To TDWG Members:

The Executive Committee has been requested to comment regarding its decision to 
hold this year’s meeting in Beijing, China.

 Its Constitution establishes Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG) as “a 
not-for-profit, scientific and educational association formed to establish 
international collaboration among the creators, managers and users of 
biodiversity information so as to promote the wider and more effective 
dissemination of information about the world's heritage of biological organisms 
for the benefit of the world at large.”

The Executive Committee’s decision to host the 2012 meeting in China was based 
on several factors: 1) A desire to more evenly spread the travel hardship and 
costs of the meeting around the globe over time, 2) A desire to enable 
attendees who otherwise would not have the resources to travel 
internationally,, 3) The Chinese Academy of Science’s offer to host the meeting 
in 2012, 4) Recent advances in biodiversity informatics in China (e.g. 
Catalogue of Life, Encyclopedia of Life), and 5) Interest in expanding 
“international collaboration” and “wider and more effective dissemination of 
information” through direct contact with the Chinese biodiversity informatics 
community in their local region, as has been done in other regions of the world 
in the past. The Executive Committee therefore decided last year to welcome the 
offer from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which now expects at least 50 local 
attendees at this year’s meeting, the largest participation of Asian scientists 
in the history of TDWG meetings.

Objections to holding the meeting in China have cited politically based 
reasons: “routine governmental suppression of internet connectivity on 
political grounds.”  TDWG is a scientific and educational association, not a 
political one.  TDWG comprises a global membership. Locating a TDWG meeting in 
a particular country does not imply an endorsement of that country's policies; 
it is instead an expression of TDWG’s purpose to collaborate to widely 
disseminate information for the benefit of the world at large.  Further, there 
is no part of TDWG’s constitution, mission or purpose that implies or endorses 
isolationist, discriminatory, or punitive actions of any kind against anyone, 
any organization or any political entity.
We look forward to your support to make this another successful and informative 
annual meeting and the opportunity to exchange cultures in an atmosphere of 
mutual respect and a common desire to make the world a better place for 
ourselves and future generations.

Best regards,
Chuck Miller, on behalf of the TDWG Executive Committee
Chair
Biodiversity Information Standards (TDWG)



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