Mahdi Elmandjra
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Mahdi ElMandjra | |
---|---|
Born | Rabat, Morocco | 13 March 1933
Died | 13 June 2014 Rabat, Morocco | (aged 81)
Nationality | Moroccan |
Occupation | Futurologist, economist and sociologist |
Mahdi Elmandjra (Arabic: مهدي المنجرة; 13 March 1933 – 13 June 2014)[1] was a Moroccan futurologist, economist and sociologist.[2] He is one of the founders of the International Federation for Future Studies (Futuribles[3]). He predicted a number of events, the most important of which was the clash of civilisations in his book "The first civilisation war"[4] in 1992, that is, before Samuel Huntington, who used the same concept in his book "The clash of civilisations" issued in 1996. Mahdi Elmandjra also predicted the occurrence of the "Arab Spring", which he referred to in his writings under the name of "Intifada".[5]
Education[]
Elmandjra started his high-school education at Lycée Lyautey (Casablanca) in 1944 where he got his Baccalaureat in 1948 . He then went to Putney School, Vermont, U.S. (1948–1950) before joining Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (1950–1954) where he obtained a B.A. Government degree. Elmandjra then went to England where he enrolled in the London School of Economics, and the University of London (1954–1957) obtaining a PhD. His doctoral thesis was on The League of Arab States.[6]
Career[]
Mahdi Elmandjra graduated from Cornell (USA) and obtained his PhD from the London School of Economics. He has taught international relations at the University of Rabat since 1958.
Elmandjra has held many occupations throughout his career. After finishing his studies, ElMandjra started his career as Director General of the Moroccan Broadcasting Service (RTM) and as a Counselor of the Moroccan Mission to the UN. He occupied various functions in the UN body from 1961 to 1981 including that of Assistant Director General of UNESCO for Social Sciences, Human Sciences and Culture as well as Coordinator of the Conference on Technical Cooperation between Developing countries at the UNDP.
He was President of the World Futures Studies Federation and of Futuribles International as well as the founding President of the and the .
He is a member of the African Academy of Sciences and of the . He has been a Visiting Professor to Tokyo University (1998) and a Visiting Scholar of the (JSPS) at the Tokyo Keizai University (1999).
He gave his name to the Mahdi Elmandjra prize for the quality of education[7] awarded by the AMAQUEN Institute to several institutions, in his presence, including , the ESIG Group[8] and the ISCAE Group.[9]
This article is in list format but may read better as prose. (September 2010) |
UNESCO (1961–1969)[]
- Chief, Africa Division (1961–1963);
- Director of the Executive Office of the Director general (1963–1966);
- Assistant Director General for the Social Sciences, Human Sciences and Culture (1966–1969);
- Visiting Fellow, Center for International Studies, London School of Economics, Univ.of London (1970);
UNESCO (1971–1976)[]
- Assistant Director General for Programming and Future Studies (1971–1976);
- Special Adviser to the Director General,(1975–1976);
- Professor, Faculte des Sciences Juridiques, Economiques et Sociales, Universite Mohamed V, Rabat (1976–1979);
- Assistant Secretary general, United Nations Programme for Development (UNDP): Coordinator, Conference on Technical Cooperation between African Countries (Nairobi, 1980);
- Special Consultant to the United Nations during the International Year of Disable Persons,(1980–1981);
- Special Advisor to the Director General of the Intergovernmental Bureau for Informatics (IBI)(1981–1987);
- Adviser to the Secretary general of the United Nations on the programmes of the UN System against the Abuse of Drugs (1990–1991);
- Professor, Faculte des Sciences Juridiques, Economiques et Sociales, Universite Mohamed V, Rabat (1981);
- Visiting Professor, Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo (1998);
Professional associations[]
- World Future Studies Federation (WFSF), President (1977–1981);
- Futuribles International, President (1981–1990);
- Club of Rome (resignation in 1988);
- Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco;
- World Academy of Art and Science;
- World Academy of Social Prospective;
- African Academy of Sciences (Exec. Comm.);
- Pugwash Movement;
- Society for International Development (SID), Council (1982–1988), Exec. Comm.(1985–1988);
- International Union of Architects, Rapporteur XIII World Congress of Architects, Mexico (1978);
- Third World Forum;
- Founding President of the Moroccan Association of Future Studies (AMP);
- Founding President of the Moroccan Organization for Human Rights (OMDH);
- Morocco-Japan Association, Founding Member and Vice-President;
- Moroccan Association of Economists;
- Moroccan Association of Philosophy;
- Moroccan Association of Historians.
Publications[]
He has published several books and over 500 articles in the fields of the human and social sciences. He is a co-author of "No Limits to Learning" (Report to the Club of Rome, 1979) and the author of several books including "The United Nations System" (1973), "Maghreb et Francophonie" (1988), "Premiere Guerre Civilisationnelle" (1991), "Retrospective des Futurs" (1992), "Nord-Sud, Prelude a l'Ere Postcoloniale" (1993), «Cultural Diversity Key to Survival» (1995),» (1996), «Decolonisation Culturelle : Defi majeur du 21e Siecle» (1996), "Reglobalization of globalization" (2000), "Communication Dialogue" (2000),“Intifadates” (2001), Humiliation à l'ère du méga-impérialisme (2003) et Ihana (2004). Many of his books have been translated to Japanese such as “The First Civilizational War” (1999) and “The Afghan War : The Second Civilizational War, The End of an Empire”.
Professor Elmandjra received the Prix de la Vie Economique 1981 (France), the Grand Medal of the French Academy of Architecture (1984), the distinctions of Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters (France, 1985) and of the Order of The Rising Sun (Japan, 1986). He also received the Peace Medal of the Albert Einstein International Academy and the Award of the World Future Studies Federation (WFSF) in 1995. In 2002 he was made the first honorary member of the Moroccan Association of Researchers and Scientists (MARS).
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "Le Matin - Mahdi Elmandjra s'est éteint". Le Matin (in French). 13 June 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
- ^ Hassan, Mohamed El. "Morocco's Mehdi El Mendjra Died". Morocco World News. Retrieved 2014-06-14.
- ^ de Jouvenel, Hugues (February 2005). "Quelles perspectives à l'horizon 2010-2020 ? Une étude de Futuribles International : synthèse générale". Futuribles (305): 47–52. doi:10.1051/futur:200530547. ISSN 0337-307X.
- ^ 1933-2014., المنجرة, المهدي (1991). الحرب الحضارية الأولى مستقبل الماضي وماضي المستقبل. عيون. OCLC 929472154.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- ^ اليحياوي, يحيى (2016). "المستقبل في فكر مهدي المنجرة = The Future According to Mahdi Elmandjra". استشراف للدراسات المستقبلية (1): 226–251. doi:10.12816/0027911. ISSN 2413-4449.
- ^ Elmandjra, Mahdi Saadi (1957). The League of Arab States (PhD). London School of Economics and Political Science. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
- ^ Naji, Abdennasser (2017-12-12). "Self-assessment in the service of Quality". Quality Schools and Innovative Universities. 7 (10). doi:10.37870/joqie.v7i10.148. ISSN 2028-1897.
- ^ "Mahdi Elmandjra". Ya Biladi.
- ^ "Mahdi Elmandjra" (PDF). Tadbir.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mahdi Elmandjra. |
- Cornell University alumni
- Futurologists
- Moroccan economists
- Moroccan sociologists
- Moroccan academics
- Moroccan writers
- English people of Moroccan descent
- Alumni of the London School of Economics
- Mohammed V University faculty
- 1933 births
- 2014 deaths
- Writers from Rabat
- Alumni of Lycée Lyautey (Casablanca)
- American people of Moroccan descent
- Recipients of the Order of Independence (Jordan)
- Club of Rome members
- The Putney School alumni
- Moroccan political scientists