Part 1 begins with civic principles. Although these include equity, solidarity, and recognition of the duties and rights of members, Dr. Sartorius opines that the establishment and maintenance of internationally viable mental health programs require more than 1) kind intentions, 2) a pilot survey or two, 3) a vague ideology of "mad" versus "bad," 4) the importation of a few traditionally trained experts and/or the traditional training of a few local leaders, 5) misplaced emphasis on rural settings (by 2020, 80% of the planet’s population will live in cities), and 6) a modest one-time fiscal investment. Dr. Sartorius goes on to note that 1) increasingly sophisticated methodologies inhibit widespread research and 2) study-based conclusions take decades to be translated into meaningful social change, partly because the knowledge that the mental health sciences have produced is still not translated into data that are comprehensible to political authorities and partly because the interventions that are generated are not made ready for nonspecialists to apply.