshaping-international-order-by-j.html, en remerciant le lecteur: "1976 - Reshaping the International Order by J. Tinberger..."
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten