International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Founded
23 February 1947StandardsOrganisation foundedDate precision, exactEvidence grade, primary1 primary source
Drivers:
Post-war reconstruction and international trade required common technical languages. National standards bodies recognised the need for global coordination.
ISO is an international organisation that creates standards, which are agreed ways of doing things. When you see 'ISO certified' on a product, it means the product meets internationally agreed quality standards. ISO standards cover everything from paper sizes (A4) to information security (ISO 27001).
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Founded event plate
Structured atlas record showing date, domain, evidence grade, source count, and predecessor and successor links.
Forecasts and counterfactuals stay labelled as opinion in the event data. Source: Computer History Museum.
Before
After World War II, international trade and cooperation required common standards. Different countries had incompatible technical specifications. There was no global body to coordinate industrial and commercial standards across nations.
What changed
ISO was established as an independent, non-governmental organisation to develop and publish international standards. It brought together national standards bodies from around the world to create consensus-based specifications covering everything from manufacturing to information technology.
How it happened
Delegates from 25 countries met in London in 1946 to create a new international standards organisation. ISO officially began operations on 23 February 1947 in Geneva, Switzerland. The name 'ISO' comes from the Greek word 'isos' meaning 'equal', ensuring the same abbreviation in all languages.
Outcomes
- Created framework for international technical standards
- Enabled global trade through common specifications
- Published over 24,000 standards covering most industries
- Established model for consensus-based standardisation
Limitations
- Standards development can be slow (years)
- Consensus process may produce compromises
- Implementation varies across countries
- Standards can become outdated
Lessons learnt
- International cooperation enables global trade
- Consensus-based standards gain wider adoption
- Neutral organisations can bridge national interests
- Standards require continuous maintenance
Stakeholders and artefacts
Organisations
- ISOstandards_bodyFounded organisation
Artefacts
- ISOspecificationInternational Organization for Standardization
Key terms
Causality
Made possible: IEEE Formed from AIEE and IRE Merger.
On this course
Read in the path Standards Bodies: How Technology Gets Standardised.