Franz Baumann

Franz Baumann (born 23 September 1953) is a German former United Nations official, who served as Assistant Secretary-General and United Nations Special Adviser on Environment and Peace Operations at the United Nations Secretariat in New York until the end of 2015. Since 2017 he has been visiting research professor at New York University (Graduate School of Arts and Science, Program in International Relations[1]).

Franz Baumann

Biography

Baumann was born in Schramberg, where he received his Abitur in 1973 from Gymnasium Schramberg. He then studied social sciences and management at the University of Konstanz, specializing in international management, and in 1975 studied history of art at the University of Bristol, in the United Kingdom. He obtained his degree in public administration in 1979 from the University of Konstanz and went on to obtain a doctorate in political science in 1992 from Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. His wife, Barbara Gibson, is a Canadian diplomat. She served from 2004 to 2008 as ambassador to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe in Vienna, in 2015 as Deputy Secretary-General and in 2016 as Secretary-General of ICM, the Independent Commission on Multilateralism (ICM) in New York.[2]

Their daughter was born in 2000.

Career

Baumann worked for the European Parliament in Luxembourg from 1976, in 1979 at the European Commission in Brussels and in 1980 for Siemens in Munich.

He began his career with the United Nations in 1980, serving from 1980 to 1982 as Associate Expert in Nigeria for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO). He then worked in various departments at the United Nations Secretariat, including those of management and peacekeeping, and in the Office of the Secretary General. In 1993 he was Chief Administrative Officer of the joint United Nations/Organization of American States Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Haiti (MICIVIH).

In 2002 he was appointed Director for Management of the United Nations Office at Vienna (UNOV), in 2004 Deputy Director-General of UNOV, in 2006 Deputy Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and in 2007 Acting Director of the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA).

In 2009 he was appointed Assistant Secretary-General for General Assembly and Conference Management at the United Nations Secretariat.[3] In September 2014 he became Senior Deployment Coordinator for Umoja, an enterprise resource planning system.[4] and in September 2015 Special Advisor on Environment and Peace Operations.
He is a Senior Fellow as well as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin.[5]

He is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Academic Council on the United Nations System. [6] and of the Board of Advisers of the Centre for United Nations Studies at the University of Buckingham (England).[7]

Publications (partial selection)

  • "Wie weit half der Marshall-Plan? Das europäische Wiederaufbauprogramm in kritischer Beleuchtung." In: Damals. 8. Jahrgang, Mai 1976.
  • "Plädoyer gegen eine Verweigerung" In: Forum Europa. Dezember 1978/Januar 1979.
  • "Die Regionalisierung Belgiens: Arithmetik eines Sprachenstreites." (mit Jan Ulrich Clauss). In: Aufstand in der Provinz. Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/ New York 1980, ISBN 3-593-32803-8.
  • The bureaucratic State and economic Development in Nigeria. Doctoral Dissertation. Carleton University, Ottawa 1992.
  • "Kollektive Psychopathologie." In: Sprach-Nachrichten. 1/2000.
  • "Globalisierung und nationale Identität." In: Kontext. 8/2001.
  • "Ein pragmatischer Idealist: Würdigung des Nobelpreisträgers Kofi Annan." In: Aufbau. 25. Oktober 2001.
  • "Die Generalsanierung des UN-Amtssitzes" (Capital Master Plan). In: Vereinte Nationen. Dezember 2004, p. 206f. online .(PDF; 2,4 MB)
  • "Warum ist Afrika unterentwickelt? Das Beispiel Nigeria." In: Mut. Nr. 533, April 2012, pp. 22–44
  • "Coexistence of Languages at the United Nations." In: Le jour. Université de Saint Joseph, Beirut. April 2012, pp. 5–10 online(PDF; 23,1 MB)
  • "Die kurze Renaissance der VN-Friedensmissionen nach der Eiszeit des Kalten Krieges." In: Des Friedens General. Ekkehard Griep (Hrsg.): Herder Verlag, Freiburg/ Basel/ Wien 2013, ISBN 978-3-451-30743-0.
  • "Die Vereinten Nationen. Eine Innenansicht der Schwierigkeiten, Frieden zu schaffen." In: Mut. Nr. 554, März 2014.
  • "The Principle of Hope." Review of Governing the World? Addressing 'Problems without Passports' by Thomas G. Weiss. In: Academic Council on the United Nations System, 21.10.2014 online
  • "Die Vereinten Nationen: Wertvoll aber schwierig." In: Ekkehard Griep (Hrsg.): Wir sind UNO - Deutsche bei den Vereinten Nationen. Herder Verlag, Freiburg/Basel/Wien 2016, ISBN 978-3-495-31138-7
  • "UN Bureaucracy? No, Thanks." In PassBlue, 14.5.2016; online
  • "Das Sekretariat der Vereinten Nationen: Unabhängig, effizient, kompetent?" In: Der (europäische) Föderalist (17.6.2016); online
  • "The United Nations Secretariat: Independent, efficient, competent?" In: Der (europäische) Föderalist (17.6.2016); online
  • "A sorry state of affairs: The UN Secretariat has no Climate Plan." In: PassBlue (2 August 2016); online
  • "UN Management - An Oxymoron?" In: Global Governance (Volume 22, No. 4, Oct. – Dec. 2016); online
  • "New Approaches to the UN in a Changing International System". In: IDN-InDepthNews UN Insider (12.12. 2016) online
  • "Populism - the Morbid Symptom of a Political Crisis". In: IDN-InDepthNews UN Insider (08.March, 2017); online
  • "Fabulous, Tragic Kurt Tucholsky" In: The Los Angeles Review of Books, (19. August 2017) online
  • "Populismus: Reflex einer gesellschaftlichen Verunsicherung und Symptom einer politischen Krise". In: Mut Nr. 591, July/August 2017.
  • "As UN Climate Talks Convene, the Earth Veers Toward Catastrophe." In PassBlue, 2 November 2017;online
  • "Present at the Destruction: Humanity’s Success in Ruining Nature". Review of Jeff Goodell’s, The Water will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World (New York: Little, Brown & Co, 2017). In: Los Angeles Review of Books, (21 February 2018); online
  • "Climate Policy is not Rocket Science: It is much more difficult". TEDx Talk (22 February 2018); online;also on youtube
  • "A Compelling Book on 'Humanity’s Success in Ruining Nature.'" In: IDN-InDepthNews UN Insider, (4 March 2018); online
  • "Climate Change is the Central Challenge for Humanity." In: IDN-InDepthNews (6.6.2018); online
  • "The Systemic Challenge of Global Heating." In: International Politics Reviews, Volume 6, Issue 2 (1.10.2018), pp. 134-144; doi 10.1057/s41312-018-0065-5; online
  • "To Save the Earth, Deepen Incentives for a Carbon-Free World." In: PassBlue, (6.10.2018); online
  • "Why would you want to be German?" In Los Angeles Review of Books, (7.3.2019); online
  • With William J. Ripple and Dominick A. DellaSala,"The Green New Deal: Finally Climate Policy informed by Science." In Climate Home News, (18.3.2019); online
  • "Climate Change: The Problem from Hell." In Los Angeles Review of Books, (9.6.2019); online
  • "Global Heating: too big for politics?" Keynote at OxPeace 2019: Peace in the Anthropocene, held at St. John’s College Oxford, May 18th, 2019; online and here
gollark: Oh, and also fear people who are good at grappling as well as striking.
gollark: Well, you should fear them *too*, but guns are obviously quite rare here.
gollark: Fear the person who practices a reasonable assortment of kicks and other strikes a large amount of times each, but also in integrated practice and live sparring?
gollark: Also, they *mostly* produce electron beams, the X-rays are IIRC a byproduct.
gollark: > you should remove the electron gun from your CRT displayimplying I have a CRT display?

References

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