About the Balaton Group
The International Network of Resource Information Centers, more commonly known as "The Balaton Group," is an international network of researchers and practitioners in fields related to systems and sustainability. Founded in 1982 by Dennis Meadows and Donella Meadows—co-authors of the ground-breaking book "The Limits to Growth"—the Balaton Group is a cross-disciplinary, multi-cultural, and inter-generational meeting point for leaders and thinkers in sustainable development.
Informally, small ad hoc teams of Balaton Group members convene someplace on the planet almost every day of the year. They work together on projects that are often initiated at the annual Balaton Group Meeting, or facilitated through the Group's active network and lively internet dialogues. These collaborations include research projects, training courses, workshops, educational games, and computer model designs, all related to environmental conservation and sustainable development.
Since its founding in 1982, Balaton Group members have consistently advanced the boundaries of research and strategy for sustainable development. Over 30 books, more than a hundred conferences, and uncounted computer models, training programs, planning methods, and educational games have emerged from collaboration among its members.
Balaton Group members and processes also support the work of many other organizations. For example, they have made major programmatic or content contributions to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, numerous national and regional sustainable development programs, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, the LEAD International training program, Japan for Sustainability, the Goa 2100 scenario process, the "Race to Save the Planet" television series, and many, many others, all over the world.
By investing in its members, and supporting them in their professional work, the Balaton Group accelerates and deepens the world's general understanding of three factors that are fundamental to sustainable development: a systems orientation, a long-term perspective, and an unshakeable personal commitment to achieving positive change.
Equally important, the Balaton Group members strive to be a model for something that the world so often lacks: global collaboration, over the long term, on the theoretical and practical challenges of sustainable development, grounded in a multi-disciplinary, systems orientation. Collaboration of this kind is a fundamental requirement for turning "sustainability" from abstract idea into on-the-ground reality.
The success of the Balaton Group's approach is illustrated by quotes from its own members, who were surveyed asked why they valued participation in the network:
"Probably no other group, formal or informal, has had more direct impact on the theory and practice of issues associated with sustainable development than the Balaton Group."
"The Balaton Group has not only always been 'ahead of the curve' - it has been quietly shaping the curve."
Membership in the Balaton Group is by invitation only. For further information, please explore our website, or write to one of the members listed in the "Members" section.
History & Facts about the Balaton Group
- Founded in 1982 by Donella Meadows (†2001) and Dennis Meadows, co-authors of the 1972 report The Limits to Growth.
- Created as an international "network of networks" for leading researchers on resource use, environmental conservation, systems modeling, and sustainability.
- Cross-cultural dialogue and collaboration, centered on acommon set of sustainability values and principles, has been at the heart of the Group's work, and it has successfully connected members from cultural backgrounds as diverse as Latvia, Costa Rica, China, the United States, Russia, India, Denmark, Japan, New Zealand, Indonesia, the Netherlands and many other countries.
- Annual meetings are limited to 50 participants, but about 130 members are currently active. They share information, support each other's initiatives, and promote sustainability leadership development. Through their activities, these members in turn affect the strategies and programs of hundreds of other sustainability-related initiatives and programs, with the aim of making them more systemic, innovative, and effective.
- The Balaton Group has strongly supported the development of emerging sustainability leaders around the world, through informal mentoring, financial assistance, and strategic support to enter formal education and training programs in universities and other institutions.
- Since its first meeting, nearly 400 participants from over 40 countries have participated in the Group. About one-third of the participants have been women. Lake Balaton was chosen as the site of the first meeting, because Hungary permitted easy assembly of scientists and practitioners from East and West, North and South. Hungary has remained the site of the annual meeting.
