Difference between revisions of "Stuart Family Foundation"
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The foundation gives to a range of conservative causes including [[Parents Television Council]], [[Common Sense Media]], the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]], the [[Heritage Foundation]], the [[Hoover Institution]] and the [[Jamestown Foundation]].<ref name="Phil"/> | The foundation gives to a range of conservative causes including [[Parents Television Council]], [[Common Sense Media]], the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]], the [[Heritage Foundation]], the [[Hoover Institution]] and the [[Jamestown Foundation]].<ref name="Phil"/> | ||
− | According to the [[Philanthropy Roundtable]] grants given by the Foundation are 'diverse, but ... an ideological current | + | According to the [[Philanthropy Roundtable]] grants given by the Foundation are 'diverse, but ... an ideological current ... underlies each donation. The goal is to influence public policy and bolster high ethical values and patriotism.'<ref name="Phil"/> |
==Grant recipients== | ==Grant recipients== |
Revision as of 01:24, 25 January 2014
The Stuart Family Foundation is a conservative foundation set up by Robert D. Stuart Jr., in Lake Forest, Illinois in 1986. Stuart is the former chairman and CEO of the Quaker Oats Company, and a former U.S. ambassador to Norway during the Ronald Reagan presidency.[1] The foundation gives to a range of conservative causes including Parents Television Council, Common Sense Media, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Heritage Foundation, the Hoover Institution and the Jamestown Foundation.[1]
According to the Philanthropy Roundtable grants given by the Foundation are 'diverse, but ... an ideological current ... underlies each donation. The goal is to influence public policy and bolster high ethical values and patriotism.'[1]
Contents
Grant recipients
People
- Board member Bob Thurston | Executive Director Truman Anderson[1]
Resources
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Philanthropy Roundtable Stuart Family Foundation, Accessed 24 January 2014