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==Background==
==Background==

Jim MacNeill was an 'ecological refugee' at the age of two, when his family moved from the hamlet of [[Mazenod]] in the southern [[dust bowl]] of [[Saskatchewan]] to the village of [[Sturgis, Saskatchewan|Sturgis]] in the province’s central park belt.


MacNeill received Bachelor of Science degrees for both physics and mathematics in 1949 and a Bachelors in Mechanical Engineering in 1958 from the [[University of Saskatchewan]]<ref name="uofsaskweb">{{cite web |url=http://library.usask.ca/archives/campus-history/honorary-degrees.php?id=403&view=detail&keyword=&campuses=0 |title=Honorary Degrees |accessdate=22 March 2014 |website =University of Saskatchewan University Library }}</ref> and a Graduate Diploma in Economics and Political Science in 1951 from the [[University of Stockholm]], [[Sweden]].
MacNeill received Bachelor of Science degrees for both physics and mathematics in 1949 and a Bachelors in Mechanical Engineering in 1958 from the [[University of Saskatchewan]]<ref name="uofsaskweb">{{cite web |url=http://library.usask.ca/archives/campus-history/honorary-degrees.php?id=403&view=detail&keyword=&campuses=0 |title=Honorary Degrees |accessdate=22 March 2014 |website =University of Saskatchewan University Library }}</ref> and a Graduate Diploma in Economics and Political Science in 1951 from the [[University of Stockholm]], [[Sweden]].

Revision as of 17:03, 7 July 2014

James 'Jim' William MacNeill, OC (born April 22, 1928 in Saskatchewan) is a Canadian consultant, environmentalist, and international public servant.

He was Director of Environment at OECD in Paris (1978–1984), Secretary General of the World Commission on Environment and Development (Brundtland Commission) and lead author of its landmark report Our Common Future (1984–1987),[1] and member and Chairman of the World Bank's Inspection Panel (1997–2002).

He is currently a member of the Caspian Development Advisory Panel, the jury of the Volvo Foundation’s Environment Prize,[2][3] and a member of several boards including the Woods Hole Research Center, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

Background

MacNeill received Bachelor of Science degrees for both physics and mathematics in 1949 and a Bachelors in Mechanical Engineering in 1958 from the University of Saskatchewan[4] and a Graduate Diploma in Economics and Political Science in 1951 from the University of Stockholm, Sweden.

Career

On his return from graduate studies in Sweden, MacNeill began his public service career in Saskatchewan in 1952 as a research economist in T. C. Douglas' cabinet's Economic Advisory and Planning Board. In 1959, he became Executive Director of the South Saskatchewan River Development Commission with responsibility for coordinating the power, irrigation, and other aspects of that project. In 1964, as Vice Chairman and Executive Director of the Saskatchewan Water Resources Commission, his responsibilities were broadened to include management of all of the Province's water resources.

Between 1965 and 1976, he held various senior positions with the Government of Canada. He was Director of Policy and Planning in the then new Canadian Department of Energy, Mines and Resources (1965–1968), moving on to Acting Assistant Deputy Minister, Water and Renewable Resources in 1968. He was appointed Special Advisor on the Constitution and Environment in the Privy Council Office in 1969. Over the next two years, he developed the Government's basic position on the environment and the constitution and wrote his first book, Environmental Management. In 1971, he joined Canada's then new Department of Environment as Director General of Intergovernmental Affairs where he led much of Canada's substantive preparations for the 1972 Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment. In 1972, he became Assistant Secretary and, in 1974, Secretary (or Deputy Minister) of the new Ministry of State for Urban Affairs, Canada's first attempt to intervene nationally in the process of urban growth and development. In 1975, he was additionally appointed Canadian Commissioner General and Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary with responsibility for Canada's national and international preparations for the first United Nations Conference on Human Settlements held in Vancouver in May, 1976.

Moving to the international arena in 1977, Jim MacNeill served for seven years in Paris as Director of Environment for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). While at OECD, he oversaw a program of empirical research on the relationships between the environment and the economy. In 1984, this work resulted in OECD finding that "the environment and the economy could be made mutually reinforcing," a concept that has since moved into the mainstream.

In 1984, he became a member and Secretary General of the World Commission on Environment and Development (the Brundtland Commission). He was the chief architect and principal author of the Commission's world-acclaimed report Our Common Future, which was presented to the UN General Assembly in 1987. Setting out a new global agenda for sustainable development, the report recommended what became the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio (the Earth Summit). From 1989 to 1992, he acted as a Special Advisor to the Secretary General of the Conference, Maurice Strong. He also established and chaired the EcoFund, which raised special funding for preparations of the Conference.

Between 1988 and 2006, MacNeill served in a number of Canadian and international positions: Senior Fellow, Institute for Research on Public Policy (1988–1993); Senior Advisor to the President of the International Development Research Center (IDRC) (1992–1997); and Senior Advisor to the Administrator, United Nations Development Programme (1994–1999) where he carried through a fundamental reorganization of UNDP's work on environment and sustainable development. From 1994-1997, he served as a member on the Board of Directors of Ontario Hydro, then the largest electrical power utility in North America. In 1990, he was asked by Per Gyllenhammar, Chief Executive of Volvo, to assist him in designing the Volvo Foundation’s Environment Prize and has served as a member (and now Chairman) of the Prize Jury ever since.[2][3]

In 1994, as an advisor to Netherlands Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers, he negotiated an agreement between Mikhail Gorbachev as the Chairman of Green Cross International and Maurice Strong as the Chairman of the Earth Council to undertake the development of an Earth Charter, a code of ethical principles which has now been endorsed by over 8,000 organizations representing more than 100 million people worldwide. In 1990, he was one of three founding members of the International Institute for Sustainable Development, an initiative of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney of Canada and Premier Gary Filmon of Manitoba, and served as Chairman between 1994 and 1999.[5]

In 1997, MacNeill became a member and in 1999 full-time Chairman of the World Banks Independent Inspection Panel to which people affected by a Bank-financed project can appeal for an investigation of their complaints over the heads of their government and of Bank Management. Since 2003, he has been a member of the Caspian Development Advisory Panel, an independent body commissioned by Lord John Browne, Group Chief Executive Officer of BP, to advise him on the economic, environmental and social impacts of the 1,700 km (1,100 mi) Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline and other related BP activities in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.

Relationship to Maurice Strong

In 2005 the New York Sun ran a front page special edition in which it reported that Jim MacNeill was a close associate of fellow Canadian Maurice Strong, and that MacNeill's career in the United Nations benefited from that relationship.[6] Maurice Strong was a close adviser to former UN Secretary General Koffi Annan and became embroiled in what is now known as the Oil for Food Program Scandal and reportedly received millions of dollars from North Korean and Iraqi lobbyists.[7]

Since Strong left the UN in 2005 following the scandal, there appears to be little linking the two men. However Jim MacNeill's relationship with Maurice Strong is well-documented before then - their shared background includes activities ranging from sharing high profile awards, to sitting on the Board of Directors of the same non-profit corporation to transferring million of dollars of charity money raised by MacNeill in the US to an organization created by Strong in Canada. Strong is credited in assisting with the creation and submission of the 1987 Brundtland Report (called "Our Common Future") that would be presented to the UN General Assembly and become the basis for the 1992 Earth Summit.[8] In 1992 when Maurice Strong launched the Earth Council Foundation (now the Earth Council Alliance) from his position as Secretary General of the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development, Jim MacNeill had a seat on the first Board of Directors.[9] An independent auditor's report for the Earth Council Foundation's operations ending in October 31, 1993 revealed that a charity based in the United States and run by MacNeill called EcoFund '92 (now called Earth Council Foundation U.S.) had sent $1.3 million of its own funds to Maurice Strong's Earch Council Foundation in Canada, which is not a charity but a non-profit corporation.[10] In 2002, the two were the sole recipients of the United Nations Candlelight Award, which was presented to them personally by Kofi Annan.[11]

Awards

  • In 1983, he received the City of Paris' Silver Medal.
  • In 1984, he received the highest achievement award of his native Province of Saskatchewan.
  • In 1991, he received the Merit Award of the Climate Institute.
  • In 1991, he received the WASA Environmental Award from the King of Sweden.
  • In 1994, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award of Environment Canada.
  • In 1995, he was appointed is an Officer of the Order of Canada.
  • In 2002, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan presented MacNeill and his colleague Maurice Strong with the Candlelight Award for his distinguished service to the United Nations and his key role in promoting and advancing sustainable development.[11]
  • In 2006 he received the Elizabeth Haub Award for environmental diplomacy.

Honours

References

  1. ^ "Honours - Order of Canada". The Governer General of Canada Archives. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Sustainable Community Development - Jim MacNeill". Community Research Connections. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  3. ^ a b "Dr. Jim MacNeill". Volvo Environment Prize Foundation. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  4. ^ a b "Honorary Degrees". University of Saskatchewan University Library. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  5. ^ "Friends of the Institute". International Institute for Sustainable Development. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  6. ^ Gupte, Maurice (April 29, 2005). "Embroiled in a United Nations Scandal Is an 'International Man of Mystery'". New York Sun. Two SL LLC. Retrieved 22 March 2014. Still another Strong associate to become an official of an international group is Jim MacNeill, who became head of the environment department of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. Its director general, Donald Johnston, is another Canadian and another Strong ally. Mr. MacNeill went on to serve as secretary general of the so-called Brundtland Commission, named after its chairman, Gro Harlem Brundtland, then Norway's prime minister. Dr. Brundtland later won appointment as head of the World Health Organization, and her name often crops up as a possible successor to Mr. Annan.
  7. ^ McLeod, Judy (December 9, 2005). "Congressional report calls for investigation of Maurice Strong's role in Oil-for-Food scandal". Canada Free Press. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  8. ^ Taylor, Duncan (1994). Off Course: Restoring Balance Between Canadian Society and the Environment. International Development Research Centre. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0889367108. Jim MacNeill, who, along with Maurice Strong, made a significant contribution to the 1987 Brundtland Report (Our Common Future) has suggested that a major failure of the Rio Earth Summit was to isolate the concepts of "sustainable" and "development." This polarized the debate and made environmental protection and economic development mutually exclusive.
  9. ^ "History - As the Secretary General of that conference, Maurice Strong recognized that the Rio Summit was just the beginning". Earth Council Alliance. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  10. ^ Dewar, Elaine (Jan 1, 1995). Cloak of Green: The Links Between Key Environmental Groups, Government and Big Business. James Lorimer & Company. pp. 8–9. ISBN 1550284509. I read the auditor's report of the ear ended October 31, 1993 for the Earth Council Foundation with interest. The audit said $1.3 million in revenue had come to the Canadian non-profit controlled by Jack Austin, Maurice Strong and board member (Jim MacNeill, Peter Thacher and executive director Alicia Barcena Ibarra). This money mostly came from the Earth Council Foundation U.S. - controlled essentially by Thacher and MacNeill. Although Peter Thacher had insisted to me that none of the Ecofund '92 funds had left the U.S., in fact the audit said $1.3 million had been transferred from Earth Council Foundation U.S. to the Canadian non-profit Earth Council Foundation which is not a registered charity. In sum, charity money gathered for the Rio Summit Secretariat in the U.S. had been put to the use of a new global oranization based in two other countries.
  11. ^ a b "Annan presents Candlelight Award to Maurice Strong and Jim MacNeill" (Press release). UN News Service. UN News Centre. 6 December 2002. Retrieved 2014-03-22.

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