Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings

Group shot of the 65 Nobel Laureates who attended the 65th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in summer of 2015 and German President Joachim Gauck as well as Countess Bettina Bernadotte, President of the Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Photo: Ch. Flemming/Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.

The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings are annual, scientific conferences held in Lindau, Bavaria, Germany since 1951. Their aim is to bring together Nobel laureates and young scientists to foster scientific exchange between different generations and cultures.

Purpose

Every Lindau Meeting consists of a multitude of scientific sessions like plenary lectures and panel discussions as well as a variety of networking and social events. The meetings assume a unique position amongst international scientific conferences: With 30-40 Nobel laureates attending they are the largest congregation of Nobel laureates (apart from the Nobel Prize Award Ceremonies in Stockholm) in the world. The meetings are not centered on the presentation of research results, but instead, their main goals are the exchange of ideas and the discussion of topics globally relevant to all scientists. The Nobel laureates do not receive any kind of payment for their participation and are free to choose the topics of their presentations. More than 300 are members of the meetings’ Founders Assembly.[1]

Billed by the organising Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings as their ‘Mission Education’, the aim of the meetings is to facilitate the transfer of knowledge between Nobel laureates and young scientists but also among the international scientific community and the general public. The opportunity for participants to form international networks of scientists is also regarded as a prime objective by the organisers. The meetings’ leitmotif is ‘Educate, Inspire, Connect.’

History

After World War II, Germany was disconnected from the international scientific community due to the ramifications of the Nazi regime. During this time, hardly any scientific conferences of high value took place in Germany.

Initial Idea & Establishment

The two physicians Franz Karl Hein and Gustav Parade from Lindau, a small town located on the Bavarian shore of Lake Constance, conceived the idea of organising a scientific meeting to bring together German researchers and physicians with Nobel laureates. They convinced Count Lennart Bernadotte af Wisborg, a member of the Swedish Royal Family and proprietor of nearby Mainau Island, to call upon his good connections to Sweden’s Nobel Committee to support the undertaking. The first meeting, subsequently held in 1951, was dedicated to the fields of medicine and physiology and was attended by seven Nobel laureates, among them Adolf Butenandt and Hans von Euler-Chelpin. After the success of the initial meeting, the scientific scope was broadened to include the other two natural science Nobel Prize disciplines chemistry and physics. Thus, a mode of annually alternating disciplines for the meetings was established.[2]

Nobel laureate Werner Heisenberg surrounded by students at the 5th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in 1955. Photo: Archive Spang/Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.

1954 – 2000

In 1954, the Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings was founded and henceforth established as the organising committee of the meetings. Count Lennart was appointed as first president of the Council. Also in 1954, the concept of inviting students and young scientists to the meetings was introduced. This step was seen as a measure to add additional value for society to the meetings. Among the young scientists participating that year were also students from Eastern Germany.[3]

While originally conceived by Hein and Parade as a European meeting of scientists, the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings slowly but steadily became more international. In the beginnings, only students from Lake Constance’s bordering states Germany, Switzerland, and Austria attended but year after year new nations began to send representatives. Since 2000, each Lindau Meeting is attended by young scientists from between 80 and 90 countries.[4]

In 1987, Count Bernadotte resigned from his position as president of the Council due to health reasons and his wife, Countess Sonja Bernadotte af Wisborg, took over.

2000 – 2008

Shortly before the turn of the millennium, the future of the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings was endangered due to financial uncertainties. In order to counter this negative development, Countess Sonja Bernadotte expanded the Council and added experts from charitable foundations and public affairs as well as representatives of Stockholm’s Nobel Foundation to the committee.

Two main goals of Countess Sonja Bernadotte’s aegis were the further internationalisation of the meetings and to improve its public image, both domestically and internationally.

On the occasion of the 50th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in the year 2000, the establishment of the Foundation Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings was officially announced. Its main goal since then has been to secure the funding of the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Upon its creation, over 40 Nobel Laureates joined the Founders Assembly of the foundation and support the continuance of the conference both morally and financially.[5]

The 50th Lindau Meeting in 2000 was also the first interdisciplinary meeting that united Nobel laureates and students from all three natural science disciplines (physics, chemistry and physiology or medicine) of the Nobel Prize.

2008 –Today

When Countess Sonja Bernadotte died in October 2008, her daughter, Countess Bettina Bernadotte, was elected President of the Council. She continued her mother’s course and worked on establishing further cooperation with research institutions around the world but also introduced educational aspects for society in general to the Lindau Meetings.[6]

Meetings

Ever since their inception, the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings have taken place in the small Bavarian town of Lindau on the shores of Lake Constance. The city’s center is located on an island in the lake that is connected to the mainland via bridges.

Meeting Cycle

The meetings focus alternately on physiology and medicine, physics, and chemistry – the three natural science Nobel Prize disciplines. An interdisciplinary meeting revolving around all three natural sciences is held every five years. In addition, the Lindau Meeting on Economic Sciences is held every three years with recipients of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

Nobel laureate Stefan Hell in discussion with young scientists. Photo: Ch. Flemming/Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings.

Scientific Programme

The following session types are currently part of the scientific programme of the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings:

Mainau Castle on Mainau Island, property of the Bernadotte family and the traditional venue of the last day of any Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting.

Social Programme

The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings also host several events with social functions like dinners, BBQs and cultural events. Since 2010 one evening of each meeting is dedicated to an alternating partner country. The partner countries so far have been India (2009), the European Union (2010), the United States of America (2011), Singapore (2012), South Korea (2013), Australia (2014), France (2015) and Austria (2016).

Boat Trip to Mainau Island

The last day of each meeting includes both scientific and social programme features with a boat trip to nearby Mainau Island. The visit to the island owned by the Bernadotte family is both designed to let the meetings culminate in a final panel discussion on a topic combining science and society and to give the young scientist the opportunity to visit the Mainau – the ‘flower island’.

Participants

Meetings dedicated to a single discipline are usually attended by about 30-40 Nobel laureates and 500-600 young scientists representing around 80 different countries. In addition, several special guests of honour from politics, industry and academia as well as international journalists attend the meetings.

Application Process

Young scientists who want to participate need to pass a multi-stage application process. The application is open to undergraduates, PhD students and post-doc researchers under the age of 35 who are at the top of their class and do not hold a permanent position yet. Young scientists can only participate once in a Lindau meeting.[7]

Outstanding guests

Over the years many noteworthy guests of honour have visited the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings: Among them former German Presidents Roman Herzog, Johannes Rau, Horst Köhler and Christian Wulff. Current German President Joachim Gauck gave the opening address at the interdisciplinary meeting in 2015 and German Chancellor Angela Merkel held the opening speech at the 2014 meeting on economic sciences. Further notable guests include philanthropist and software entrepreneur Bill Gates, former President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso and the President of Singapore Tony Tan.

Organisation

The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings are made up of two legal bodies: The Council and the Foundation. While the council’s responsibility is to put together the scientific programme and to organise the meetings via its executive secretariat, the foundation’s task is to maintain the financial stability of the meetings and to ensure ongoing financial support.

Academic Partners

The Council sustains a global network of academic partner institutions that range from national science academies, to universities, foundations and government ministries. Applications for meeting participation need to be addressed to the academic partners, who in turn nominate the best young scientists for the meetings.

Funding

The Lindau meetings are funded by both public resources and private donations. The costs and funding of each meeting are made public in the annual report of the respective year. Private supporters are listed on the organisation’s website and various other publications.[8]

Impact

Ever since their beginnings, the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings have aimed to facilitate an atmosphere in which scientists could assume more responsibility towards society. Therefore, several political appeals have been issued in Lindau over the years.

The impact these meetings have had on the careers of the roughly 30,000 young scientists, who have participated, is hard to quantify but profound: As one of the supporters put it: "You see the deep inspiration and motivation for the years to come in the eyes of the young researchers when they leave Lindau.”

Global Networks

The meetings provide many networking opportunities for young scientists who in turn form global networks that often yield research collaborations or knowledge transfer not limited by borders or differing cultures.

Mainau Declarations

See article: Mainau Declaration

In 1955 at the 5th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting German physics Nobel laureates Max Born and Otto Hahn initiated the ‘Mainau Declaration against the Use of Nuclear Weapons’ that was meant to urge world leaders to abstain from using nuclear weapons. It was initially signed by 18 Nobel laureates attending the meeting, but the number of signatories grew to 52 within a year.

Fifty years later, at the 65th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in the summer of 2015, a second Mainau Declaration was issued, this time making a statement on the need to combat climate change. The declaration was initially signed by 36 attending Nobel laureates who were later joined by 35 additional colleagues.

Mediatheque

Due to the fact that the Lindau Meetings have such a long tradition and history, a digital and open to the public archive was established. It currently contains about 400 hours of video footage of lectures held by Nobel laureates during the Lindau meetings. In addition, photos, animated educational films and interactive content like virtual tours of Nobel laureates’ laboratories and an interactive map showing the career paths of the laureates are also available. The mediatheque is also used as an educational tool providing topic dossiers and introductions to certain scientific fields that can be used by teachers and professors.

Other Projects & Outreach

The Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings are also actively engaging in outreach projects and science communication based on their ‘Mission Education’ leitmotif. Among these projects are the photo exhibition ‘Sketches of Science’ by German photographer Volker Steger being exhibited world-wide and a permanent exhibition on the history of the meetings in Lindau’s city museum. Additional educational content is provided through close collaborations with media partners such as the Nature Publishing Group.

References

Footnotes

  1. "Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings, Website". Founders Assembly. Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  2. Burmester, Ralph (2015). Science at First Hand. Bonn, Germany: Deutsches Museum Bonn. p. 28.
  3. Burmester, Ralph (2015). Science at First Hand. Bonn, Germany: Deutsches Museum Bonn. pp. 42ff.
  4. Burmester, Ralph (2015). Science at First Hand. Bonn, Germany: Deutsches Museum Bonn. pp. 72/73.
  5. Burmester, Ralph (2015). Science at First Hand. Bonn, Germany: Deutsches Museum Bonn. pp. 86ff.
  6. Burmester, Ralph (2015). Science at First Hand. Bonn, Germany: Deutsches Museum Bonn. p. 138.
  7. "Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings, Website" (PDF). Selection Criteria 2016. Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  8. "Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings, Website". Publications. Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings. Retrieved 2016-04-12.

External links

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