The Science Diplomat

The Science Diplomat

Briefs

Decision Intelligence Briefs | No. 1: The global architecture of science diplomacy

Mapping the institutions shaping international scientific cooperation and governance.

Science Diplomat Staff's avatar
Science Diplomat Staff
Jun 03, 2026
∙ Paid

Editor’s Note: This inaugural edition launches a new monthly series designed to help policymakers, diplomats, scientists and institutional leaders navigate the evolving landscape of science diplomacy and global governance.

Decision Intelligence Briefs provide concise strategic analysis rooted in the legacy of structured decision science. Each monthly briefing maps emerging institutions, governance frameworks, strategic risks and opportunities shaping international scientific cooperation.

The executive summary is open to all readers. The full briefing and downloadable PDF edition are available to paid subscribers.


Decision Intelligence Briefs | No. 1
The Science Diplomat
June 2026

The global architecture of science diplomacy

Mapping the institutions shaping international scientific cooperation and governance.

Science diplomacy today operates through a distributed network of international organizations, scientific institutions and diplomatic initiatives that shape how scientific knowledge moves into global governance.

Rather than being coordinated by a single authority, international scientific cooperation is managed through overlapping institutions, advisory systems and diplomatic forums. This brief functions as an intellectual map of the institutions and governance mechanisms that are shaping the contemporary architecture of science diplomacy.

Strategic outlook

Three structural trends are reshaping the institutional landscape of science diplomacy.

Scientific institutions are gaining policy influence.

Global scientific bodies increasingly shape diplomatic agendas through expert assessments and technical coordination.

Emerging technologies are expanding the scope of science diplomacy.

Artificial intelligence, quantum technologies and biotechnology are becoming central topics of international governance discussions.

Geopolitical competition is altering patterns of scientific cooperation.

Governments are promoting international research collaboration while simultaneously strengthening research security and technological sovereignty.

These dynamics are transforming science diplomacy from a specialized diplomatic tool into a broader system linking science, security and global governance.

Why it matters

🔓 Unlock the full 8-page Decision Intelligence Brief and download the print-ready PDF edition. Available with a paid subscription or team subscription.

User's avatar

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of John Heilprin.

Or purchase a paid subscription.
© 2026 The Science Diplomat · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture