Difference between revisions of "Freedom House"
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<table border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" align="center"> | <table border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" align="center"> | ||
<tr><td>[[William H. Taft]] IV, Chair</td> | <tr><td>[[William H. Taft]] IV, Chair</td> | ||
− | <td>[[Ruth Wedgwood]], Vice-Chair </td> | + | <td>[[Ruth Wedgwood]], Vice-Chair - also with [[Council on Foreign Relations]], [[International Institute for Strategic Studies]] & [[Defense Policy Board]]</td> |
− | <td>[[Thomas A. Dine]], Vice-Chair</td></tr> | + | <td>[[Thomas A. Dine]], Vice-Chair - former CEO with [[Jewish Community Federation]] & Executive Director of the [[American Israel Public Affairs Committee]]</td></tr> |
<tr><td>[[Walter J. Schloss]], Treasurer </td> | <tr><td>[[Walter J. Schloss]], Treasurer </td> | ||
− | <td>[[John Norton Moore]], Secretary, Governance & Ethics Officer</td> | + | <td>[[John Norton Moore]], Secretary, Governance & Ethics Officer - former Chairman of the [[United States Institute of Peace]] whcih he helped to establish</td> |
<td>[[Max M. Kampelman]], Chairman Emeritus</td></tr> | <td>[[Max M. Kampelman]], Chairman Emeritus</td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>[[Bette Bao Lord]], Chairman Emeritus</td> | <tr><td>[[Bette Bao Lord]], Chairman Emeritus</td> | ||
<td>[[Kenneth L. Adelman]]</td> | <td>[[Kenneth L. Adelman]]</td> | ||
− | <td>[[Susan J. Bennett]]</td></tr> | + | <td>[[Susan J. Bennett]] - reported & editor. Also member of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]]</td></tr> |
<tr><td>[[James H. Carter]]</td> | <tr><td>[[James H. Carter]]</td> | ||
<td>[[Antonia Cortese]]</td> | <td>[[Antonia Cortese]]</td> | ||
− | <td>[[Lee Cullum]]</td></tr> | + | <td>[[Lee Cullum]] - also with the [[Council on Foreign Relations]], [[Trilateral Commission]], [[Pacific Council on International Policy]], [[American Council on Germany]], [[Inter American Dialogue]] & [[National Committee on U.S.-China Relations]]</td></tr> |
− | <tr><td>[[Paula J. Dobriansky]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[Paula J. Dobriansky]] - former Senior Vice President and Director with the [[Council on Foreign Relations]] & Associate Director for Policy and Programs at the [[U. S. Information Agency]]</td> |
<td>[[Alan P. Dye]]</td> | <td>[[Alan P. Dye]]</td> | ||
<td>[[Stuart Eizenstat]]</td></tr> | <td>[[Stuart Eizenstat]]</td></tr> | ||
− | <tr><td>[[Carleton S. (Carly) Fiorina]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[Carleton S. (Carly) Fiorina]] - formerly served [[Hewlett-Packard]] Company (1999-2005), [[AT&T]] and [[Lucent Technologies]]</td> |
− | <td>[[Sidney Harman]]</td> | + | <td>[[Sidney Harman]] - founder & chairman of [[Harman/Kardon]] (now known as [[Harman International Industries]]. Serves the Boards of the [[Aspen Institute]], [[BENS]] ([[Business Executives for National Security]]), is a member of the [[Trilateral Commission]], the [[Council on Foreign Relations]] and the [[Council on Competiveness]]. Trustee of the [[Martin Luther King Center for Social Change]], the [[Public Agenda Foundation]] and The [[Carter Center]]</td> |
− | <td>[[D. Jeffrey Hirschberg]]</td></tr> | + | <td>[[D. Jeffrey Hirschberg]] - partner & managing director of [[Kalorama Partners]]. Formerly served [[Howrey Simon Arnold & White]], was Vice-Chairman of [[Ernst & Young]], Director of the [[US-Russia Business Council]] and served Administration & Congressional oversight committees</td></tr> |
− | <tr><td>[[John T. Joyce]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[John T. Joyce]] - president of the [[International Construction Institute]], member of the [[Advisory Committee on Labor Diplomacy to the President and the Secretaries of State and Labor]], on the boards of the [[National Endowment for Democracy]], the [[National Democratic Institute]] and the [[Commission on Central American Reconstruction and Redevelopment]]. Formerly with [[AFL-CIO]], the the [[International Labor Organization]] (ILO), [[International Confederation of Free Trade Unions]] and was a founding board member of venture capital fund [[Poland Partners]] </td> |
− | <td>[[Kathryn Dickey Karol]]</td></tr> | + | <td>[[Kathryn Dickey Karol]] - Vice President of Global Corporate Affairs of [[Amgen]]. Former Assistant Vice President of Global Government Affairs at [[Eli Lilly]] and served the [[International Republican Institute]] She is reported to have 'held various other positions in the U.S. government agencies of Treasury and the [[Central Intelligence Agency]]'.</td></tr> |
− | <tr><td>[[Farooq Kathwari]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[Farooq Kathwari]] - Chairman, President & CEO of [[Ethan Allen Interiors Inc]]. Member of [[Council on Foreign Relations]], Trustee of the [[World Conference of Religions for Peace]], Director of the [[Institute for the Study of Diplomacy]] at [[Georgetown University]] and is a member of the [[American Committees on Foreign Relations]]. Awards include “National Human Relations Award” by the [[American Jewish Committee]] and [[Ernst & Young]]’s Entrepreneur of the Year Award</td> |
− | <td>[[Anthony Lake]]</td> | + | <td>[[Anthony Lake]] - Professor with [[Georgetown University]]. Former Assistant to the President for [[National Security Affairs]]</td> |
<td>[[Lawrence Lessig]]</td></tr> | <td>[[Lawrence Lessig]]</td></tr> | ||
− | <tr><td>[[Michael Lewan]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[Michael Lewan]] - Principal and founder of law firm, [[Brown Rudnick]] which 'represents a wide cross section of Fortune 500 companies as well as some of the most important trade associations in the American business community'. Lewan has 'close relationships in both the House and Senate' and prior to founding Brown Rudnick, he was President of the [[Michael Lewan Company]]: which specialized in developing and executing public policy strategies for domestic and international corporations</td> |
− | <td>[[Jay Mazur]]</td> | + | <td>[[Jay Mazur]]- President Emeritus of [[UNITE]] and member of the [[Holocaust Memorial Council]] and of the [[US-South Africa Business Development Committee]].</td> |
− | <td>[[Theodore N. Mirvis]]</td></tr> | + | <td>[[Theodore N. Mirvis]] - trustee of the [[Jerusalem Foundation]] and a member of the Board of Directors and Board of Overseers of the [[Center for Jewish History in New York City]]</td></tr> |
− | <tr><td>[[Dalia Mogahed]]</td> | + | <tr><td>[[Dalia Mogahed]] - member of the [[Crisis in the Middle East Task Force]] of the [[Brookings Institution]] and Executive Director of the [[Gallup Center for Muslim Studies]]. Mogahed has spoken at events with the [[World Economic Forum]] and the Brookings Institution’s [[U.S.-Islamic World Forum]]</td> |
− | <td>[[Joshua Muravchik]]</td> | + | <td>[[Joshua Muravchik]] - serves the State Department’s [[Advisory Committee on Democracy Promotion]], is on the editorial boards of the ''[[Journal of Democracy]]'' and the ''[[Journal of International Security Affairs]]''. He also serves as an adjunct scholar at the [[Washington Institute for Near East Policy]] and as an adjunct professor at the [[Institute of World Politics]]. He was a former resident scholar at [[AEI]]</td> |
<td>[[Azar Nafisi]]</td></tr> | <td>[[Azar Nafisi]]</td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>[[David Nastro]]</td> | <tr><td>[[David Nastro]]</td> |
Revision as of 14:18, 15 May 2009
Freedom Houseis a non-profit organization that relies upon tax-deductible grants and donations under Section 501(c)(3) of the IRS code.[1] Corporate researcher Holly Sklar described it as a "conservative research, publishing, networking, and selective human rights organization."[1]. Freedom House's work is linked to the "democracy promotion" efforts of the National Endowment for Democracy.
Freedom House is a small but influential organization with bases in Washington and New York. In 2006 it was reported to have more than 120 offices around the world and an annual budget of US$19 million[2]. A high percentage of its funding is reported to come from the State Department (an average of 95% between 2000 and 2003) and it is described as having a list of trustees 'consisting of a Who's Who of neoconservatives from government, business, academia, labor, and the press'[3]
Contents
Background
Freedom House describes itself as non-partisan and broad-based, "a clear voice for democracy and freedom around the world." It was founded "nearly sixty years ago by Eleanor Roosevelt, Wendell Willkie, and other Americans concerned with the mounting threats to peace and democracy, Freedom House has been a vigorous proponent of democratic values and a steadfast opponent of dictatorships of the far left and the far right."[4]
Freedom House sees itself "at the center of the struggle for freedom ... It was an outspoken advocate of the Marshall Plan and NATO in the 1940s, of the U.S. civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, of the Vietnam boat people in the 1970s, of Poland's Solidarity movement and the Filipino democratic opposition in the 1980s, and of the many democracies that have emerged around the world in the 1990s ... Freedom House has vigorously opposed dictatorships in Central America and Chile, apartheid in South Africa, the suppression of the Prague Spring, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, genocide in Bosnia and Rwanda, and the brutal violation of human rights in Cuba, Burma, China, and Iraq ... It has championed the rights of democratic activists, religious believers, trade unionists, journalists, and proponents of free markets. In 1997, a consolidation took place whereby the international democratization training programs of the National Forum Foundation were incorporated into Freedom House."[2]
Board of Trustees
The Freedom House Board of Trustees is described as "composed of leading Democrats, Republicans, and independents; business and labor leaders; former senior government officials; scholars; writers; and journalists."[3]
In 2009, Freedom House lists their Trustees as[5]:
Funding
- Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
- Byrne Foundation
- Carthage Foundation
- Scaife Foundations
- Eurasia Foundation
- Ford Foundation
- The Freedom Forum
- Grace Foundation, Inc.
- Lilly Endowment, Inc.
- LWH Family Foundation
- National Endowment for Democracy
- Pew Charitable Trusts
- Sarah Scaife Foundation (Scaife Foundations)
- Schloss Family Foundation
- Smith Richardson Foundation, Inc.
- Soros Foundations
- Tinker Foundation
- Unilever United States Foundation, Inc.
- US Agency for International Development
- US Information Agency
Affiliations
NB: These organizations often co-host events, there is personnel overlap, and at some point have shared offices.
The Monthly Review Foundation reports in an article describing the history of Freedom House that some of the affiliations of its trustees and associates included the State Department, the National Security Council (Jeane Kirkpatrick), the CIA (through front groups), the U.S. Information Agency, the Trilateral Commission (Zbigniew Brzezinski), the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Committee on the Present Danger, Accuracy in Media, the American Enterprise Institute, Crisis, The New Republic and PRODEMCA (a group that is reported to have raised funds and lobbied for the Contras). During the 1980s, it is claimed that Freedom House also formed the Afghanistan Information Center, one of several NED-funded groups supporting the mujahedin. This was reportedly to have complement the government's US $3,000 million covert funding program for the anti-Soviet groups.[6]
Contact
New York Office
- 120 Wall Street, Floor 26
- New York, NY 10005
- Phone: 212-514-8040
- FAX: 212-514-8055
- URL: www.freedomhouse.org
Washington D.C. Office
- 1319 18th Street, N.W.
- Washington, D.C. 20036
- Phone: 202-296-5101
- FAX: 202-296-5078
External Resources
- Holly Sklar, "Washington Wants to Buy Nicaragua's Elections Again: A Guide to US Operatives and Nicaraguan Parties," Z Magazine, December 1989.
- Freedom House Archives 1936-1999, Princeton Univ., Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
- Bill Berkowitz, "Freedom House receiving US government money "for clandestine activities inside Iran"", Media Transparency, April 4, 2006.
References
- ↑ Sklar, H. (1989) 'Washington Wants to Buy Nicaragua's Elections Again: A Guide to US Operatives and Nicaraguan Parties,' Z Magazine, December 1989
- ↑ Freedom House Freedom House Statement on the Passing of George Field 1st June 2006. Accessed 14th may 2009
- ↑ Barahona, B. (2007) The Freedom House Files MR Zine A project of the Monthly Review Foundation. 3/1/07. Accessed 14th May 2009
- ↑ Freedom House About Accessed 2006
- ↑ Freedom House Board of Trustees Accessed 15th May 2009
- ↑ Barahona, B. (2007) The Freedom House Files MR Zine A project of the Monthly Review Foundation. 3/1/07. Accessed 14th May 2009