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Federico Mayor Zaragoza was born in Barcelona
in 1934. He obtained a doctorate in pharmacy from the Universidad
Complutense of Madrid in 1958. In 1963 he became professor
of biochemistry at the School of Pharmacy of the University
of Granada, and in 1968 was elected Rector of the same university,
a post he held until 1972. The following year he was appointed
professor in biochemistry at the Universidad Autónoma
of Madrid.
Professor Mayor was co-founder in 1974 of the Severo Ochoa
Centre of Molecular Biology at the Universidad Autónoma
of Madrid and of the High Council for Scientific Research.
His political posts have been: Undersecretary of Education
and Science in the Spanish goverment (1974-75), deputy in
the Spanish Parliament (1977-78), advisor to the President
of the Government (1977-78), Minister of Education and Science
(1981-82) and deputy in the European Parliament (1987). In
1978 he became vice-director general of UNESCO. In 1987 was
elected director general of UNESCO, and re-elected for a second
mandate in 1993. After deciding not to present for a third
term, in 1999 he returned to Spain to create the Foundation
for a Culture of Peace, serving as its President. In December
2002 he was appointed to the chair (presidency) of the European
Research Council Expert Group (ERCEG).
During his 12 years as head of UNESCO (1987-1999) Professor
Mayor gave new life to the organization's mission to "build
a bastion of peace in the minds of all people", putting
the institution at the service of peace, tolerance, human
rights and peaceful coexistence, working within the scope
of its powers and remaining faithful to its original goals.
Under Professor Mayor's guidance, UNESCO created the Culture
of Peace Programme, whose objectives revolve around four main
themes: education for peace; human rights and democracy; the
fight against isolation and poverty; the defence of cultural
diversity and intercultural dialogue; and conflict prevention
and the consolidation of peace.
Within the framework of this strategy, numerous international
meetings and conferences were held on subjects such as education
in non-violence, the eradication of discrimination and the
promotion of pluralism and international cooperation. The
result of these meetings was some 30 Declarations expressing
a will to promote education, science, culture, research and
teaching, justice and the “moral and intellectual solidarity”
to which the constitution of UNESCO refers.
On 13 September 1999, the UN General Assembly adopted the
Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of peace,
which embodies Professor Mayor’s greatest aspirations
from both a conceptual and practical standpoint.
Through the Foundation for a Culture of Peace, created in
Madrid in March 2000, under the patronage of the Department
of Education of the Autonomous Community of Madrid, Professor
Mayor continues the task he began as director general of UNESCO:
that of promoting the transition from a culture of violence
and force, to a culture of peace and tolerance. Each year
the Foundation offers an annual Culture of Peace course in
collaboration with the Juan Carlos I University of Madrid,
with educational content including democracy, human rights,
and the origin of conflicts. In December, 2000 the Foundation
organised an international conference attended by major figures
in the struggle for justice, freedom, and peace. At the end
of the conference, the Declaration of Madrid was adopted unanimously.
In addition to numerous scientific publications, Professor
Mayor has published four books of poetry; A contraviento (1985),
Aguafuertes (1991), El fuego y la esperanza (1996) y Terral
(1997) and various collections of essays including: Un mundo
nuevo (in English, The World Ahead: Our Future in the Making)
(1999), Los nudos gordianos (1999) Mañana siempre es
tarde (1987), La nueva página (1994), Memoria del futuro
(1994), La paix demain? (1995), Science and Power (1995) and
UNESCO: Un idéal en action (1996).
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