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Photo gallery: 50 years of the IARC Monographs


Photo Gallery Top of the page

We have collected some photos illustrating the history and evolution of the IARC Monographs over the first 50 years of the programme since it was founded in 1971.

Programme Heads

Heads of the IARC Monographs programme

The first Head of the IARC Monographs programme was Lorenzo Tomatis, who was instrumental in its creation in 1971, when he was Chief of the Division of Carcinogenicity at IARC, and who led the programme until he became IARC Director in 1983. Dr Tomatis has been followed by a number of prominent scientists drawn to IARC from around the world.



Diversity

Diversity in the Working Group

Since 1971, over 1300 scientists from more than 50 countries have participated in IARC Monographs meetings. Diversity in the Working Group has been increasing and the “Call for Experts” for each meeting now explicitly states that nominations are encouraged of scientists whose relevant publications may not be found through standard literature searches, of women, and of candidates from low- and middle-income countries.





Past

Evolution in technology: the past

In the early years of the IARC Monographs programme, the development of a Monograph was primarily paper-based. References were catalogued on cards and stored on microfiche. All drafts, publications, and reports were printed before review by the Working Group. Text and figures were projected using an overhead projector. The final Monograph would have been typed up for printing.





Present

Evolution in technology: the present

In the 50 years since its creation, the IARC Monographs programme has continually sought to improve and innovate in the procedures it uses, not only in the review of potential carcinogenic hazards, but also in the organization of Monographs meetings and in the publication and dissemination process. The Preamble to the IARC Monographs is regularly updated. New processes and tools have been developed and integrated that aid systematic literature review (Health Assessment Workspace Collaborative, HAWC), and the evaluation of high-throughput mechanistic data on the key characteristics of carcinogens (“kc-hits”). An online content management system was created in-house (IARC Online Publications System, IOPS). The Table Builder tool is used to produce evidence tables from peer-reviewed literature. Desktop automated layout and online publishing were adopted and the iconic orange volume was given a fresh look.




Our home

The IARC Monographs home

We are looking forward to welcoming meeting participants to our new home in the IARC Nouveau Centre in 2023.




All photos: © IARC
Except:
Some recent covers © Tristan Gohier


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