A history of the groundbreaking 1960s?1970s sustainability event. The Delos Symposia, which ran from 1963 to 1975, were a groundbreaking series of events dedicated to rethinking and reshaping the built environment to solve the planet's environmental and demographic problems. Choreographed around the charismatic Greek architect-planner Constantinos Doxiadis, and generating an entirely new ?science of human settlements? called ?Ekistics,? this ambitious endeavour was run according to ancient Greek practices of the sympósion, with banquets, dancing and fancy dress parties taking place aboard cruise ships in the Aegean Sea. Each symposium concluded at the island-city of Delos, where influential figures as diverse as Margaret Mead, Arnold Toynbee, Siegfried Giedion, Buckminster Fuller, Barbara Ward, Jean Gottmann, Kenzo Tange, Jaqueline Tyrwhitt and Marshall McLuhan would formally proceed to the ancient amphitheater and participate in ceremonial declarations on world issues. The Delos Symposia and Doxiadis offers the first comprehensive appraisal of the history and legacy of the Delos Symposia not only as a global humanitarian network, but also as an intellectual theatre and publicity machine. It explores their ideals, commitments and fights, the way they fed into the colossal urban planning projects that Doxiadis was implementing across the world, and the lessons they might offer for contemporary thinking on sustainable development. AUTHORS: Mantha Zarmakoupi is the Morris Russell and Josephine Chidsey Williams Assistant Professor of Roman Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. She has published widely on Roman luxury villas, as well as on the architecture, harbor infrastructure and urban development of late Hellenistic Delos. Simon Richards is Senior Lecturer and Programme Director in Architectural History and Theory at Loughborough University, UK. His research areas are modern through to contemporary architecture, comparative philosophical aesthetics and discourses of tradition and heritage. SELLING POINTS: . Lessons from an influential humanitarian network including great minds of the era, from Buckminster Fuller to Margaret Mead . An essential book on the science of human settlements, for researchers in architecture, planning, archaeology, anthropology, history, geography and sociology 150 illustrations