Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001October 1, 2000 to September 30, 2001
Ford Foundation OfficesInside front cover
1 Mission Statement3 President’sMessage18 Board of Trustees18 Officers19 Committees of the Board20 Staff25 The Foundation Responds to September 1126 ProgramApprovals
27 Asset Building and Community Development
49 Peace and Social Justice
65 Education,Media,Arts and Culture
83 Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
Asset Building and Community DevelopmentEconomic Development 84Community and Resource Development 92HumanDevelopment and Reproductive Health 105Programwide 118Program-Related Investments 119
Peace and Social JusticeHuman Rights and International Cooperation 120Governance and Civil Society 136Programwide 151
Education,Media,Arts and CultureEducation,Knowledge and Religion 152Media,Arts and Culture 163Programwide 172
Foundationwide Actions 173GoodNeighbor Grants 175
177 Financial Review
193 Index
CommunicationsBack cover flap
Guidelines for Grant SeekersInside back cover flap
Library of CongressCard Number 52-43167ISSN:0071-7274April 2002
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Mission Statement
The Ford Foundation is a resource for innovative peopleand institutionsworldwide. Our goals are to:
� Strengthen democratic values,� Reduce poverty and injustice,� Promote international cooperation and� Advance human achievement
This has been our purpose for more than half a century.
A fundamental challenge facing every society is to create political,economic and social systems that promote peace, human welfare and thesustainability of the environment on which life depends. We believe thatthe best way to meet this challenge is to encourage initiatives by thoseliving and working closest to where problems are located; to promotecollaboration among the nonprofit, government and business sectors, andto ensure participation by men and women from diverse communitiesand at all levels of society. In our experience, such activities help buildcommon understanding, enhance excellence, enable people to improvetheir lives and reinforce their commitment to society.
The Ford Foundation is one source of support for these activities.We work mainly by making grants or loans that build knowledge andstrengthen organizations and networks. Since our financial resources aremodest in comparison with societal needs, we focus on a limited numberof problem areas and program strategies within our broad goals.
Founded in 1936, the foundation operated as a local philanthropy inthe state of Michigan until 1950, when it expanded to become a nationaland international foundation. Since its inception it has been an indepen-dent, nonprofit, nongovernmental organization. It has provided morethan $10 billion in grants and loans. These funds derive from aninvestment portfolio that began with gifts and bequests of Ford MotorCompany stock by Henry and Edsel Ford. The foundation no longerowns Ford Motor Company stock, and its diversified portfolio is managedto provide a perpetual source of support for the foundation’s programsand operations.
The Trustees of the foundation set policy and delegate authority to thepresident and senior staff for the foundation’s grant making and operations.Program officers in the United States, Africa, the Middle East, Asia, LatinAmerica and Russia explore opportunities to pursue the foundation’s goals,formulate strategies and recommend proposals for funding.
Graduate students supported byI.F.P. fellowships at the UniversidadMayor de San Simón (U.M.S.S.),Cochabamba, Bolivia. From left:FélixTito,ElizabethUscamayta,Vidal Carbajal, Hipólito Peralta,
Néstor Velásquez,MelquíadesQuintasi. All are studying formaster’s degrees in interculturalcommunications and bilingualeducation. Another I.F.P. fellow,DomingoOñate, is not pictured.
3
In 2001 the Ford Foundation and the Institute for International Education(I.I.E.) launched the largest single initiative in the foundation’s history—the Ford Foundation International Fellowships Program (I.F.P.). This10-year, $330million programhas two parts. Through the InternationalFellowships Fund (I.F.F.), a new entity established by Ford and I.I.E., theprogramwill provide approximately 3,500 graduate fellowships fordisadvantaged individuals with academic promise and proven leader-ship capacity, for study anywhere in the world for up to three years.Fordwill alsomake complementary grants to strengthen overseasundergraduate institutions’ability to recruit and prepare traditionallyexcluded groups for opportunities of this sort.
The I.F.P. responds to theworld’s need for new generations of outstand-ing leaders with direct knowledge of some of their societies’worstproblems and inequities, and a sense of moral urgency about them.Such leaderswill needmore than talent,good ideas and determination,crucial as these qualities are. Manywill also need the analytic skills,social networks and know-how that can come from advanced profes-sional or interdisciplinary education, and from the diversity of thoughtand experience now found onmany of theworld’s university campuses.Because the I.F.P. uses a variety of innovative recruitment and selec-tion procedures to reach its target groups,and because fellowships canbe such a crucial strategy for personal and national development,I want to describewhat the I.F.P.’s first year has involved.
The program seeks academically talentedmen andwomenwhowouldnot normally have the opportunity for graduate study,whether becauseof geographic isolation, family poverty or discrimination based ongender, ethnicity, physical disability or other factors. The I.F.P.’s dualfocus on talent and social exclusion, combinedwith the freedom tostudy anywhere in the world,was noted by experts in each countryas nearly unique and challenging to implement. A decentralizedoperation and partnershipswith experienced regional, national andinternational organizations havebeen key to addressing the challenges.In each location, three organizations combined forces tomake theprogramwork as intended: the I.F.F., its local partner organization,and a local Ford Foundation office (see table on page 4).
President’sMessage
4
IFP International Partners
February 2002
Asia
China Institute of International Education (IIE)www.china-ifp.org
India United States Educational Foundation in India (USEFI)www.ifpsa.org
Indonesia Indonesian International Education Foundation (IIEF)www.iie.org/iie/iief
Philippines Philippines Social Science Council (PSSC)www.philsocsci.org
Vietnam Center for Educational ExchangewithVietnam (CEEVN)[email protected]
Africa
West Africa: The Association of African Universities (AAU)Ghana,Nigeria www.aau.org/ifpand SenegalEast Africa: Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA)Kenya,Tanzania www.iucea.org/scholarships/Scholarships.htmland UgandaSouthern Africa: Africa-America Institute (AAI)Mozambique and www.aaisa.org.zaSouth AfricaNorth Africa and America-Mideast Educational andTraining ServicestheMiddle East: (AMIDEAST)Egypt and Palestine www.amideast.org
Latin America
Andes and Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences (FLACSO)Southern Cone: www.programabecas.orgChile and PeruBrazil Carlos Chagas Foundation (CCF)
www.programabolsa.org.brMexico and Institute of International Education (IIE)Guatemala [email protected] Center for Research andHigher Studies in Social
Anthropology (CIESAS)www.ciesas.edu.mx/bibdf/ciesas-ford/home.html
Guatemala Center for Research on theMesoamerica Region(CIRMA)www.cirma.net/becas.htm
Russia
Institute of International Education (IIE)www.iie.ru/IFP
Ford Foundation overseas offices (see inside front cover) collaborated with thefollowing local and regional organizations to develop and operate the Interna-tional Fellowships Program in 21 countries around the world.
5
Outreach and selection processes combined knowledge of best prac-tices as well as new techniques designed to find hidden talent.In Vietnam, for example, nominators sought out women and ethnicminority people known to be good students and social innovators,particularly those involved in rural economic and social development.Each personwho requested informationwas counseled about theapplication and selection process. This was particularly important forsome of themost socially isolated applicants who initially believedtheyhad little to say about themselves andhad seldombeenaskedwhattheywanted to study and dowith their lives. Counseling also helpedovercomeworries aboutmoving ahead of family and friends or gaininggovernment approval for study overseas. This unusual investmentin all applicants helped level the playing field for a very rigorous selec-tion process. An international five-member selection committeereviewed the final applications, examining interview notes from thesemifinal rounds. They looked for evidence that the applicants hadovercome barriers to higher education, showed significant socialcommitment and linked their study plans to community improve-ment work after the fellowship.
In Mexico and Guatemala, partner organizations familiar withindigenous communities made repeated visits to indigenous areas,encouraging promising candidates to apply. InNigeria,Senegal andGhana,NGOs and newsmedia announcements helped reachwomen,ethnic minority communities andmembers of poor families, espec-ially those in rural areas. Beyond academic ability, final selectionemphasized leadership potential as reflected in successful commu-nity service. In Chile and Peru, selectors looked for academic talentin“persons affected by social exclusion” such as poverty, residencein remote provinces and education in public schools and univer-sities rather than the more prestigious private institutions. Theyfocused on performance in the last two years of the normal baccalau-reate program, recognizing that talented students often overcomeearly academic problems with hard work, good instructionandmentoring.
In India, announcements in 15major-language publications, English-language dailies and the Internet were supplemented by sendingrecruiters to rural areas to describe the program and bymailingmorethan 1,000 letters to remote regional nominators. Selection emphasizedacademic talent and social exclusion as assessed by factors such asthe type of schooling (language of instruction, rural, etc.), parental
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Susan Berresford, left, withAmbassador Donald McHenry,Chairman of the InternationalFellowships Fund (parent organ-ization of the InternationalFellowships Program), and JoanDassin, Executive Director ofI.F.P., at an event to announcethe initiative.
6
President’s Message
occupation and education, caste, gender and disability. Amember ofthe national selection panel met with each finalist for an informalchat over tea or coffee before the interview, trying to set the applicantat ease and provide a familiar face at the interview table. Candidateswere encouraged to express themselves in the language of their choicewith translation provided as necessary. In China, by contrast,withina similar broad outreach a fundamental selection criterionwas abasic level of proficiency in English,nownecessary for admission intohigh-quality Chinese aswell asmany foreign universities.
In every location, several rounds of screening and oversight byacademics and practitioners ensured a careful and transparent selec-tion process. Nonetheless, final selection was often difficult forpanels accustomed to awarding fellowships exclusively on the basisof academic performance. Panelists worked hard to find the rightbalance between academic and leadership potential and to definesocial exclusion. Selection processes will continue to be refinedas the programevolves and as the advisers gain experiencewith thecomplexity and subjectivity of a culturally sensitive approach.
Once selected, I.F.P. fellows unfamiliar with academic study optionsare offered advice on graduate schools and assistedwith applicationroutines. Not surprisingly, second-language skills have influencedoptions for graduate placement. Some foreign-language instructionis available for the fellows, as is training in computer and researchskills, and all will take part in networking activities designed to providepersonal support and a powerful sense of belonging to an interna-tional leadership cohort. All are eligible for modest funds to expandprofessional horizonswhile studying, see familymembers and laterresumework in their countries upon completion of study. A commondata collection system follows the fellowship recipients during andafter the program,providing the basis for evaluation of the I.F.P. andresearch on international higher education.
The results of the I.F.P.’s initial phase vindicate its ambitions. The attri-butes of its first cohort are shown on the opposite page. Notably:56 percent are female, 76 percent were recruited from outsidemajorcities and 50 percent aremembers of ethnicminority groups. Withoutquestion, I.F.P. has tapped into a reservoir of talented people whowould otherwise have very limited chances for advanced study. In fact,it is painfully clear that manymore of the finalists than the I.F.P. couldfundwere fully qualified—a powerful reminder that if education is
7
United States 19%
Target Population Indicators
Average Age: 32
Women: 56%
FromOutside Major Cities: 76%
Ethnic Minority: 50%
Physical Disability: 5%
Additional Selection Factors:
� Evidence of Social Commitment and Leadership(e.g. volunteer involvement; NGO participation;founding and leading organizations)
� Limited Family Access to Higher Education
� Limited Financial Means
International Fellowships Profile
As of February 2002
Brazil, Egypt, Indonesia, Mozambique, Palestine, the Philippinesand South Africa will select fellows later in the year.
Australia 1%
Europe 33%
undecided 15%
Russia 8%
Asia 6%
Africa 5%Canada 2%
Latin America11%
Proposed Location of Study
Proposed Degree of Study
200
150
100
50
0
1 Candidate of Science degree in Russia is considered
betweenMA and PhD
Master’s PhD Candidate ofScience1
Fellows
Results to Date
Two Selection RoundsFemale Male
Vietnam 36 Fellows 21 1558% 42%
West Africa 56 Fellows 30 2654% 46%
Andes & Southern Cone 51 Fellows 26 2551% 49%
Russia 40 Fellows 27 1367% 33%
One Selection Round
China 19 Fellows 12 763% 37%
India 30 Fellows 14 1647% 53%
East Africa 28 Fellows 20 871% 29%
Mexico & Guatemala 28 Fellows 10 1836% 64%
Total 288 Fellows 160 12856% 44%
8
to be a catalyst for development, societiesmust findways to reachmore of this deep but hidden talent pool. I hope the I.F.P. can beginto generate a broad discussion about that possibility and how topursue it. As the programmatures, it may also offer other donorsaway to invest in these populations.
I havemet withmany I.F.P. fellows, a few of whom are presented inthe next pages. I am impressedwith their ambitions and abilities,the extraordinary obstaclesmany have overcome,and their determi-nation to seize this opportunity to help build just and fair societies.The I.F.P. experience to date suggests that such people abound inmarginalized communities.
María Félix Quezada, a member of the Hñahñu ethnic group, grew upin a rural community in the Hidalgo region ofMexico and became ateacher in a rural school in Ixmiquilpan. She plans to study populationand demography inMexico, and has a special interest inmigrationissues and the history of her rural community. Speaking at a gatheringofMexico’s first I.F.P. fellows, she said:“From the time you are borninto an indigenous community society points a finger. Not everybodydoes this, only thosewho still think and practice a dichotomy: superior-ity and inferiority of races. To these people you represent the other,the Indian boy or girl, poverty, the illiterate. In short, an obstacle forthe development of the country.... They blame you for your backward-ness, your stubbornness tomaintain and defend the resources ofmother nature....
“I hadmany difficulties entering school. My parents did not haveenoughmoney to support my studies, and they discouragedmefrom studying because I was the only girl of five children. I financedmy studies with scholarships, byworking andwithmoney frommymigrant brothers....
“There was a timewhen I decided to hidemy indigenous roots toavoid aggression... However, I realized that it was amistake to adopta different personality... it did not feel good to reject what character-izedme as a human being and an Indian.... I later retookmy identityand proclaimed it with pride.... I am proud to be the first woman inmy community to graduate from a university.
“When the community learned Iwas studying, Iwas excluded fromworkin the fields because people thought that thiswas no longer appropriate
President’s Message
10
for a student. They thought I had forgotten how to harvest corn, cutvegetables, etc. They assumed that I did not want to know anythingabout our traditions. Little by little, I convinced them that theywerewrong, that despite my acquired knowledge I still was an indigenouswoman and that my training always includedmy community,myethnic group andmy region.
“Unfortunately, there are few of us who enter the academic world;it is not an easy task. This struggle is not some kind of natural selection.Those of uswho are already in the academicworld are not better orstronger than the rest of our indigenous brothers. In fact, they are theprincipalmotivation of this constant search for academic knowledge.What we accomplish is through them and for them.”
Ilja Viktorov fromYekaterinburg, Russia, grew up in a low-income,single parent family and started his higher education at Irkutsk StateUniversity in Eastern Siberia andgraduated fromUrals StateUniversity.With I.F.P. support, he is working for a Ph.D. in economic history atStockholmUniversity. Hewrites: “As formy passion for Sweden, it ishard to understandwhy it attractedme... Perhaps it was AstridLindgren’s fairy-tales... The land seemed to be romantic and some-whatmysterious... I decided to study Sweden’s history from the verybeginning ofmy undergraduate studies.... I realized that it shouldnot only be interesting tome but also useful to others.... I believe thatsome forms of economic democracy can be practiced in Russianfirms.... Themain thing, however, that fascinates me in the Swedishexperience is that the Swedes havemanaged to create a comprehen-sive social state and preserve an effectivemarket economy.
“I plan to organize a Swedish centre in a newly created Faculty ofInternational Relations at the Urals State University.... The interestin Sweden among Russians is enormous, although themajority ofthe population sees the Swedish experience as rather unrealistic....What I have learned duringmy studies of Sweden,and especially afterthesemonths in the country, is that one can understand best one’sown country onlywhen one tries to understand another culture andlook at theworld from another point of view.”
President’s Message
Ilja Viktorov, center,withfellow students in Stockholm,Sweden.
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President’s Message
Vo Thi Hoang Yen,Vice President of the Youth Association for theDisabled inVietnam,wrote in her application: “I am the youngest ofthe family of five childrenwho lived in a remote villagewhere peopleearned a living by working in small rice fields and raising poultry.Almost all children dropped out of school early. Basic health serviceswere insufficient. Bymy third birthday, polio had taken awaymyfirst walking steps.” Later, she was asked how she overcame somanychallenges, and she replied, “I often had a feeling that I had been strug-gling in the violent current to get onto some peaceful bank but hadalways beenwhirled away by fierce waves. What kept me from sink-ing into the bottom of depression? It is love and unhappiness.
“It ismyMom’s unconditioned love for her children. It is her life ofsacrifice for our education. It is her unendingworry for her youngestchild, the vulnerable onewith disability. It is the love and supportfrommy sisters who, not influenced by the common perception ofour society, strongly believed that their youngest sister is notwithout capability.
“It is thememories of the childhood full of unhappiness: fire, bombs,war,deaths and hunger; the ash pile of our house. It is the image ofmymom saving up each rare seed of rice during years of poor harvestto help her children get onwith study. It is the so-calledmiserabledestiny of the countryside women. It is the suffering of the familieswith five or six children with disabilities due to agent orange orthe lack of vaccines.
“Yes, it is love that encouragesme to overcome all the difficulties andto live ameaningful life. It is unhappiness that helps increasemyunderstanding and openmy heart to the disadvantaged. Love andunhappiness nurture inme the aspiration towork for the unlucky,to assist them to build a better life....
“I am studying HumanDevelopment at the University of Kansas,whereI have found the close relationship between professors and studentsand that the professors give students much freedom and supportto develop their ability. ....Other students in the research group havealso givenmemuch assistance and encouragement.... ThemoreI study, themore I feel interested.”
VoThi HoangYen at theUniversity of Kansas.
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President’s Message
AaronMushengyezi, from the Rufumbira ethnic group in Uganda,grew up in a remote rural area. Hewalked great distances each day toattend grade school and ultimately gained admission toMakerereUniversity,where hewas the first undergraduate student in 20 yearsto win a First Class degree in Literature. At the university he attainedthe post of Lecturerwhile being involved in children’s literature andwomen writers’ projects, an AIDS Operation Rescue Club and familysupport services. Hewill use his I.F.P. fellowship to study for a doctoratein English and Comparative Literature either in Great Britain or theUnited States.
He commented in his application: “Ugandans have been trauma-tized by the political turmoil the country has gone through sinceindependence... One of the legacies of this turmoil was the death ofa reading and writing culture in the country. It was not until the lastdecade that a ‘renaissance’has taken place, resulting in incredibleliterary production inworks of fiction, theatre for development andthemedia... Furthermore, following the launching of the UniversalPrimary Education Program a few years ago, there is an insatiabledemand for readingmaterials in the schools. This is bound to growwith Universal Secondary Education in the next couple of years...My proposed doctoral researchwill ... be the first of its kind to providevital criticism of theworks of emerging Ugandanwriters.”
Timewill tell howwell these appealing, committed and talented peoplewill do in graduate school and in later leadership roles. On the basisof Ford’s experiencewith past fellowships, it is fair to predict that asignificant numberwill emerge in their communities, in local, regionaland national organizations, and on a global stage. As they do, it willbe in part because of their ownmotivation and unique talents,but itwill also reflect the creative efforts of the program’s recruiters, selectorsandmanagers to locate hidden reservoirs of human potential andtap into them—affirmative action at its best.
AaronMushengyezi at MakerereUniversity in Kampala,Uganda.
16
I expect many of the I.F.P. fellows, remembering what others havedone for them,will urge that every man,woman or child’s dignity andpotential to achieve be recognized. I particularly hope theywill speakabout the values that gave them the courage to struggle against greatodds and how they acquired those values for themselves. Their storiescan prompt each of us to recognize the difficulties somany talentedpeople face. My colleagues and I share the hope that the fellows willbring closer to reality our shared vision of just and stable societiesaround theworld.
On September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on theWorld Trade Center andthe Pentagon brought death, injury and hardship to thousands ofpeople. Immediately after these attacks, the Ford Foundationworkedclosely with people and organizations responding to the emergency,loaned staff to the newly created September 11th Fund andmadea total of $11.2 million in emergency grants. A list of these projects isshown on page 25. Each check for these grantswas accompanied bya book of signatures of hundreds of Ford Foundation staff members inour 14 officesworldwidewhowanted to express their personal supportfor the grantees in this difficult time. In addition to the emergencygrants, drawn from the foundation’s reserve funds, grants addressinglonger-term issues and problems related to the September 11 eventscontinue in 2002.
Frances Fergusson,President of Vassar College, retired from our boardthis year after a full 12 years of service. She brought to the foundationa deep understanding of scholarship and educational reform,artisticsensibility and broad cultural interests, helping us to deepen ourworkin these domains and to see the connections between themboth inthe United States and around the globe. Wewill miss thewise counseland range of experience that made her such a valuable trusteeand colleague.
SusanV. BerresfordPresident
President’s Message
Melquíades Quintasi, center, anI.F.P. fellow, participates in adiscussion of “Truth in Relation tothe SpokenWord”at U.M.S.S.,Cochabamba,Bolivia.
18
Ford Foundation Trustees and Officers
Paul A. AllaireChair of the Board
Former Chairman and ChiefExecutive Officer
Xerox CorporationStamford, Connecticut
Susan V. BerresfordPresident
The Ford FoundationNew York, New York
Alain J. P. BeldaChairman and Chief Executive OfficerAlcoa Inc.New York, New York
Anke A. EhrhardtDirectorHIV Center for Clinical and
Behavioral StudiesNew York State Psychiatric InstituteNew York, New York
Frances D. FergussonPresidentVassar CollegePoughkeepsie, New York(Term expired September 20, 2001)
Kathryn S. FullerPresident and Chief Executive OfficerWorld Wildlife FundWashington, D.C.
Wilmot G. JamesExecutive Director: Social Cohesion and
Integration Research ProgrammeHuman Sciences Research CouncilCape Town, South Africa
Yolanda KakabadseExecutive PresidentFundación Futuro LatinoamericanoQuito, Ecuador
David T. KearnsFormer Chairman and Chief
Executive OfficerXerox CorporationStamford, Connecticut
Wilma P. MankillerFormer Principal ChiefCherokee NationPark Hill, Oklahoma
Richard MoePresidentNational Trust for Historic
PreservationWashington, D.C.
Yolanda T. MosesPresidentAmerican Association for Higher
EducationWashington, D.C.
Luis G. NogalesManaging PartnerNogales Investors, LLCLos Angeles, California
Deval L. PatrickExecutive Vice President and
General CounselThe Coca-Cola CompanyAtlanta, Georgia
Ratan N. TataChairmanTata Industries LimitedBombay, India
Carl B. WeisbrodPresidentAlliance for Downtown
New York, Inc.New York, New York
W. Richard WestDirectorNational Museum of the
American IndianWashington, D.C.
Board of Trustees Officers
Susan V. BerresfordPresident
Barron M. TennyExecutive Vice President, Secretary,
and General Counsel
Barry D. GabermanSenior Vice President
Alexander WildeVice President for Communications
Linda B. StrumpfVice President and Chief Investment
Officer
Melvin L. OliverVice President, Asset Building and
Community Development
Bradford K. SmithVice President, Peace and Social Justice
Alison R. BernsteinVice President, Education, Media,
Arts and Culture
Nicholas M. GabrielTreasurer, Comptroller and Director,
Financial Services
Nancy P. FellerAssistant Secretary and Associate
General Counsel
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
19
Committees of the Board of Trustees
Audit andManagement
Kathryn S. Fuller, ChairPaul A. AllaireAnke A. EhrhardtDavid T. KearnsWilma P. MankillerRichard MoeDeval L. PatrickRatan N. TataCarl B. Weisbrod
Executive
Paul A. Allaire, ChairSusan V. BerresfordKathryn S. FullerRichard MoeCarl B. Weisbrod
Investment
Carl B. Weisbrod, ChairPaul A. AllaireAlain J. P. BeldaSusan V. BerresfordYolanda KakabadseYolanda T. MosesLuis G. NogalesRatan N. TataW. Richard West
Transactions
(Subcommittee of theInvestment Committee)
Luis G. NogalesRatan N. TataCarl B. Weisbrod
Membership
Paul A. Allaire, ChairSusan V. BerresfordKathryn S. FullerRichard Moe
Proxy
Richard Moe, ChairPaul A. AllaireAnke A. EhrhardtKathryn S. FullerWilmot G. JamesLuis G. NogalesCarl B. Weisbrod
Asset Building andCommunity Development
Wilma P. Mankiller, ChairPaul A. AllaireAnke A. EhrhardtYolanda KakabadseRatan N. Tata
Education,Media,Artsand Culture
Wilmot G. James, ChairAlain J. P. BeldaDavid T. KearnsDeval L. PatrickW. Richard West
Peace and Social Justice
Richard Moe, ChairKathryn S. FullerYolanda T. MosesLuis G. NogalesCarl B. Weisbrod
20
Ford Foundation Staff
Office of the PresidentSusan V. Berresford,
presidentBarry D. Gaberman,
senior vice presidentSadako Ogata, scholar in
residenceVerna E. Gray, assistant to
the presidentDianne I. DeMaria, executive
assistant to the senior vicepresident
Wendy Malina, projectspecialist
Rodica Mischiu, executiveassistant
Asset Building and CommunityDevelopment
Office of the Vice PresidentMelvin L. Oliver, vice presidentElizabeth C. Campbell, senior
directorMarian S. Krauskopf, project
specialistKatherine Sadowski, project
coordinatorKathy R. Lowery, executive
assistant
Economic DevelopmentFrank F. DeGiovanni, directorLisa A. Mensah, deputy directorJohn L. Colborn, program officerMichele F. Kahane, program
officerMara A. Manus, program officerGeorge W. McCarthy, Jr.,
program officerMillard A. Owens, program
officerChristine C. Looney, senior
financial analystMarianne D. Inghilterra,
PRI/grants administratorJulie R. Pinnock, PRI/grants
administratorJennifer D. Powell, PRI/grants
administrator
Community and ResourceDevelopmentCynthia M. Duncan, directorJeffrey Y. Campbell, deputy
directorMichael E. Conroy, senior
program officerCarl Anthony, program officerMiguel Garcia, program officerLinetta Gilbert, program
officerVernice Miller-Travis, program
officerBenjamin Afrifa, grants
administratorSharon D. Ebron, grants
administratorRobyn R. Tangredi, grants
administrator
HumanDevelopment andReproductive HealthVirginia Davis Floyd, directorHelen R. Neuborne, deputy
directorSarah H. Costa, program officerChukwudi Onwuachi-Saunders,
program officerNancy Sconyers, program officerDavid J. Winters, program officerSuzanne M. Shea, grants
administratorSelmin Cicek, grants administrator
Peace and Social Justice
Office of the Vice PresidentBradford K. Smith, vice presidentNatalia Kanem, senior directorLaurice H. Sarraf, senior grants
administratorMeredith Wrighten, executive
assistant
Project on Strategic PhilanthropyJan E. Jaffe, senior directorJohn Naughton, project
coordinator
Special Initiative on AfricaAkwasi Aidoo, director
Human Rights and InternationalCooperationAlan Jenkins, directorMahnaz Z. Ispahani, deputy
directorLarry R. Cox, senior program
officerAaron I. Back, program officerCristina Eguizábal, program
officerTaryn L. Higashi, program officer
(deputy director as of March,2002)
Manuel F. Montes, programofficer
Barbara Y. Phillips, programofficer
Christine B. Wing, programofficer
Mary López, grants administratorAnil Oommen, grants
administrator
Governance and Civil SocietyMichael A. Edwards, directorUrvashi Vaid, deputy directorMichael Lipsky, senior program
officerJacqueline Berrien, program
officerIrena Grudzinska Gross,
program officerChristopher M. Harris, program
officerJulius O. Ihonvbere, program
officerLisa Jordan, program officerCeleste Dado, grants
administratorA. Dwayne Linville, grants
administratorJonathan Sandville, grants
administrator
Education,Media,Arts andCulture
Office of the Vice PresidentAlison R. Bernstein, vice presidentKenneth B. Wilson, senior
directorLori Matia, senior grants
administratorAlsie J. Falconer, executive
assistant
Education,Knowledge and ReligionJanice Petrovich, directorJoseph A. Aguerrebere, deputy
directorConstance H. Buchanan, senior
program officerJorge Balán, program officerCyrus Driver, program officerGertrude J. Fraser, program
officerMaxine E. Gaddis, grants
administratorBrigid Sheehan, grants
administrator
21
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Project GRAD ProgramL. Steven Zwerling, senior
program officerMaura Harford, project
specialist
Media,Arts and CultureMargaret B. Wilkerson, directorJon Funabiki, deputy directorRoberta G. Lentz, program officerDamien M. Pwono, program
officerJohn P. Santos, program officerLynn Stern, project specialistCourtney Martin, grants
administratorDavid Mazzoli, grants
administrator
International Fellowships ProgramJoan Dassin, directorAshok Gurung, program officerMaureen Caruso, administrative
coordinator
Office ofManagement ServicesSteven W. Lawry, directorSusan D. Mairston, manager,
grants administrationFred S. Tom, manager, budgets
and international operationsDeborah T. Bloom, assistant
manager, grants informationSonali Mukerjee, senior grants
information specialistM. Salim Sufi, assistant manager,
overseas grants administrationKyle C. Reis, senior grants
administratorMary Lampson, grants
administrator
Africa andMiddle East
Eastern Africa(Nairobi)Katharine R. Pearson,
representativeRobert Burnet, program officerMary Ann Burris, program
officerJoseph B. Gitari, program officerMilagre Nuvunga, program
officerBismarck Dourado, budget and
finance management officerAnna Wambui Mngolia, office
services manager
Nancy Wachira, senior accountantZainab Ali, secretary to the
representative
Middle East andNorth Africa(Cairo)Omotade A. Aina, acting
representativeFateh S. Azzam, program officerMaha A. El-Adawy, program
officerBasma El Husseiny, program
officerBassma Kodmani, program
officerSharon R. Lapp, program officerAleya Helmy, senior financial
officerIsis Guirguis, general services
officerAmani Mankabady, grants
administratorHana Ayoub, administrative
officer
Southern Africa(Johannesburg)Gerry Salole, representativeAlice L. Brown, deputy
representativeAhmed Bawa, program officerGary A. Hawes, program officerJames C. Murombedzi, program
officerWilliam N. Okedi, program
officerElizabeth Yates, grantee/project
liaison (Namibia)Ivan John, accountantKaren Rayman, general services
officerNume Mashinini, grants
administratorThandi Shiba, executive
assistant
West Africa(Lagos)Adhiambo P. Odaga,
representativeBabatunde A. Ahonsi, senior
program officerOlununmi A. Olubode,
accountantAkwaugo Amaechi, grants
administratorFrancisca Cole, general services
managerBella Ekpenyong, executive
assistant
Asia
China(Beijing)Andrew J. Watson, representativeSarah Cook, program officerHe Jin, program officerEve Win-Jing Lee, program
officerMina T. Liu, program officerHenricus (Hein) P. Mallee,
program officerZheng Hong, senior grants
administratorLiang Bo, financial officerLi Yan, general services officerWang Yan, grants administratorChen Yimei, assistant to the
representative
Indonesia(Jakarta)Suzanne E. Siskel, representativeHans-Goran Antlöv, program
officerMeiwita P. Budiharsana, program
officerUjjwal Pradhan, program officerPhilip Yampolsky, program officerIwan Setiawan, accountantPudji Augustine, executive
assistant and personneladministrative officer
Ina Jusuf, grants administratorVenia Maharani, general services
officer
The Philippines(Manila)David Chiel, representativeMilwida Guevara, program officerCaridad T. Sri Tharan, program
officerRizalee C. P. Ibarra, grants
administratorMinie D. Manalese, accountantEfren Tadeo, general services
officerMarianne Francisco, executive
assistant
Vietnam(Hanoi)Charles R. Bailey, representativeMichael Di Gregorio, program
officerLisa J. Messersmith, program
officerNgo Thi Le Mai, grants
administratorNghiem Thi Bich Nguyet,
accountant
Nguyen Hung Tien, generalservices officer
Phung Thi Minh Uyen, executiveassistant
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka(NewDelhi)S. A. Gowher Rizvi, representativeA. Doris N. Capistrano, deputy
representativeNarayan Belbase, program officerRoshmi Goswami, program
officerAubrey McCutcheon, program
officerRekha Mehra, program officerSushma Raman, program officerMark A. Robinson, program
officerS. Chellani, general services
managerNeera Sood, senior grants
administrator (manager, grantsand information)
Neena Uppal, manager, financeand accounts
Tuhina Sunder, executiveassistant
Latin America and Caribbean
Andean Region and Southern Cone(Santiago)Augusto F. Varas, representativeMartín Abregú, program officerGaby M. Oré Aguilar, program
officerMaría A. Palacios Vallejo,
program officerAnthony D. Tillett, program
officerDelicia Corzano, accountantBarbara Trosko, grants
administratorNora Oyarzún, general services
officerCristina Véjar, executive assistant
Brazil(Rio de Janeiro)Nigel P. Brooke, representativeDenise D. Dora, program officerOndina Fachel Leal, program
officerElizabeth R. Leeds, program
officerJosé Gabriel López, program
officerSonia Regina Magalhães, general
services officer
22
Sonia B. Mattos, grantsadministrator
José Do Carmo Filho, accountantSonia Maria Mello da Silva,
executive assistant
Mexico and Central America(Mexico City)Pablo J. Farías, representativeDeborah A. Barry, program officerKimberli R. Brown, program
officerChristopher Martin, program
officerBertha Hernández, executive
officer/general services officerAraceli Marín Koeck, accountantTeresa Schriever, grants
administratorMaría Elena Trueba, executive
assistant to the representative
Russia(Moscow)Mary McAuley, representativeIrina Iourna, program officerChristopher R. Kedzie, program
officerGalina Rakhmanova, program
officerOlga Lobova, general services
officerElena Petukhova, accountantIrina Korzheva, grants
administratorElena Ivanova, representative’s
assistant
Office of CommunicationsAlexander W. Wilde, vice
presidentDavid C. Anderson, directorTheodora A. Lurie, deputy director
for strategic communicationsThomas M. Quinn, deputy
directorMary C. Loftus, manager,
dissemination & administrationLaura Walworth, manager, art &
designElizabeth Coleman, associate
editorNgozi M. T. Amu, communications
associateCarol M. Powel Smith, executive
assistantDana M. Hughes, senior editorial
assistant
Office of the Secretary, Legal,Human Resources, Financial andAdministrative ServicesBarron M. Tenny, executive vice
president, secretary, and generalcounsel
Carmen D. DaCosta, executiveassistant
Office of the Secretary andGeneral CounselNancy P. Feller, assistant secretary
and associate general counselElaine C. Kranich, director,
office of the secretaryJosephine V. Brune, manager,
travel servicesMihaela A. Fertig, grants analyst
coordinatorChristopher R. Gillespie, grants
analyst coordinatorRenee M. Rose, grants analyst
coordinatorMargaret A. Black, special
assistantKatherine K. Richardson,
supervisor, correspondence controlElizabeth Buckley Lewis, resident
counselAngela L. Galindo Oliver,
resident counselKenneth T. Monteiro, resident
counselMichele A. Gorab, paralegal
Office of Human ResourcesBruce D. Stuckey, directorLinda S. Charles, deputy directorLisa A. Misakian, manager,
benefits and compensationDawanna L. C. Veneable,
manager, staffingCynthia N. Gerson, assistant
manager, benefitsJanet E. Graber, assistant manager,
staffingLoraine A. Priestley-Smith,
assistant manager, compensationTheresa H. Smith, assistant
manager, staffingJulie Totero, assistant manager,
training and developmentMeagan S. Baldwin, staffing
coordinator
Internal AuditRoscoe G. Davis, directorAngela James, internal auditorVictor D. Siegel, internal
auditor
Administrative ServicesSandra L. Harris, directorRobin L. Lane, purchasing
managerHenry J. De Perro, manager,
facilities managementJoseph C. Carrillo, manager,
building servicesViera A. Crout, chief technology
officerHugo Cervantes, manager, global
infrastructure servicesGeorge J. Fertig, manager,
program systems developmentLucius C. Ponce, manager,
management systems developmentRandy L. Quan, manager,
IT project portfolio managerDonald L. Serotta, manager,
FFNY infrastructure servicesHarry Brockenberry, senior project
leaderMaged Abdelmalek Tadros,
regional technical advisor(Cairo)
Yang Yiqi, regional technicaladvisor (China)
Thomas Earley, network projectleader
Brian C. Hsiung, project leaderNatalia Nikova, project leaderAriela Vineberg, project leaderAlbert Davis, network
communications specialistLinda A. Feeney, manager,
information servicesKathleen T. Brady, manager,
information and records unitsVictoria A. Dawson, librarianAina Geske, research associateAlan S. Divack, archivistJonathan W. Green, associate
archivistIdelle R. Nissila-Stone, associate
archivistGloria J. Walters, records managerTammie Alzona, project managerStephen G. Krehley, assistant
records managerShuyuan Zhao, database services
administrator
Kevin Mathewson, supervisor,cataloging services
Judith A. Shapiro, informationservices coordinator
Financial ServicesNicholas M. Gabriel, treasurer,
director and comptrollerMichele R. Potlow, deputy
director and assistant comptrollerAnita S. Achkhanian, manager,
investment accounting andreporting
Lorna L. Lewis, manager, generalaccounting, accounts payable andinternational operations
Eileen A. Posch, manager,tax reporting
Marian L. Wong, generalaccounting manager
Amir A. Abbasi, senior investmentaccountant
Nancy M. Coscia, budget managerMardig Kalarchian, financial
systems analystJulie D. Martin, senior portfolio
administratorCarl M. Harroo, disbursements
managerJerry L. Slater, payroll managerIsidore E. Tsamblakos, banking
managerRajcomarie Gokul, accountantNorma I. Jimenez, administrative
assistant and risk managementadministrator
Investment DivisionLinda B. Strumpf, vice president
and chief investment officerHalliday Clark, Jr., director,
equity investmentsEric W. Doppstadt, director,
private equitySusan A. Ollila, director,
fixed income investmentsLaurence B. Siegel, director,
policy researchClinton L. Stevenson, director,
investment administrationKim Y. Lew, senior manager,
private equity investmentsEdwin J. Mihallo, senior portfolio
strategistTheodore W. Anderson, portfolio
strategistWilliam A. Ellsworth, portfolio
strategist
Ford Foundation Staff
23
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
David S. Nelson, portfoliostrategist
Frederick V. Romano, Jr.,portfolio strategist
Caren E. Winnall, portfoliostrategist
Donald J. Galligan, seniormanager, fixed incomeinvestments
Joanne K. Sage, manager,equity trading
Mario A. Martinez, securityanalyst
M. Angela Esquivel, investmentanalyst
Timothy J. Aurthur, investmentsystems administrator
Yolanda Mercado, private equityassociate
Odessa M. Starke, fixed incomeassociate
Lucy Fabris, executive assistantMireya Ramos, executive assistantNick H. Sayward, investment
services librarian
The staff list reflects theorganization of the foundationas of Jan. 31, 2002.
The September 11 Fund$5millionThe fund, set up as a specific
response to theWorldTrade Center
disaster, is jointly administered
by the NewYork Community
Trust and the UnitedWay of New
York City. It distributesmoney
through intermediary organiza-
tions to individuals, small and
midsize businesses and nonprofit
groups directly affected by the
attack.
The Legal Aid Society$1millionTohelp the agency handle increased
demand for legal services to low-
income people affected by the
WorldTrade Center disaster. Their
legal issues relate to housing,
health insurance, unemployment
benefits, small-business recovery
and survivor benefits.
The Fund for the Cityof NewYork$1millionFor cash-flow loans to nonprofit
organizations based in lower
Manhattan and facing financial
difficulties because of the
attack.
Seedco (StructuredEmployment EconomicDevelopment Corporation)$1millionFor loans, grants and technical
assistance to small businesses
located near theWorldTrade Center
that suffered serious losses not
covered by city, state or federal
programs.
The Nonprofit Finance Fund$1millionFor financial and advisory assis-
tance to nonprofit organizations
in lowerManhattan that suffered
physical damage and financial
losses because of the attack and
whose needswere not fullymet
by other funds.
TheWNYC Foundation$1millionTo help NewYork City’s leading
public radio station replace a trans-
mitter destroyed in the attack and
restore full broadcast service to the
greatermetropolitan area.
TheWashington RegionalAssociation of Grantmakers$1.2millionTo help nonprofit organizations
respond to an increased need
for counseling and other support
services for individuals and
families affected by the attack on
the Pentagon. Funds are also
being used to enhance coordina-
tion among donors and service
providers working on community
recovery problems.
The Foundation Responds
Emergency grants in response to the September 11, 2001 attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Members of the Ford Foundationstaff gather to sign pages thatwere presented to each September11th grantee as an expressionof support.
(Left) The view of “ground zero”at theWorld Trade Center site fromthewindowof a building used byManhattan Youth Recreation andResources. The agency receivedemergency help from theNonprofitFinance Fund.
26
Program Approvals 2001Total Program Approvals—$901.0million*
Asset BuildingandCommunityDevelopment$221.4million
Economic Development$66.4million
Community and Resource Development$75.3million
HumanDevelopment and Reproductive Health$76.0million
Programwide$3.7million
Peace andSocial Justice$266.1million
Human Rights and International Cooperation$106.9million
Governance and Civil Society$131.8million
Programwide$27.4million
InternationalFellowships Program$280.0million†
FoundationwideActions$14.6million
Education,Knowledge and Religion$68.6million
Media,Arts and Culture$43.0million
Programwide$6.5million
Education,Media,Artsand Culture$118.1million
42.1
40.0
70.0
99.3
46.0
25.2
37.216.5 12.7
33.2
36.9
36.0
32.5
22.6
17.8
Overseas Programs United States andWorldwide Programs
†A one-time commitment above routine budget levels for an International Fellowships Program
across the 15 field offices of the foundation.
*Does not include $7.1 million in reductions in prior year approvals.
Program-Related
Investments
280.0
GoodNeighbor Grants$.8million
AA Concept, S.A.R.L., 146AASHRAY, 88AAUW Legal Advocacy Fund, 120Abantu for Development, 143Abt Associates, 86Academic Council on the United
Nations Systems, 132Academy for Educational
Development, 105, 107, 120, 152Academy for the Development of
Philanthropy in Poland, 136Access to Justice, 133ACCION U.S.A., 84Acre Network for Women and
Men, 96Action Alliance for Virginia’s
Children and Youth, 105Action for Development, 143Action for Health Initiatives, 113Action Without Borders, 175Activists for Social Alternatives, 89Adalah: The Legal Center for
Arab Minority Rights in Israel,120
Adva Center, 120Advisory Center for Print and Radio
Media, 141Advocacy Institute, 151AFIRMA Communication and
Research, 127AFL-CIO Working for America
Institute, 86, 139Africa 95 (The Caine Prize for
African Writing), 172Africa Policy Information Center,
123Africa Resources Trust, 101African Association for Public
Administration and Management,143
African Bar Association, 139African Butterfly Research and
Education, 176African Center for Democratic
Governance, 139African Conservation Centre, 98African Economic Research
Consortium, 118African Media Productions, 170African Medical and Research
Foundation, 143African Public Radio, 128African Research Association
Limited, 102African Wildlife Foundation, 98, 101African Women and Child
Information Network Limited, 111African Women’s Development
Fund, 120
Afro-Reggae Cultural Group, 127Aga Khan Foundation, 100, 143Aga Khan Trust for Culture, 100Agency for Social Information, 147Agrarian Research Group, 96Agri-Aqua Development Coalition—
Mindanao, 146Aha Punana Leo, 172Ahmedabad Study Action Group,
143Ahmedabad Women’s Action
Group, 111Aid to Artisans, 89AIDS Alliance for Children, Youth
and Families, 107AIDSLink, 113Akatiga Foundation, 144Akina Mama wa Afrika, 128, 132Al-Ahram Center for Political and
Strategic Studies, 146Al-Fekr Center for Sudanese
Studies, 168Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights,
130Al-Mujadilah Development
Foundation, 113Al-Quds University, 146, 168Alabama, University of, 84, 164Alan Guttmacher Institute—
A Corporation for Research,Policy Analysis and PublicEducation, 107
Albany, University at, 154All-China Women’s Federation,
127, 151All India Women’s Conference, 89Allavida, 136, 143Alliance for Justice, 136, 139Alliance Forest Workers and
Harvesters, 94Alternativa Center for Social
Research and Popular Education,96
Alternatives, Inc. (Canada), 130Alternatives and Social Participation
Processes (Mexico), 89, 99American Anthropological
Association, 172American Association for Higher
Education, 154American Association of University
Professors, 154American Baptist Seminary of the
West, 92American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, 120, 164American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to HumanisticStudies, 133, 136, 154, 159, 160
American Council on Education, 154
American Dance Festival, 163American Forests, 94American Friends of the Ludwig
Foundation of Cuba, 123American Friends of the Medem
Library, 136American Friends of the University
of Ulster, 139American Historical Association, 154American Institute of Indian
Studies, 167American Jewish World Service, 92American Library Association, 164American Museum of Natural
History, 163American Research Center in
Egypt, 100American Small Business Alliance,
139American University (Washington,
D.C.), 120, 129American University in Cairo, 90,
112, 131Americans for the Arts, 163Amnesty International, 128Amnesty International of the U.S.A.,
120An Giang University, 160Anadeges, A.C., 89Anco “Union of Media and
Culture,” 169Andean Commission of Jurists, 126Andean Region, 88, 96, 109, 126–127,
141, 156–157, 166Antonio Restrepo Barco Foundation,
88, 156Appalachian Regional Commission,
84Applied Research Center, 172Arab Image Foundation, 168Arab Press Freedom Watch, 168Arab Studies Society, 131Archaeological Conservancy, 163Archive Administration of
St. Petersburg and LeningradRegion, 169
Arias Foundation for Peace andHuman Progress, 123
Arid Lands Information Network(Eastern Africa), 98
Arise Citizens’ Policy Project, 139Arizona, State of, 105Arizona, University of, 92, 112,
158, 172Arizona Humanities Council, 94Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, 168Arkansas, State of, 105Arkansas Advocates for Children
and Families, 105
193
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Index
Asset Building and Community Development
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
HumanDevelopment and ReproductiveHealth
Children,Youth and Families
Sexuality and Reproductive Health
Economic Development
Development Finance and Economic
Security
Work-Force Development
Community and Resource Development
Environment and Development
Community Development
28
Much of the world’s population depends on liveli-hoods derived from natural resources: land, forest,water and the air we breathe. The continueddegradation and diminution of these resourcesthreaten the economic and social security of indi-viduals, communities and countries, as well as theintricate web of ecological, social, economic andcultural relations that binds the global community.As farmers lose the ability to produce crops andraise livestock due to environmental degradationand insecure land tenure, as communities depen-dent on forests see them destroyed, as droughtparches previously productive areas, urban centersswell with millions of destitute migrants who jointhe growing ranks of the underemployed. Alltoo often, these urban centers become unhealthyreceptacles of human and industrial toxic wastewhile the poor and disenfranchised become likelytargets for ideologies of hate and violence. Whenmobilized they can, as we have tragically seenin recent months, threaten national and globalsecurity. The challenge is to transform naturalresources into assets that sustain global economicviability and provide a healthy environment forfuture generations. That happens only as the poorand disenfranchised become true “stakeholders”in their societies.
At the “Earth Summit” in Rio de Janeiro 10 yearsago, governments pledged to support a comprehen-sive plan of action to improve the quality of life
for all the world’s people in ways that preserve theecosystems on which life depends. Transformingnatural resources into assets depends on individualsor communities securing access to them, whetherindividually or collectively. Rights and respon-sibilities must be clear and of significant duration.To be productive, a resource must be properlymanaged, enriched and harvested responsibly. Itshould also be the kind of resource to whichproduction processes can add value. And it shouldbe passed along in an ecologically resilient andproductive condition to ensure its viability forthe next generation.
A striking large-scale example is in place in thestate of Acre in western Brazil. There, the deepand productive bond between residents andthe Amazon rainforest is being restored afterdecades of rainforest destruction to make roomfor cattle and other agricultural investments.In January 1999, the 600,000 citizens of Acre,including 40 indigenous groups, voted into powera government committed to stewardship of therainforest and its communities. This “Governmentof the Forest,” emerged as a result of a powerfulsocial justice movement; it nurtures the region’sresources as valuable assets to be tended forcommon benefit.
Land, Trees, Air,Water—and People
Melvin L.Oliver,Vice President,Asset Building and Community Development
30
The changes followed tragedy. In the city ofXapuri, just before Christmas 1988, gunmen assas-sinated Chico Mendes, the renowned leaderof the movement to reclaim the rainforest for itspeople. What began as protests by rubber tappersspread throughout the region into a call to savethe rainforest from destruction by cattle ranching,agribusiness and logging. Chico Mendes gainedinternational recognition as the leader of massresistance to government policies that laid wasteto forestland and threatened indigenous cultures.The movement had its own proposals for preserva-tion, but Mendes was murdered before theseideas could be put into effect.
Now, the Government of the Forest has enactedcomprehensive initiatives to improve theregion’s economy and environment. “The programhas a clear goal, to combat poverty and createjobs through sustainable development of forestresources,” says Gilberto Sigueira, the govern-ment’s secretary of planning. “Through theseassets we wish to establish a new entrepreneurialand modern culture.”
The achievements are remarkable. Rubber tappersnow harvest rubber sustainably from “extractivereserves” controlled by local production groups. Anagricultural cooperative of 375 small-scale farmers
Asset Building and Community Development
31
diversifies crop production and improves marketaccess for rubber, nuts and other sustainablyharvested products. The Federal University ofAcre’s 100-hectare Zoobotanic Park serves asa “living laboratory” for researchers and studentsin natural resource management and sustainabledevelopment. A worker-owned rubber processingplant has increased production by 500 percentand earned certification for producing the bestquality natural rubber in the country. Theplant’s success led to a contract with Pirelli TireCompany and to development of a facility toproduce 200 million condoms per year. In addition,a major expansion of a Brazil-nut processing plantand a new furniture-making venture based oncertified wood are providing jobs and income.The forest once again belongs to the people, andthey share in its management, its benefits andits continued viability.
“We have a long way to go,” observes AcreGovernor Jorge Viana. “But what we have done inAcre, thank God, is something everyone wants todo, turn dreams into reality.”
In September 2002, the United Nations will convenethe World Summit on Sustainable Developmentin Johannesburg, South Africa, a follow-up to theEarth Summit. As we plan for this event, we shouldkeep in mind that in order for individual examples
of asset building to be effective they require keysupport on several levels. International agree-ments that equalize the flow of benefits from the“South” to the “North” and that correct for themassive consumption of resources in the industri-alized North are paramount. In this sense, thedecision of the United States not to subscribe tothe Kyoto accords on global warming has hinderedlocal efforts in the global South. New institutionalarrangements, new policy frameworks and newcoalitions are necessary. Public-private partner-ships, similar to those for wood certification, arekey to increasing the value of products harvestedand produced in sustainable ways. Finally, successdepends on the local stakeholders being trulyempowered to manage their resources and partici-pate in important decisions about their lives.
The foundation will continue to support theremarkable efforts of local communities to converttheir resources into assets. At the same time, wewill support those who want to build a system ofrules to help globalization do more to improvethe lives of the poor. And finally, we will supportorganizations and social movements that blend thegoals of environmental protection, social justiceand economic opportunity.
The Asset Building and Community
Development programhelps
strengthen and increase the effec-
tiveness of people and organiza-
tionsworking to find solutions to
problems of poverty and injustice.
Sixty-five staffmembers focus
grant resources on six fields
in three programunits in New
York and abroad.
We support peoplewho leverage
human, social, financial and
environmental assets to promote
social change. Grants support
vibrant and robust socialmove-
ments, institutions and partner-
ships that analyze contemporary
social and economic needs and
devise responses to them.
Asset Building and Community Development
(Page 29) A rubber tapper in Acre,Brazil. (Opposite) Nut factoryworkers in Acre, Brazil.
HumanDevelopment andReproductive Health
The HumanDevelopment and
Reproductive Health unit, led by
Virginia Davis Floyd,director,
and Helen R.Neuborne,deputy
director, coordinates efforts
to build human assets while
strengthening the relationships
and social networks that people
need to improve their lives. We
work in two fields to accomplish
these goals:
With children, youth and familieswe support organizations and
promote policies that help families
mobilize human and social assets
to overcome poverty and discrimi-
nation.
In sexuality and reproductive healthwe focus on the social, cultural
and economic factors that affect
sexuality and reproductive health.
Emphasis is given to nongovern-
mental organizations, researchers
and government agencies acting
on the expanded understanding of
sexuality and reproductive health
reached at major United Nations
conferences in the last decade.
A primary concern is empowering
women to participate in improving
reproductive health and related
policies.
Economic Development
The Economic Development unit,
led by Frank F.DeGiovanni, director,
and Lisa A.Mensah,deputy director,
seeks tomake durable economic
improvements in the lives of
the disadvantaged. The unit coor-
dinates efforts in two fields:
In development finance andeconomic security we supportorganizations that help businesses
create employment opportunities
and help low-income people
acquire, develop andmaintain
savings, investments, businesses,
homes, land and other assets.
Inwork-force developmentwesupport organizations that help
improve theways low-income
people developmarketable job
skills and acquire and retain
reliable employment that pro-
vides livablewages.
Community and ResourceDevelopment
The Community and Resource
Development unit, led by Cynthia
Duncan,director, and Jeffrey Y.
Campbell, deputy director, coordi-
nateswork in two fields that
aim to create conditions for the
development of sustainable and
equitable communities.
In environment and developmentwehelp people and groups acquire,
protect and improve land,water,
forests,wildlife and other natural
assets inways that help reduce
poverty and injustice.
In community developmentweseek to improve the quality of life
and opportunities for positive
change in urban and rural commu-
nities. We support community-
based institutions that mobilize
and leverage philanthropic capital,
investment capital, social capital
and natural resources in a respon-
sible and fairmanner.
In all these units, grant making is
also helping to establish and
fortify organizations and institu-
tions that support asset building
through research, training,policy
analysis and advocacy.
Grant making aims to help low-
income people and communities
build the financial,human,social
and natural resource assets they
need to overcome poverty and
injustice. By supporting and build-
ing strong fields,wewill be able
to continue devising strategies
appropriate to new situations.
Elizabeth C.Campbell, the senior
director of the Asset Building
and Community Development
program, is responsible for helping
our staffmembers develop and
sharewhat we have learned
in ourwork.32
Asset Building and Community Development
The Ford Foundation supports
organizations and policies that
enable low-income families
to improve their lives.
Members of awomen’s discussion
group in Esteli, a city in the
Nicaraguan highlands, talk about
ways to prevent and copewith
youth suicide. The group receives
assistance from Foundation Points
of Encounter for Changes in
Daily Life, aManagua-based
organization that engages in
television programming, training
and community networking to
strengthen social support systems
and services for Nicaraguan
youth and families.
Children,Youth and Families
34
In Lagos, students fromBariga
Comprehensive High School paint
amural for a competition held
by Action Health, Inc., a Nigerian
organization that promotes
reproductive health and youth
development. The competition,
whose themewas “Mirror on the
Wall,” reflects Action Health’s
mission to provide young people
with the information, education,
skills and services they need
to gain greater power over their
lives.
A U.S.Marine Corps couple with
their daughter at the day-care
center operated by Fort GeorgeG.
Meade nearWashington, D.C.,
part of amajor effort by the
U.S. Department of Defense to
provide good child-care services
at military installations. The
NationalWomen’s Law Center
focused on the program in a
report entitled Be All ThatWeCan Be: Lessons from theMilitaryfor Improving Our Nation’sChild Care System.
Asset Building and Community Development
The foundation’s work in sexuality
and reproductive health supports
civil society organizations that
promote public debate of these
issues.
These teenagers at the Pilot City
Health Center inMinneapolis are
part of a national initiative to
promote understanding of human
sexuality, particularly as it relates
to adolescent development.
With support from the Academy
for Educational Development, the
center (like similar community-
based organizations in Oklahoma
City and Seattle) is working
closelywith the local health depart-
ment to redefine public education
about sexuality, reduce teen preg-
nancy and curb the transmission of
sexually transmitted diseases.
Sexuality and Reproductive Health
(Above) The hosts of “BienvenidaSalud,”or “Welcome to Health,”
broadcast from the studios of the
Jungle’sVoice,a leading station
in the Peruvian Amazon region.
The popular program features
music, interviews and an educa-
tional soap opera that addresses
health and social concerns like
pregnancy and domestic violence.
AssociationMinga Peru produces
the showas part of a broader effort
to promote sexual and reproduc-
tive health among indigenous
women.
Asset Building and Community Development
(Right) A new program at the
Health Center of District 6,which
serves a poor section of Ho Chi
Minh City,Vietnam,helps homeless
people and unregisteredmigrants
gain access to public health
services,whichusually require proof
of registration or legal residence.
The center now offers all local resi-
dents sexual, reproductive and
primary health care, oftenmaking
use of peer education,counseling
and services. To promote their entry
into the economicmainstream,
it also provides clients with help
obtaining legal residency and
registration and offers small loans
to help boost their incomes.
37
(Right) Community leaders in
Minia, a city in Upper Egypt,work
with local residents to discourage
the practice of female genital
mutilation. Hands Along the Nile
for Development Services Inc.,
in collaboration with the Coptic
Evangelical Organization for
Social Services, is drawing lessons
from their efforts and sharing them
with othersworking to improve
reproductive health. The project is
noted for its integrated approach
to social change and economic
development.
38
The foundation believes that
good jobs, savings,home equity,
businesses and other financial
assets are important sources of
stability for families.
(Above) Thousands of Clevelandresidents are finding it easier
to save for important life goals, like
going to college or buying a home,
with help from the Consumer
Federation of America. To promote
savings among the city’s least
affluent households, the federa-
tion launched a pilot program last
year that includes community
organizing, financial counseling
and new savings opportunities
at local banks. The program is
gearing up for a possible national
expansion.
Development Finance andEconomic Security
Asset Building and Community Development
Thesewomen demonstrating
against moneylenders in
Vadamadurai village inTamilNadu,
India are some of the 80,000
who have formed kalanjiams, orcommunity lending groups,
with support from the DHAN
Foundation (Development of
HumaneAction). DHANworkswith
the poorest of the poor, including
many illiterate and low-caste
women, and empowers them to
own andmanage their own
financial institutions. So far
the kalanjiams havemobilized
$2.8million in savings from
members and leveraged another
$3.6million from state and
commercial banks.
40More than 13,000 entrepreneurs
in China’s Hebei Province, including
(above) borrowersmeeting in
Yelidian village, and (right) theranchers at a farm in Nandadi
village,have received small loans
from the Funding the Poor
Cooperative,an armof the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences.
The program,among the first of
its kind in China, includes research
and outreach to increase under-
standing ofmicroenterprise. Its
rapid growth and high repayment
rates have already shown that
microenterprise programs can reach
poor households on a sustainable
basis andwithout government
assistance.
Asset Building and Community Development
The foundation supports efforts
that enable the disadvantaged to
developmarketable skills and
to find and retain jobs that pay
decent wages.
(Left) Students attend aweldingclass at Cotton Boll Technical
Institute in northeast Arkansas,
where the economic base has
shifted fromagriculture to industry.
The institute is working to retrain
the local work force for good jobs
in growing industries with support
from theNational Network of
Sector Partners, an alliance of busi-
ness, labor, government, education
and community organizations.
The network, staffed by the
National Economic Development
and Law Center in Oakland,Calif.,
promotes job training in regional
growth industries,where wages
and benefits canmove individuals
and families out of poverty.
(Above) This student in El Paso,Texas, is among the first Americans
to receive job training and place-
ment through theWorkforce
Innovation Networks Initiative,
a partnership of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce, the National
Association ofManufacturers
and Jobs for the Future. The initia-
tive’s primary goals are to help
small andmidsize employersmeet
their staffing needs and to help
low-skilledworkers obtain stable,
family-friendly jobs.
(Right) Newgraduates of a bricklay-
ing/plastering training program
sponsored by the Joint Education
Trust, a public/private partnership
that seeks to strengthen South
Africa’s work force. The trust draws
on approaches towork-force devel-
opment in the United States by
combining services to individuals
and businesses and engaging labor
unions, schools and government.
Work-Force Development
Asset Building and Community Development
43
44
The primary goal of the founda-
tion’s work in the environment and
development field is to protect
and restore natural resourceswhile
improving livelihoods for low-
income people.
(Top) Children in Chhatis Mauja,
Nepal, in a canal that was part
of amajor upgrade of the area’s
irrigation system. Training
from theMountain Resources
Management Group has helped
local residents,especiallywomen,
gain access to the planning
process,monitor the project and
hold its administrators account-
able to the community.
(Bottom) Villagers in the Kuneneand Caprivi regions of northern
Namibia, including these guards
in the Torra Conservancy, are
gaining a greater say in how
natural resources aremanaged.
With assistance from Integrated
Rural Development andNature
Conservation, villagers run game
preserves that link sustainable
use of wildlife to the social and
economic development of rural
communities.
Environment and Development
Asset Building and Community Development
Farmers fromMengsong village,
in the tropical uplands of south-
western China, inspect plants at a
nursery established in collabora-
tionwith the Center for Biodiversity
and Indigenous Knowledge.
The center,which opened in 1995
to bridge gaps in cultural and
scientific understanding,works
with government officials
and ethnic communities inYunnan
Province to strengthen cultural
traditions, improve livelihoods and
enhance biodiversity.
The foundation supports efforts
by institutions—churches, schools,
nongovernmental organizations
and local foundations—to increase
opportunities in rural and urban
communities.
Ninemembers of the Navajo
Council, shown near their offices
inWindow Rock,Arizona, are
among the first Native American
leaders to receive training from
the Native Nations Institute
for Leadership,Management and
Policy. The institute,housed at
theUniversity of Arizona inTucson,
was established in 2001 as a
resource for tribal communities
and their governments.
Community Development
47
(Above) Rev.Dennis Jacobsen,the pastor of Incarnation Lutheran
Church inMilwaukee,directs an
interfaith network of more than
1,000 religious leaderswho provide
training in community organizing
and civic leadership. The network
is affiliated with the Gamaliel
Foundation, a Chicago institute
that helps congregations through-
out the United States acquire
theological and practical tools
to organize communities for
social justice.
(Right) Palestinian studentsreceive Internet training at a new
computer center in the Khan
Younes refugee camp in the Gaza
Strip. The center is part of the
Across Borders Project,which
Birzeit University’s Center for
Continuing Education launched
in 1999 to help camp residents
in Gaza, theWest Bank and
Lebanon establish linkswith
other refugees andwith people
across theworld.
Asset Building and Community Development
48
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
BarbaraMiller,Director of the Silver
Valley People’s Action Coalition in
Kellog, Idaho,won an L.C.W.award
formobilizing residents to force
the cleanup of contamination
caused bymining. She also created
a network of health and policy
officials who are examining the
residual effects of lead poisoning
on public health throughout
the Northwest.
Leadership for a ChangingWorld,
a programof the Ford Foundation in
partnershipwith theWashington-
based Advocacy Institute and the
Robert F.Wagner Graduate School
of Public Service at NewYork
University, recognizes 20 individ-
uals or organizations each year for
their effective responses to social
problems in communities across
the United States. Thewinners
receive $100,000 each to advance
their work and an additional
$30,000 to strengthen their skills
and for other supporting activities
over thenext two years. Photos of
other L.C.W.winners in 2001 appear
on pages 64 and 82.
Leadership for a ChangingWorld
Peace and Social Justice
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Human Rights and InternationalCooperation
Human Rights
International Cooperation
Governance and Civil Society
Governance
Civil Society
50
I had been working in Brazil for many years when,in September 1992, the Congress charged PresidentFernando Collor de Mello with corruptionand voted to initiate impeachment proceedings.Aristedes Junqueira, Chief Federal Prosecutor,spoke for the nation when he said: “For the firsttime we have a chance to resolve a political crisis inline with the constitution and without armedsoldiers.” Brazil’s fragile democratic institutionsproved strong enough to bring Collor—the firstdemocratically elected President in 29 years—to justice.
That experience profoundly shaped my ownthinking about the role of justice in society. Therule of law could hardly be assumed in Brazil.Initial euphoria at the end of dictatorship quicklyturned to despair as a series of corruption scandalsreinforced Brazilians’ belief that the wealthy andpowerful, when exposed, escaped any sanction.Collor’s impeachment was a turning point, a clearsign that the public valued justice and demandedit of the government. It also made it clear that afunctioning system of justice was absolutely essen-tial to the redemocratization of Brazil.
Brazil is hardly unique; similar histories have beenwritten in many parts of the world and may yetbe written in others. Justice and democracy areinseparable, and though some societies have triedto put justice “on hold” while pursuing economicdevelopment, they have found that development,too, is not sustainable without justice. Everywherethe foundation works, the struggle to create justsocieties depends on the behavior of the courts,the police and the prisons.
In December 1999, after violent clashes betweenMuslims and Christian Copts in the Egyptian
town of El Koshesh, Muslims were arrested,tried and found guilty, but given extraordinarilylight sentences. The Coptic Church appealedwith the support of Egypt’s General Prosecutor,and a higher court is currently reviewing the case.Human rights activists played a critical role inchallenging the government’s version of the clashes.The following year, in a separate case, the Courtof Appeals declared illegal the attempts of govern-ment authorities to take over several Islamist-led professional associations. In the absence ofstrong political parties, unions or NGOs, Egyptiansociety looks increasingly to the justice sector tomediate sensitive disputes.
In China, courts have traditionally been viewedas an extension of the government’s administrativebureaucracy. The political and legal committeesof Party organs at various levels intervene in specificcases, as do national, provincial, municipal andlocal people’s congresses and their delegates. Judgesare often poorly trained and paid and vulnerable tobribes. Many in China are therefore working toimprove the independence and quality of the judi-cial system. Elsewhere in Asia nongovernmentalnetworks are bringing cases of corruption to publicknowledge and monitoring the legal process. TheIndonesian Forum for Transparency in Budgetsassures that funds allocated by the central govern-ment are used by local authorities in optimal ways.Police Watch, based in Jakarta, cooperates with thelocal police to improve their human rights trackrecord. In the Philippines, Tanggol Kalikasan, apublic interest law firm, is working with the ChiefJustice of the Supreme Court to ensure enforce-ment of environmental protection laws.
Systems of Justice, and Freedom
Bradford K. Smith,Vice President, Peace and Social Justice
52
In East Africa, the Kenyan judiciary has long provedunable or unwilling to act independently whenfaced with major abuses of citizens’ human rights.However, judicial reform is under way thereand in neighboring Uganda. After years of advocacyby NGOs, the Kenyan Chief Justice in 2001 setup a Family Court to dispense justice quickly incases of domestic violence, juvenile offenses anddisputes over inheritance of property by womenand children.
Serious attempts to reform the judiciary have beenunder way in many Latin American countriesfor a number of years. Chile’s Criminal ProceduralLaw, in which Diego Portales University workswith a number of NGOs, has played an instrumen-tal role in such efforts. For many Latin Americans,especially the poor, ideas about justice are formed
through contact with the police. And that contactcan be frightening. According to one Brazilianstudy, in 1999 Rio de Janeiro police were respon-sible for 82 percent of the 1,148 “death-squad”executions of young men reported by the media.Yet the northern state of Amapa has gainednational recognition for providing new models forpolice training in youth detention centers. Andin the state of Pernambuco an NGO—the Gabinetede Assessoria Jurídica às Organizações Populares—pioneered a widely replicated program to protectwitnesses (primarily from the police).
In Russia, police are rated for their success in solv-ing crimes, which leads many to register crimesor complaints that they see as easily solvable anduse excessive force to extract confessions fromsuspects. The common practice of holding those
53
Peace and Social Justice
The 21st century offers human-
kind the prospect of a peaceful,
prosperous and cooperative global
order—the historic possibility
that globalization can be a force
for the common good. But this
visionwill go unrealized unless
we redouble our efforts to deepen
democracy, strengthen citizen
participation, combat discrimina-
tion and foster true international
cooperation.
These issues drive thework of
the Ford Foundation’s Peace and
Social Justice program,a network
of some 50 staffmembers in
two programunits based in New
York and our offices overseas.
Peace and Social Justice
undergoing preliminary investigation or awaitingtrial (even juveniles detained for petty crimes)results in overcrowded prisons, illness (especiallytuberculosis) and even death from asphyxiationor hunger. These conditions have put justicesector reform on the public policy agenda. The jurysystem—currently operating in only a few regions—will soon be extended to the entire country.And the Russian Prison Administration has joinedforces with NGOs in a campaign to change theCriminal Code and provide judges with alterna-tives to detention for those convicted of lessserious crimes.
The United States has long relied on a strongjustice system to uphold its constitutional democ-racy, yet African-Americans and Latinos aregrossly overrepresented and poorly treated in itscriminal justice system. Increasingly prisons arepopulated by minorities and aliens that Americansociety has chosen to warehouse rather thanembrace as full citizens. The last decade has seenchallenges to the independence of the Americanjudiciary as well, as Congress has stripped federalcourts of the authority to decide importantquestions of immigration, criminal and NativeAmerican tribal law.
As globalization advances, the quest for justice seekslegal instruments that transcend national borders.In early 2000, Egypt’s Supreme ConstitutionalCourt struck down a new law restricting activitiesof NGOs; the court acted in response to arguments
that the law was unconstitutional and breachedthe Universal Declaration of Human Rights andthe International Covenant on Political andCivil Rights. “Universal Jurisdiction” entered theglobal lexicon in 1998 when Augusto Pinochetwas arrested in London following an extraditionrequest from Spain, where a prosecutor, acting onevidence presented by Chilean immigrants andothers, brought human rights charges against theformer dictator. And the International CriminalCourt was expected to be ratified by 60 nationssometime in 2002, becoming a reality despite oppo-sition from the United States government.
Whether it is the American Civil Liberties Union,supported since 1975, or the Nigerian Center forLaw Enforcement Education, a grantee sinceits creation in 1998, the foundation has a deep andongoing commitment to organizations that strivefor justice. The Peace and Social Justice Program iscurrently launching a new effort to stimulategrants that will encourage democratic reforms ofthe entire justice sector—police, prisons and thecourts—around the world. Though conceived priorto the events of September 11, these efforts havegained even greater urgency as societies around theworld are tempted to sacrifice due process fornational security. The need for strong and indepen-dent justice systems—to bring global criminalsto trial while safeguarding civil liberties—hasnever been more pressing.
(Page 51) A worker protests rightsabuses in Peru. (Opposite) Inmatesof a women’s penal colony in theVladimir region of Russia withtheir babies.
54
Human Rights andInternational Cooperation
The Human Rights and
International Cooperation unit
coordinates efforts in two fields:
In human rightswe promote
access to justice and the protection
of civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights.
In international cooperationweencourage cooperation between
nations toward amore peaceful
and equitable international
order based on pluralism and
tolerance.
The unit, led by Alan Jenkins,
director, andTaryn Higashi, deputy
director, supports organizations
working on international human
rights aswell as the rights of
women,members ofminority
groups and refugees. New
initiatives are exploring diverse
approaches to achieving reconcil-
iation and justice at the end of a
period ofmassive crimes against
human rights. Grant making
focuses on the International
Criminal Court aswell as discrete
efforts in countries as diverse
as Nigeria,Argentina, Indonesia,
Russia and South Africa. Grants
for international cooperation
focus on foreign policy, resolving
conflicts, encouraging peace-
making and curbing nuclear
proliferation.
Newwork is fostering greater
recognition of developing-country
economic issues in the regulation
of globalmarkets and the decision
making ofmultilateral institutions
like the InternationalMonetary
Fund and theWorldTrade
Organization.
Governance and Civil Society
The second unit,Governance
and Civil Society, alsoworks in
two fields:
In governancewe foster effective,transparent, accountable and
responsible governmental institu-
tions guided by the rule of law and
dedicated to reducing inequality.
In civil society our goal is tostrengthen the civic and political
participation of people and groups
in charting the future of their
societies.
Under the leadership ofMichael
A. Edwards, director, and Urvashi
Vaid, deputy director, the unit
supports efforts to improve govern-
ment performance,build public
awareness of budget and tax issues
and confront the challenges posed
by government decentralization.
To address concerns about electoral
reform, campaign finance, voting
andwomen in politics, a new
grant-making emphasiswill focus
on political equality in America.
Throughwork on civil society,
grants will seek to increase partici-
pation in public affairs beyond
votingwhile strengthening civil
society organizations and the
practice of philanthropy needed
to guarantee their long-term
sustainability. Another new grant-
making portfolio focuses on global
civil society and on the role of
transnational citizens’coalitions in
addressing theworld’s pressing
social problems.
Natalia Kanem, as the senior
director of the Peace and Social
Justice program, is responsible for
encouraging newareas of grant
making and helping staffmembers
to document and share the knowl-
edge gained through ourwork
among staff, grantees and others.
One example of this commitment
is the Budget and Fiscal Analysis
Network (BFAN),which facilitates
learning, capacity building and
the sharing of experience across
20 countries on how citizens can
promote transparency, account-
ability and participation in
government budgeting. In a simi-
lar vein, the foundation recently
established the Network on
Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights to help advocates, govern-
ment officials andNGOs develop
ways to enforce these new
categories of rights.
Peace and Social Justice
The foundation is concerned
with human rights for all through-
out theworld. It takes a special
interest in the rights of women,
members ofminority groups
and refugees.
Civic activists from around the
world, including this supporter of
the rights of Afro-Brazilians,
received video training and equip-
ment to document their experi-
encewith racial discrimination as
well as their participation in the
United NationsWorld Conference
Against Racism, Racial
Discrimination,Xenophobia and
Related Intolerance. The project
was sponsored by Firelight
Media, an independent produc-
tion company. Based in NewYork,
Firelight tells stories of people,
places, cultures and issues that
are underrepresented in the
mainstreammedia.
Human Rights
Peace and Social Justice
(Left) Sueli Carneiro, second fromleft, and other activists from the
Geledes Institute of BlackWomen
discuss their plans for the U.N.
World Conference Against Racism,
whichwas held in 2001 in Durban,
South Africa. Geledes,which is
based in São Paulo, coordinated
thework of Brazilian activists
in preparation for the conference
and helped call delegates’atten-
tion to the complex dynamics of
race, ethnicity and gender.
(Below) Proponents of racialjustice in Uruguay discussways to
increase participation and coordi-
nate strategy in the run up to the
U.N.World Conference Against
Racism. Their organization,Mundo
Afro,helped form the Strategic
Alliance of Afro-American People,
a network of 28 groupsworking
to end racial discrimination in
Latin America and the Caribbean.
The alliance sent delegates to
preparatory conferences in Chile
and Switzerland aswell as the
final conference in Durban,
South Africa.
56
Tribal laborers show Vivek Pandit,
right,a prominent human rights
activist in India, the site of a land
andwater dispute in Kombapada
village, north of Mumbai. Pandit’s
organization,Vidhayak Sansad,
helps tribal communities secure
fair wages, regain land and
natural resources, improve schools,
preserve art and dances and train
emerging leaders. In this case,
the local politicianwho had occu-
pied the land agreed tomeet with
Pandit to resolve the dispute.
58
Peace and Social Justice
The foundation encourages coop-
eration amongnations toward
a more peaceful and equitable
world.
(Above) Activists fromVietnam’s
emerging civil society receive
intensive English-language instruc-
tion during a 24-week course at
VietnamNational University in
Ho ChiMinh City. The university’s
Center for Foreign Studies
offers the course to help gradu-
ate students and civic activists
communicatewith peers overseas.
The course includes specialized
training in electronic information
retrieval and simultaneous inter-
pretation, skills that are especially
useful for thoseworking in inter-
national relations and international
economics and commerce.
International Cooperation
West African students at awork-
shop organized by the Centre for
Development and Conflict
Management Studies in Ile-Ife,
Nigeria. Through research,
advocacy and dialogue, the
center is exploringways to prevent
and resolve violent conflicts and
promote the peaceful transition to
democratic government.
60
The foundation promotes effec-
tive governing practices that
are transparent and responsive
to a nation’s citizens.
(Above and Left) Community
activists and government officials
in Olinda, a colonial town near
Recife, Brazil,meet at the Luiz
Freire Cultural Center to discuss
themunicipal budget and its
effect on children. The center is
conducting budget research,
analysis and public education in
28municipalities in the northeast-
ern state of Pernambuco.
(Above Right) Members of
Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia’s
largest Muslim association, take
part in a training seminar about
ways to play an active role in
civil society. Lakpesdam, the
association’s research institute,
organized the seminar to
help equip citizenswith the
skills needed to shape public
policy in Indonesia,where
trends toward decentralization
and regional autonomy are
shiftingmore power to the
district level.
Governance
Peace and Social Justice
A commuter returns home from
work inMontgomery, Alabama,
where the AlabamaOrganizing
Project helped avert cutbacks in
rush-hour bus service. The project,
a statewide alliance led by
Greater BirminghamMinistries,
has also developed and advanced
a vision of public policy called
the“Quality of Life”agenda. Its
chief goal is to increase citizen
participation,particularly among
low-income andminority popu-
lations, in the policy-making
process.
61
The foundation tries to strengthen
institutions that form the back-
bone of civic life. These include
nongovernmental organizations,
neighborhood groups and reli-
gious associations.
Nicaragua’s indigenous people,
including thismother and her
child in Bilwi, are gaining access to
public policy debates through
workshops and continuing educa-
tion programs at the University of
the Autonomous Regions of the
Caribbean Coast of Nicaragua. The
university was founded in 1995
to address the unique social and
economic needs of the region’s
indigenous and ethnic communi-
ties. Taking itsmission outside
the classroom, it is helping local
residents gain a stronger voice
in national dialogues on poverty
alleviation and regional
development.
Civil Society
Asmembers of the National
Religious Leadership Roundtable,
Debra Kolodny,Rev. Ken South
and Abdullah areworking to build
bridges in U.S. civil society. The
roundtable is an interfaith network
that promotes greater understand-
ing, equality and respect for gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender
people. The organization,which
beganmeeting in 1998 under
the aegis of the National Gay and
Lesbian Task Force Foundation,
also promotes respect for reli-
gious diversity within the gay
community.
Youngmen repair a bus stop in
Sudogda,a city in central Russia,
through a new community
service program started by the
Constructive Approach Foundation.
The program, conceived as an
alternative tomilitary service,
includeswork campswhere
youngmen andwomen from
around the country perform such
tasks as renovating schools or
preparingwinter firewood
for the elderly.
Peace and Social Justice
63
64
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Wing Lam,Executive Director
of the Chinese Staff &Workers
Association in NewYork City,
won an L.C.W.award for helping
to create an independent union
of restaurant workers and the
Chinese ConstructionWorkers
Association. They campaign for
better working and living condi-
tions for immigrant Chinese
and others employed in garment
manufacturing, restaurants,
construction and building
custodial services.
Leadership for a ChangingWorld,
a programof the Ford Foundation in
partnershipwith theWashington-
based Advocacy Institute and the
Robert F.Wagner Graduate School
of Public Service at NewYork
University, recognizes 20 individ-
uals or organizations each year for
their effective responses to social
problems in communities across
the United States. Thewinners
receive $100,000 each to advance
their work and an additional
$30,000 to strengthen their skills
and for other supporting activities
over thenext two years. Photos of
other L.C.W.winners in 2001 appear
on pages 48 and 82.
Leadership for a ChangingWorld
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Education,Knowledge and Religion
Education Reform
Higher Education and Scholarship
Religion, Society and Culture
Media,Arts and Culture
Media
Arts and Culture
Last fall, millions of people across the UnitedStates watched a five-hour prime time public tele-vision series called, “Local News.” Unlike previousblockbuster shows like “The Civil War” or“Baseball,” this one was not about history or massculture, both popular public television subjects.Instead, the series focused on a contemporary topicthat few Americans have thought much about—what makes local TVnews good, bad or mostly justmediocre? The show’s producers spent 10 monthsrecording daily life at a Charlotte, North Carolina,local TVnews operation that was trying to breakfree of the “if it bleeds, it leads” philosophy. Thedocumentary’s theme was not exactly the stuffof high ratings but, as one media critic put it, “if‘Local News’ were fiction, it would be the mostpromising new dramatic series of the fall.”
The series, funded in part by the Ford Foundation,was engrossing and revealing—a new kind of realityTV. “Local News” made clear that in the UnitedStates, one of the least regulated media environ-ments in the world, journalists work in a highlycompetitive and profit-oriented atmosphere thatoften causes them to emphasize sensational andlurid news. But the dramatic tension in the series,and in real life, exists because the TV reporters inCharlotte had chosen journalism for honorablereasons, believing that the news media are not justbusinesses but also hold an important place ofpublic trust in a democratic society. The reportersand the filmmakers who followed them for nearly ayear rejected the view that the financial bottom lineis incompatible with high-quality journalism.
The journalists in “Local News,” like journalistseverywhere, believe that the news media have aprofound effect on society. They can shine a lighton the lives of minority, poor and disenfranchisedcommunities; they can serve as civic watchdogs,holding government agencies and other institutionsaccountable; and they can “connect the dots” andhelp citizens understand that the “local” is partof a more national or international context. Asday-to-day life grows more complex, and as globalcommunities become more interdependent, thenews media’s ability to report on events truthfully,accurately and fairly becomes even more critical.Moreover, in democratic systems, the news mediahelp citizens obtain the information they need tomake informed decisions and voice their concerns.Since last September 11, the news media’s role inresponding to the public’s urgent need for infor-mation seems more important than ever.
Given this context, the foundation’s Education,Media, Arts and Culture program is devotingmore resources, both financial and human, tocreate environments that enable journalists to dotheir jobs more effectively, more ethically andwith greater attention to the needs of citizens.This increased focus on the news media does nottake place just in the United States. Foundationstaff in our overseas offices are also providingsupport to reporters, editors, educators andprofessional journalism associations for effortsto improve the role, performance and diversi-fication of the news media.
66
Local News, Global News
Alison R.Bernstein,Vice President, Education,Media,Arts and Culture
68
In Russia, for example, staff are working withgrantees who are rethinking the role of journalists.Soviet journalism formerly was a vehicle for propa-ganda, and the news media were centralized andtightly controlled by government. Now, withRussia’s shift to a market economy, a transforma-tion of the news media is under way. Newspapersand electronic media, originally state financed,have been bought by financial groups, banks andlarge conglomerates. It’s not clear how open todiverse perspectives this new environment will be.In response to new challenges brought about byprivatization, the foundation supports grantees likeInternews, which provides technical assistance anddiverse programming for independent cable TV
stations, and the House of Journalism, Russia’sleading membership organization for journalists,which has developed ethics seminars for reportersand editors. Although the Russian context isdifferent from that of the United States, the goalsof the foundation’s initiatives in each countryare similar—to cultivate more open and civic-minded media.
In West Africa, the foundation’s efforts to improvenews media practices face different challenges.Despite the enormous potential of electroniccommunication, information flows between andwithin countries in the region are skewed becausethe news is reported in English, French andPortuguese, the languages of former colonial
69
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
The Education,Media,Arts and
Culture program focuses on
strengthening the roles leaders in
these sectors play in broadening
knowledge,opportunity, creativity
and freedomof expression. Nearly
30 staffmembers pursue these
goals in two programunits in our
NewYork headquarters and in
our overseas offices.
Education,Media,Arts and Culture
powers, as well as in local languages. In addition,news and information about neighboring countriesare obtained from global news agencies likeReuters, CNN, Agence France-Press and the BBC,which tend to ignore local news and diversecultural perspectives. One foundation grantee,the West Africa Radio Pluralism Project, countersthis homogenization by helping stations coverlocal events in various languages and with avariety of programming.
Among the greatest challenges facing the newsmedia in a country like Nigeria, Africa’s mostpopulous nation, are draconian statutes governinglibel, sedition and contempt. Such laws can“criminalize” media content and may obstruct acitizen’s access to public information. Even so,there are hopeful signs. As Nigeria has movedfrom dictatorship toward democracy, urban areashave become more open environments for thenews media, though rural communities have yetto experience the same level of pluralism. Thus,the foundation’s news media work in Nigeriafocuses on reaching underserved populations,especially rural women.
The African Radio Drama Association and theIndependent Television Producers Association havereceived funds to generate more local news in vari-ous tribal languages, particularly for the growing
number of new community-based radio stations.Although these stations are still largely governmen-tally owned and controlled, there are opportunitiesin the current political environment to givecitizens greater access to diverse viewpoints inthe news and information they receive.
In Ghana, community radio broadcasting isbecoming a major force. In 1999, 10 out of approx-imately 35 independent stations were either ruralor community based. The foundation-fundedGhana Community Radio Network enablescommunities to participate fully in dialogues anddecision-making forums, giving them a voicein the debates over economic, political and culturalchanges likely to affect their lives. This networktherefore does more than bring more diversenews stories to the community; it also serves asa venue for democratic citizenship.
The EMAC program’s growing engagement withthe news media reflects a heightened sense of themedia’s importance around the world. The newsmedia not only transmit information and culture;they also decide what information is important.In that way, they help to shape culture and values.Put another way, the news media serve as the“miner’s canary.” If the media cannot breathe freely,there probably isn’t much oxygen left for therest of us.
(Page 67) A scene from “Local News.”(Opposite) Vivid Features in Kenya,which trains new documentary makers,produces a weekly documentarymagazine series on culture, identityand citizenship.
Education,Knowledgeand Religion
The Education,Knowledge
and Religion unit, led by Janice
Petrovich,director, and Joseph A.
Aguerrebere, deputy director, seeks
to enhance educational opportu-
nity, especially for low-income and
chronically disadvantaged groups,
and to address the challenges of
diversity using interdisciplinary
and collaborative approaches.
The unit works in three fields to
pursue these goals:
In education reformwe seek to
enhance the capacity of schools
and higher education institutions
to broaden accesswhile pursuing
higher levels of student achieve-
ment, especially for historically
underserved groups. In this way,
we help reduce poverty and
inequality by promoting better
educational practices for all
students.
In higher education and scholarshipour goal is to expand knowledge
and deepen scholarship, curricu-
lum and public understanding of
pluralism and identity. We support
social science training as ameans
of educating a new generation
of leaders and scholars who can be
more effective in their civic roles,
helping to chart the future of
their societies.
In religion, society and culturewe are pursuing a deeper under-
standing of religion as a powerful
force in contemporary life and
a resource for strengthening the
cultural values and social practices
that support democracy,human
achievement, justice, equity
and cooperation.
Media,Arts and Culture
TheMedia,Arts and Culture unit,
headed byMargaret B.Wilkerson,
director, and Jon Funabiki, deputy
director, seeks to strengthen the
arts andmedia as important
contributors to the communities
and societies in which they func-
tion. The unit works in two fields
to accomplish these goals:
Inmedia ourwork aims to promote
free and responsible newsmedia
and to develop infrastructures that
serve the civic needs of society
and its diverse constituencies. In
addition,we support the develop-
ment ofmedia policy and
high-quality productions that
enrich public dialogue on such
issues as building democratic
values and pluralism.
In arts and culture our goal isto strengthen opportunities for
artistic creativity and cultural
expression that will generate the
hope,understanding, courage and
confidence necessary to help citi-
zens fulfill their potential.
The senior director for the
Education,Media,Arts and Culture
program,Kenneth B.Wilson,
is responsible for helping staff
membersworldwidework
together to learnwhat is effec-
tive andwhy, and then sharing
these lessonswith foundation
grantees andwider commu-
nities of interest.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
70
Education Reform
The Foundation looks for ways
to broaden educational opportu-
nities, especially for students
fromhistorically underserved
groups. Ford supports programs
that promote civic participation,
enhance teacher preparation and
nurture partnerships that help
children succeed.
These elementary school pupils
in the Philippines are benefiting
from an effort to improve English
andmath proficiency among
first and second graders in Bulacan
Province. Known as Project JOSIE
(Joint Systems Improvement
in Education), it brings together
school administrators, teachers
and parents as well as NGOs
and universities. In its first year,
the project retrained 620 teachers,
developed newworkbooks for
students,held support sessions for
parents andwon a commitment
from the secretary of education to
providemore textbooks and build
more schools in the province.
DCVoice, a coalition of parents,
teachers and school administrators
inWashington, D.C., is exploring
ways to achieve comprehensive,
systemic education reform in the
nation’s capital. With support
from theNetwork of Educators on
the Americas, it seeks to build
a broad constituency for quality
teaching and to create vital family-
school partnerships.
These Chilean students are learn-
ing about local flowers,herbs
and vegetables at a community
center inValparaiso, a city known
for its steep hills and historic
seaport. Their school has begun
to incorporate local heritage and
history into the curriculum,and
improve teaching practices,with
support from the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization. The initiative is
helping kindergarten and primary
school students inValparaiso and
Chiloe provinces givemeaning
and value to local culture.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
72
These students at the Alexandrina
Pitta School in Salvador, on Brazil’s
northeast coast, are exploring
questions of race and inequality
with support from theCentre for
Afro-Oriental Studies. The center,
located at the Federal University
of Bahia, trainsmunicipal teachers
and rebroadcasts television
programsdesigned to reach adoles-
cents who have dropped out of
elementary school.
Higher Education and Scholarship
The foundation tries to illuminate
theway changing economic and
political contexts around theworld
influence colleges and universities.
It is also examining issues of
access, equity and globalization
in higher education.
This brick-making venture is one
ofmany local enterprises receiving
support from the University of
Namibia’s newbranch in the north-
ern city of Oshakati. The branch,
which opened in 1998, has 1,400
students enrolled in continuing
education classes and degree
programs designed to foster skills
and knowledge needed to advance
the country’s development.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
75
Deborah Rosenfelt, Bonnie
Thornton Dill and Sharon Harley
helped establish the Consortium
on Race,Gender and Ethnicity, a
newalliance of scholars at the
University of Marylandwho are
exploring overlapping interests
inwomen’s studies and Afro-
American studies. The consortium
promotes collaborative and inter-
disciplinarywork.
Minority students at a science
class at South Oak Cliff High School
in Dallas. In response to a 1998
federal court ruling that eliminated
race-sensitive admissions policies
in Texas’s higher education system,
scholars at Princeton University’s
Office of Population Research have
beenmeasuring the impact on
minority admissions and retention.
The long-term study aims to
contribute to the national policy
debate on affirmative action in
higher education.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
76
Religion, Society and Culture
The foundation believes that
religion can be a resource
for strengthening democracy,
pluralism and individual
achievement.
(Left) Ismail Haidara inherited
thousands of ancient manuscripts,
including rare Islamic texts from
the 14th century, fromhis family in
Timbuktu,once an important
economic and cultural crossroads
on the edge of the Sahara desert.
Together with scholars at the
Institute for the Study of Islamic
Thought in Africa,which is based
at Northwestern University in
Chicago,he is working to preserve,
catalog and analyze thesemanu-
scripts without removing them
from their home inMali. The texts
are shedding new light on the
history of Islam,Africa and even
slavery in the Americas.
(Above) Elaine Pagels, the scholarof religion, in her office at Princeton
University. She is at work on
a book about Christianity and
religious pluralism.
Patients and familymembers
engage in a healing ceremony
sponsored by the Boston Healing
Landscape Project. The project,
started by doctors at the Boston
University School ofMedicine,
seeks to integrate the study of reli-
gious values and belief systems
intomedical education in order to
deliver care that is responsive
to the cultural and religious back-
grounds of patients. The project’s
initial focus is on healing systems
of African diaspora communities
in Boston.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
The vibrant life of the Janpath
market, in the heart of NewDelhi,
is the subject of a new documen-
tary about village artisanswho
aremaking theirmark in India’s
cities. The programwas produced
by the Public Service Broadcasting
Trust, a new radio and television
venture that addresses civic
concerns in India. The trust,which
was established in 2000,produces
documentaries and educational
programs on issues like gender,
development, the environment,
health and schools.
79
Media
The foundation’smedia unit
supports productions that explore
such social issues as democracy
andwomen’s rights. It also helps
journalists andnewsorganizations
maintain high standards.
(Above) These Nigerianwomen
in the northern state of Kano
formed a radio listeners’ club so
they could hear broadcasts on
agriculture and health and keep
upwith global events. The club
receives support from theWomen
Farmers Association of Nigeria,
which is helping rural communi-
ties gain a stronger voice in public
policy issues. The initiative, like
similar efforts in Ghana and Sierra
Leone,draws on the experiences
of the Federation of AfricanMedia
Women,which pioneered the
use of radio to advance develop-
ment in southern Africa.
(Below) AnuradhaVittachi, a SriLankan journalist based in London,
is a cofounder of oneworld.net,
an Internet portal devoted to news
and commentary on public affairs.
The OneWorld International
Foundation is working to enhance
the site’s editorial content with
insightfulmedia analysis and
criticism and thorough coverage
of international events like the
World Economic Forum.
Arts and Culture
The foundation is committed
to strengthening arts and cultural
organizations around theworld.
It also finds ways for artists and
scholars to pursue newprojects.
Students at the Yunnan College
of Nationalities in southwestern
China practice the Peacock Dance,
a traditional favorite among the
Dai people. To enhance the cultural
traditions of themany ethnic
minorities that inhabit Yunnan
Province, the college is strength-
ening its programs in art and
dance and creating a new one in
music. It recently opened studios
in 10 outlying villages where
instructors can learnmore about
local traditions, and it routinely
invites ethnic artisans to teach at
themain campus in Kunming.
81
(Top) A new stage adaptation of
“Moby Dick”by the Perseverance
Theatre in Douglas, Alaska, draws
on native Alaskanwhaling culture
in its retelling ofMelville’s story.
The theater is one of 32 U.S. arts
and cultural organizationsworking
to advance public dialogue on
important civic issueswith support
from the Animating Democracy
Initiative. The initiativewas started
in 1999 by Americans for the Arts,
an alliance of local arts agencies
throughout the United States.
(Bottom) Musicians in Indonesia
rehearse a composition in the
gambang kromong tradition, anamalgamof Indonesian,Chinese
and European sounds that
originated in Old Jakarta. The
ensemble receives support from
Yayasan Asosiasi Tradisi Lisan
(the Association for Oral Tradition),
which isworking to revitalize
traditional forms ofmusic, theater
and oral literature of the country’s
many different ethnic groups.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
82
Bill Rauch, Artistic Director and
Co-founder of the Cornerstone
Theater in Los Angeles,Calif.,
won an L.C.W.award for joining
talents of professional artists with
local amateurs to create theater
pieces that deal with community
concerns. Cornerstone produc-
tions have addressed the need for
AIDS education in rural Virginia,
de facto school segregation in
Mississippi and racial profiling
in Los Angeles. (Above right) ascene from“Peter Pan,” featuring
residents of a community in Ohio;
(bottom right) residents of LosAngeles neighborhoods perform
in“For Her or to Go?,”a production
that celebrated Cornerstone’s
15th anniversary.
Leadership for a ChangingWorld
Leadership for a ChangingWorld,
a programof the Ford Foundation in
partnershipwith theWashington-
based Advocacy Institute and the
Robert F.Wagner Graduate School
of Public Service at NewYork
University, recognizes 20 individ-
uals or organizations each year for
their effective responses to social
problems in communities across
the United States. Thewinners
receive $100,000 each to advance
their work and an additional
$30,000 to strengthen their skills
and for other supporting activities
over thenext two years. Photos of
other L.C.W.winners in 2001 appear
on pages 48 and 64.
Approved Grants and Projects
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Asset Building and Community Development
Economic Development 84
Community and Resource Development 92
HumanDevelopment and Reproductive Health 105
Programwide 118
Program-Related Investments 119
Peace and Social Justice
Human Rights and International Cooperation 120
Governance and Civil Society 136
Programwide 151
Education,Media,Arts and Culture
Education,Knowledge and Religion 152
Media,Arts and Culture 163
Programwide 172
Foundationwide Actions 173
GoodNeighbor Grants 175
84
Asset Building and Community Development
Economic DevelopmentApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
The Economic Development unitadministers program-related invest-ments (PRIs) for the foundation’sprograms. PRI actions,which totaled$16.5million, are listed on page 119.
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Development finance and economicsecurity
ACCIONU.S.A. Inc.
(Somerville,MA)
$400,000
To complete themerger of Working Capitalwith ACCION and expand amicroenter-prise program in New England.
Alabama,University of
(Tuscaloosa,AL)
$400,000
To launch the Earnest Johnson LegacyProject to strengthen community develop-ment credit unions and help low-incomepeople build assets.
Appalachian Regional
Commission (Washington,DC)
$25,000
To publish and disseminate the proceed-ings of a conference entitled Tools forEntrepreneurship:BuildingNew Economiesin Rural America.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
To assist the foundation’s Affinity Groupon Development Finance edit, publish anddisseminate four papers on strategies tohelp disadvantaged people build financialassets.
Association for Enterprise
Opportunity, Inc. (Arlington,VA)
$96,000
To develop a national strategy formicroenterprise development in theUnited States.
Association for Enterprise
Opportunity, Inc. (Arlington,VA)
$7,000
To print and disseminate additionalcopies of The Role of Microenterprise
Development in the United States,
to discuss the report’s findings and howto use them.
Brandeis University
(Waltham,MA)
$480,000
For its Asset Development Institute topromote and advance a newdomesticpolicy framework of economic securityand opportunity for all Americans.
Brandeis University
(Waltham,MA)
$345,321
To help plan and launch an instituteto promote asset development as a newframework for domestic social policy.
Brody&Weiser
(Branford,CT)
$88,350
To prepare and disseminatematerials onthe potential and structuring of program-related investments.
Brookings Institution
(Washington,DC)
$70,000
To analyze themarketplace and regula-tory structure of financial services inlow-income communities in order to findnew approaches to serving the bankingneeds of the poor.
Brookings Institution
(Washington,DC)
$50,891
To examine the effectiveness of theCommunity Reinvestment Act andother federal laws and regulations inincreasing access to credit in low-andmoderate-income andminoritycommunities.
BSR Education Fund Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$500,000
For Net Impact, a network of emergingbusiness leaders concerned with linkingbusiness practice with social concerns.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$227,000
For a comparative study of asset formationin assessments of living standards andeconomic well-being in the United States,France and Germany.
Communications Development
Incorporated (Washington,DC)
$35,000
To publish a three-volume book entitledTheMicrofinance Revolution: Sustainable
Finance for the Poor.
Community Development
Venture Capital Alliance
(NewYork,NY)
$125,000
To build capacity within the communitydevelopment venture capital industrytomake effective use of the NewMarketsTax Credit and NewMarkets VentureCapital programs.
Consumer Federation of America
Foundation (Washington,DC)
$400,000
For Cleveland Saves, a pilot program topromote savings among the least affluentand to plan a marketing effort for apossible national expansion.
Consumers Union of United
States, Inc. (Yonkers,NY)
$296,160
To assess the potential ofmanufacturedhousing,an asset-building homeownershipalternative for low-income people.
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$600,000
For data collection and analysis to improveunderstanding of the operations andperformance of community developmentfinancial institutions in the UnitedStates.
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$600,000
To analyze asset-building policies for low-income Americans, educate federal andstate policy makers on the importance ofasset building for the poor, and enhanceinstitutional capacity.
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$500,000
Tomanage and evaluate a nationaldemonstration of individual developmentaccounts.
85
Economic Development
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$275,000
To develop and implement a strategyto increase the involvement of financialinstitutions in the advancement ofIndividual Development Accounts.
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$250,000
To explore the feasibility of developinga national demonstration of Children’sSavings Accounts.
D2D Fund, Inc. (Cambridge,MA)
$300,000
For an Internet-based system tomonitorand reduce the costs of promoting andadministering Individual DevelopmentAccount programs and give savers accesstomore saving options.
Desarrolladora de
Emprendedores,A.C.
(Mexico)
$100,000
For a recoverable grant to capitalize acurrency devaluation fund for the creditand savings program inMexico.
Enterprise Corporation of
the Delta (Jackson,MS)
$350,000
For development finance activities in theMississippi River Delta region.
Enterprise Foundation
(Columbia,MD)
$125,000
To develop and implement a strategy toeffectively structure,market and utilizethe NewMarkets Tax Credit program.
First Nations Development
Institute (Fredericksburg,VA)
$50,000
To expand a demonstration program ofindividual development accounts amongNative American populations.
Florida,University of
(Gainesville, FL)
$200,048
For a national conference on small-areadata development and analysis methods.
Foundation-administered project
$350,000
For the activities of the Affinity Group onDevelopment Finance.
Foundation-administered project
$28,090
For the activities of the Affinity Group onDevelopment Finance.
Friends of WWB/USA, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$600,000
To strengthenWomen’sWorld Bankingaffiliates and promote microenterprisedevelopment worldwide.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$334,455
For a longitudinal study of homeownerswho file for bankruptcy, to establish itsprecursors and the effects of bankruptcyon homeowners.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$20,000
To publish the findings from a JointCenter for Housing Studies symposiumexamining the asset-building potentialof homeownership for low-income andminority people.
Initiative for a Competitive
Inner City, Inc. (Boston,MA)
$155,000
For case studies showcasingmarket-based strategies and public policies thataccelerate business and job growth inlow-income urban communities.
Institute of Development Studies
(England)
$3,500,000
To help development finance institutionsin Africa,Asia, Latin America and Centraland Eastern Europe to develop, refine andtest impact-assessment methodologies.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
Formeetings to exploremethods forenhancing asset accumulation throughhomeownership for low-income andminority populations.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
Formeetings to explore barriers tohomeownership among low-incomeandminority populations and tohelp develop strategies to increasehomeownership.
International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
For the Consultative Group to Assistthe Poorest to develop the capacity ofmicrofinance institutions and improvemember-donor practices in support-ingmicrofinance.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$125,000
To study the relationship between residencein assisted housing as a child and variousindicators of success as an adult.
Lakota Fund Inc. (Kyle, SD)
$400,000
To strengthen itsmanagement and gover-nance, developmore effective lendingprograms and create new programs toenhance economic opportunities on thePine Ridge Indian Reservation.
Laufer/Green/Isaac
(SantaMonica,CA)
$30,000
For additional copies of Win-Win:
Competitive Advantage through
Community Investment and to identifynewwin-win storiesmaking the casefor corporate involvement in communityand economic development.
Low IncomeHousing Fund
(Oakland,CA)
$300,000
To foster financing of affordable home-ownership opportunities for disadvantagedpeople.
Minority Business Legal Defense
and Education Fund, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To rebuild its staff,board and infrastructureand for fund-raising assistance.
Mortgage Professor Inc.
(Wayne, PA)
$60,000
To help the Upfront Mortgage BrokersAssociation establish a certificationprocess formortgage brokers.
Ms. Foundation forWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For annual training institutes for grass-roots women on economic developmentand for a peer exchange program tobuild organizational capacity.
National American Indian
Housing Council
(Washington,DC)
$82,600
To help develop credit union/tribal partner-ships to provide housing finance andother banking services to Native AmericanReservations.
National Community Capital
Association (Philadelphia, PA)
$125,000
To design and implement products andservices to help community developmentfinancial institutions access the NewMarkets Tax Credit program.
National Community Capital
Association (Philadelphia, PA)
$100,000
For activities to combat predatorylending.
National Community Investment
Fund (Chicago, IL)
$125,000
For activities on how best to utilizethe NewMarkets Tax Credit as a tool forchanneling capital from institutionalinvestors to depository institutions withcommunity development missions.
National Community Investment
Fund (Chicago, IL)
$20,500
To plan a Retail Financial ServicesInitiative to expand access to retailand credit services for low-incomeindividuals.
National Congress for Community
Economic Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$125,000
To develop educational tools and infor-mational resources to help communitydevelopment corporations create eligibleprojects for the NewMarkets Tax Credit.
National Council for Community
Development, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$50,000
To conduct research and raise publicunderstanding about innovative conceptsand policy alternatives forwealth accumu-lation for low-income families.
National Economic Development
and Law Center (Oakland,CA)
$400,000
To serve asmanaging partner for thefoundation’s initiative on savings andwealth building.
National Federation of
Community Development Credit
Unions, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
To increase net assets available tocover possible defaults on loansmadeby itsmember credit unions.
National Federation of
Community Development Credit
Unions, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$72,000
To develop a technology plan for increas-ing the scale of community developmentcredit unions in the United States andexpanding financial opportunities forlow-income communities.
86
Asset Building and Community Development
National Housing Institute
(Orange,NJ)
$29,100
For a study of the housing abandonmentlife cycle and its impact on the assets ofhomeowners.
Neighborhood Reinvestment
Corporation
(Washington,DC)
$60,000
For a quantitative and qualitative analysisofmanufactured housing stock and itsasset-building potential for low-incomefamilies.
NewColumbia Capital Advisors
(Takoma Park,MD)
$190,000
To identify new categories of investorsfor, build investor knowledge of andidentify and address potential investorconcerns about the NewMarkets TaxCredit program.
New School University
(NewYork,NY)
$188,000
To assess Fleet Bank’s CommunityLinkInternet banking initiative to fosterwealth creation by increasing access toonline financial services in low- andmoderate-income communities.
North CarolinaMinority Support
Center (Durham,NC)
$350,000
To help a statewide network of African-American community development creditunions secure new technologies andexpand their services andmarkets.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$1,256,368
For a longitudinal study on the accumu-lation of financial assets and social capitalamong low-income renters.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$250,000
For the Center for Community Capitalismto continue and expand its researchon increasing access to financial servicesamong low-income individuals.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$100,000
For amultidisciplinary program to presentthe benefits of low-income homeowner-ship through an academic conference andtraveling art exhibition.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$96,517
For the Center for Community Capitalismto study the implications of increasedautomation ofmortgage underwritingandmortgage servicing, particularlyfor low-income families.
One Economy Corporation
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
To develop online financial services access,content and products for low-incomehouseholds.
One Economy Corporation
(Washington,DC)
$65,500
To develop a business plan for providinglow-income peoplewith access to infor-mation andwith vehicles to enable themto turn that information into assets.
Peninsula Community
Foundation (SanMateo,CA)
$150,000
To expand the Assets for All Allianceindividual development account programand disseminate its lessons on effectivepractice to national audiences.
Phoenix Color Corporation
(Hagerstown,MD)
$38,325
To publish a three-volume book entitledTheMicrofinance Revolution: Sustainable
Finance for the Poor.
Puerto Rico Strategies, Inc.
(San Juan,PR)
$125,000
To promote economic development inPuerto Rico through initiatives in the areasof access to financial services, informationtechnology and new philanthropy.
Regional Technology Strategies,
Inc. (Carrboro,NC)
$97,750
For a convening of regional economicdevelopment experts to explore thepotential for cluster development ofindustries to increase opportunitiesfor low-income people.
Reinvestment Fund, Inc.
(Philadelphia, PA)
$155,420
To analyze the extent and severity ofpredatory lending in the PhiladelphiaMetropolitan Area.
Retail Initiative, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$125,000
To develop and implement a strategyto effectively structure,market andutilize the NewMarkets Tax Creditprogram.
Shorebank Advisory Services, Inc.
(Chicago, IL)
$100,000
To research and plan the developmentof an international fund for investmentin development finance institutions.
SiliconValley Community
Ventures, Inc. (San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
To assess and expand its business advisoryservices in low-income communities andto develop systems for their measurementand replication.
Small Enterprise Education and
Promotion Network
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To enhance the capacity ofmicroenterprisenetworks at the country level.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$684,000
For research on how the structure andcivic culture of businesses affect the socialfabric and community development.
Vanderbilt University
(Nashville,TN)
$100,000
For a longitudinal analysis of theimpact of the federal tax code on blacktaxpayers and to create an interdiscipli-nary research circle to examine raceandwealth disparities in 21st-centuryAmerica.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$400,000
For the Center for Social Development’sprograms on asset building for social andeconomic development.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$400,000
For the Center for Social Development tocomplete a national demonstration andevaluation of individual developmentaccounts.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$200,000
To build enhanced capacity at the statelevel to develop, fund and operate individ-ual development account programs.
Wayne State University
(Detroit,MI)
$510,000
For research on the effects of dispersedpublic housing and homeownershipprojects in Denver on Latino, African-American and other public housingresidents.
Weber ShandwickWorldwide
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To develop and implement a nationalcommunications strategy for an investor-focusedmarketing campaign designedto expand the investor base for the NewMarkets Tax Credit program.
Wisconsin-Madison,University of
(Madison,WI)
$61,500
For research on the role of themortgageinterest deduction and other tax policiesin fostering low-income homeownership.
Woodstock Institute
(Chicago, IL)
$75,000
To study the extent towhichmainstreamcredit unions currently serve low-incomepopulations and their potential forhelping poor people gain entry to theformal financial sector.
YouthBuild USA, Inc.
(Somerville,MA)
$300,000
To design the YouthBuild Asset Trustand develop plans for an endowmentcampaign.
Work-force development
Abt Associates, Inc.
(Cambridge,MA)
$500,000
For technical assistance toTechReach,an initiative to provide training andemployment services to under- andunemployed people in the informationtechnology sector and to assess theinitiative.
Abt Associates, Inc.
(Cambridge,MA)
$126,000
To evaluate theWorkforce InnovationNetworks Initiative.
Abt Associates, Inc.
(Cambridge,MA)
$50,000
To evaluate Phase III of theWorkforceInnovation Networks Initiative.
AFL-CIOWorking for America
Institute, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$550,000
To strengthen labor-affiliatedwork-forcedevelopment partnerships and promotedevelopment of an evaluationmethod-ology and indicators of impact forworkersand communities.
Asian Neighborhood Design, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
To reorganize and redevelop its financialmanagement systems.
87
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$4,000,000
For the Initiative for Social Innovationthrough Business to expand discourse,teaching and research on the role of thecorporation in society among currentand future business leaders.
Brody&Weiser
(Branford,CT)
$421,250
For activities to advance the CorporateInvolvement Initiative, including capacitybuilding for initiative grantees anddesign andmanagement of an InitiativeLearning Agenda.
CaliforniaWorkforce Association
(Sacramento,CA)
$75,000
For a project aimed at improving theunderstanding of work-force developmentpolicy by key California state policymakers, includingmembers of the statelegislature.
Center for Law and Social Policy
(Washington,DC)
$125,000
For training and technical assistance tostate and local officials, practitionersand advocates with respect to federal andstate work-force development policiesand practices.
Center forWorkforce Preparation
andQuality Education
(Washington,DC)
$733,833
For thework of Phase III of theWorkforceInnovation Networks Initiative.
Center forWorkforce Preparation
andQuality Education
(Washington,DC)
$99,500
For ongoing activities of theWorkforceInnovation Networks Initiative and tocomplete the planning for Phase III.
Center on Policy Initiatives
(San Diego,CA)
$50,000
To plan amulti-year project to increaseunderstanding and improve policiesconcerning the changing structure ofwork in California,with a focus on thelow-wage labormarket.
Corporation for Supportive
Housing (NewYork,NY)
$75,000
To develop a Stepping Up initiative tohelp workers whowere formerly homelesssecure improved earnings and benefits.
Council for Adult and Experiential
Learning (Chicago, IL)
$425,000
For a demonstration of portable LifelongLearning Accounts in Chicago and toseek collaborators and funding for addi-tional demonstration sites around theUnited States.
Council for Adult and Experiential
Learning (Chicago, IL)
$198,200
To collaborate with the Joint EducationTrust of South Africa on work-forcedevelopment partnership projects withSouth African employers, labor unionsand educational institutions.
Council for Adult and Experiential
Learning (Chicago, IL)
$195,150
To develop assessment and benchmarkingtools for adult-learner focused educationalinstitutions.
Council for Adult and Experiential
Learning (Chicago, IL)
$50,000
For activities to improve the capacityof the Council’s leadership team tomanage organizational transition andgrowth.
Economic Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$330,000
For state-based research and advocacyto promote high-wage/high-skilleconomic andwork-force developmentapproaches.
Economic Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For research and analysis on the effects ofstate unemployment insurance laws onthe contingent work force and to developpolicy recommendations based on theresearch findings.
Economic Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$25,000
For research and publication of a study ofnon-standardwork arrangements.
FutureWorks Company
(Belmont,MA)
$500,000
For a learning collaborative of regionalbusiness civic organizations to promoteequitable and sustainable regionaleconomic development benefiting low-income people and communities.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$260,000
For research to generate an understandingof community-based organization tempo-rary staffing services.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$6,779
For research to generate an understandingof community-based organization tempo-rary staffing services.
Initiative for a Competitive Inner
City, Inc. (Boston,MA)
$325,000
For a series ofmeetings and research onhow and under what circumstances theprivate sector invests in the educationand training of low-wage and low-skilledworkers.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$128,750
To organize two convenings of CorporateInvolvement Initiative grantees: a fall2001meeting to design a learning agendaand the spring 2002 fifth annualmeetingof initiative grantees.
Institute of Social and Ethical
Accountability (England)
$268,000
To buildmanagement capacity andleadership in corporate involvement incommunity and economic developmentthrough research on innovation inbusiness practices in disadvantagedcommunities.
Interfaith Education Fund, Inc.
(Austin,TX)
$500,000
For the ComprehensiveWork StrategyProject, a set of initiatives to enablelow-income people to obtain good jobsin growing industries.
Jobs for the Future, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$733,833
For Phase III of theWorkforce InnovationNetworks initiative.
Jobs for the Future, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$300,000
To build its capacity to develop anddisseminate innovative strategies forwork-force development.
Jobs for the Future, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$99,500
For ongoing activities of theWorkforceInnovation Networks Initiative and tocomplete the planning for Phase III.
Jobs for the Future, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$75,000
For activities arising from the Spring2000National Conference on CareerAdvancement Strategies for Low-WageWorkers.
Jobs for the Future, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$20,700
To plan Phase III of theWorkforceInnovation Network initiative.
Laufer/Green/Isaac
(SantaMonica,CA)
$425,000
To help participants in the CorporateInvolvement initiative to develop acommunications strategy aimed atbuilding business awareness andpractice in community and economicdevelopment.
Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For research on state and local policychanges and program strategies with thepotential for increasing communitycollege enrollment and program comple-tion for low-wageworkers.
MANPOWER, Inc.
(Milwaukee,WI)
$335,000
For a collaborative program to helpunemployed and underemployed peoplegain access to permanent and full-timejobs in the information technologysector.
Manufacturing Institute
(Washington,DC)
$733,833
For Phase III of theWorkforce InnovationNetworks initiative.
Manufacturing Institute
(Washington,DC)
$99,500
For ongoing activities of theWorkforceInnovation Networks Initiative and tocomplete the planning for Phase III.
National Center on Education
and the Economy
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
To establish aWork-force DevelopmentPolicy Forum to highlight best practicesand innovative and successful strategiesin states and cities implementing theWorkforce Investment Act.
Economic Development
88
National Economic Development
and Law Center (Oakland,CA)
$150,000
For a conference to increase learning andcommunication among sectoralwork-forcepractitioners about industry-targetedpractices that improve economic opportu-nity for disadvantaged people.
National Employment Law
Project, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For research, technical assistance, organiz-ing and advocacywith respect to theimpacts of subcontracting practices onworkers.
National Governors’Association
Center for Best Practices
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
To launch the Next Generation Initiativeto improvework-force developmentpolicy and practice at both the stateand local levels.
Public Policy Associates, Inc.
(Lansing,MI)
$150,000
To evaluate the first phase of the LifelongLearning Accounts demonstration.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$100,000
For the Center for Urban Policy Researchto help the Interfaith Education Fundcreate a strategic plan to build the capacitytomanage its organizational growth.
Visser and Associates
(Chevy Chase,MD)
$150,000
To design and field test an evaluationtool tomeasure the progress of granteeorganizations and the impact of grantmaking on the work-force developmentsystem and field.
Washington Alliance of
TechnologyWorkers
(Seattle,WA)
$150,000
For research on low-wage contingentworkers’ training needs in the high-techeconomy and for activities to encourageimproved policies and programs forthat labor sector.
Washington Alliance of
TechnologyWorkers
(Seattle,WA)
$15,000
For research focusing on low-wagecontingent workers’ training needs inthe high-tech economy and for activitiesencouraging improved policies andprograms for that labor sector.
Workforce Strategy Center, Inc.
(Brooklyn,NY)
$154,880
For amulti-funded study exploring exem-plarymodels where practice and policyenable community colleges to be effectiveelements of work-force and educationalsystems.
Working Partnerships USA
(San Jose,CA)
$75,000
To expand its survey of the landscape oflabormarket intermediaries in the SiliconValley andMilwaukee regions anddisseminate the findings.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Development finance and economicsecurity
Antonio Restrepo Barco
Foundation
(Colombia)
$200,000
To expand itsmicrocredit and socialservice programs formigrants,displacedpersons and other disadvantagedColombians.
CEGA (Colombia)
$68,000
For aworkshop to review and evaluateregional policies and their impact oneradicating poverty in Argentina,Chile,Colombia and Peru.
Christ’s House Foundation
(Chile)
$300,000
For an innovativemicrocredit programtargeting themost vulnerable poor,particularly women heads of householdand the physically handicapped.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$165,000
For an assets-based analysis of householdwealth in Chile.
International Potato Center
(Peru)
$70,000
To explore the viability of its socialinvestment approach to communitydevelopment in poor, agriculturalmountain communities and for anindependent evaluation of this andother CONDESAN projects.
NGOConsortium for the
Promotion of Small andMicro
Enterprise (Peru)
$200,000
For an emergency loan fund for micro-enterprise reconstruction in the earthquakedevastated zone of Arequipa, Peru.
Program in Labor Economics
(Chile)
$80,000
To analyze the experience ofmicrocreditinstitutions in Chile to determinewhymicrocredit policies have been ineffectiveand propose newpolicies for usingmicro-credit to alleviate poverty.
Social Education and
Self Management Team
(EDAPROSPO) (Peru)
$100,000
For research andworkshops to identifyeconomic and operating challenges facingthe urbanmicrocommerce sector inPeru and to develop recommendationson services and training programs tosupport the sector.
Solidarity Foundation:Work for
a Brother (Chile)
$25,000
For review and evaluation of current lend-ing practices to impoverished borrowersin Santiago.
China
Development finance and economicsecurity
Chinese Academy of Agricultural
Sciences
$59,100
For the first phase of experimentalresearch on providing sustainablefinancial services to low-income ruralhouseholds in China.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$301,500
For the Poverty Research Center’s capacity-building activities,microfinance researchand exchange network.
Chinese Society forWomen’s
Studies, Inc.
$33,000
For a pilot participatory training projecton project evaluation and field researchmethodology in Guangxi Province.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
For a regional conference, publicationsand follow-up activities to disseminate thefindings of a survey on social protectionin Asia.
Mountain Institute, Inc.
(Harrisonburg,VA)
$179,200
For business, environmental and financialtraining programs in Tibet.
Nanjing Agricultural University
$68,000For research on institutional changesandmarket reforms of rural credit cooper-atives and the implications for China’srural development.
Nanjing University–The Johns
Hopkins University Center for
Chinese and American Studies
$70,000
For a research project on credit cooper-atives and financial system reform inrural China.
Office of Economic Development
of Poor Areas in Sichuan
$54,700
To analyze and appraise different modelsofmicrofinance projects in China.
Eastern Africa
Development finance and economicsecurity
Near East Foundation
(NewYork,NY)
$281,000
To develop and test client-centeredmarketresearch and impact assessment tools forEast Africanmicrofinance institutions.
Tanzania Gatsby Registered
Trustees (Tanzania)
$100,000
To expand amicrofinance programworking for traditional women’s savingsand loans groups.
UgandaMicrofinance Union
(Uganda)
$75,000
For transition to a formal deposit-takingand lending institution.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Development finance and economicsecurity
AASHRAY (India)
$100,000
For Dalit managed savings and creditcooperatives to strengthen economicsecurity and human rights of Dalitsandwomen.
Asset Building and Community Development
89
Activists for Social Alternatives
(India)
$208,400
To use Internal Learning Systemmethod-ology tomonitor,modify and improveitsmicrofinance programs andmeasureand assess client impact.
Aid to Artisans, Inc.
(Hartford,CT)
$193,190
To build the capacity of community-basedcraft groups in India to compete in main-stream commercial and export marketswhile maintaining the aesthetic qualityof their products.
All IndiaWomen’s Conference
(India)
$24,300
To help the Asia Pacific regionalMicrocreditSummit meeting address issues of povertythroughmicrocredit delivery via network-ing and collaboration.
Development Support Team
(India)
$55,200
To expand its economic and leadershipdevelopment activities for poor urbanwomen inMaharashtra and establish anon-bank finance company to providefinancial support services.
DHAN (Development of Humane
Action) Foundation
(India)
$98,400
To expand awomen-owned andmanagedcommunity banking program and forgrassroots leadership development.
Foundation-administered project
$400,000
To explore education as a tool for economicand social development and to identifycurriculum development and staff train-ing issues with respect to the campusdiversity initiative.
Friends of WWB, India
(India)
$100,000
To train community-based financialinstitutions and self-help groups to offermicrofinance services to poor womenin the states of Uttar Pradesh, RajasthanandMadhya Pradesh.
HandloomWeavers Development
Society (India)
$34,010
Formarketing, financial services, advocacyand community development activitiesto improve incomeand status of handloomweavers in Kerala.
International Food Policy
Research Institute
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To conduct collaborative policy research,inform public debate and policymakingand build research capacity on foodsecurity and agricultural trade issuesin South Asia.
Mahila SewaTrust (India)
$1,419,241
For rebuilding livelihood security in theaftermath of the Gujarat earthquake.
National Council of Applied
Economic Research (India)
$90,400
To analyze the effects of trade liberalizationand other rapid changes in global andnationalmarkets on employment,wagesand working conditions of womengarment workers.
Network of Entrepreneurship&
Economic Development (NEED)
(India)
$70,000
To expand its training, technical assistanceandmarketing activities to promoteeconomic self-reliance and empowermentamong poor women.
Sa-Dhan Association (India)
$150,000
For standard setting, policy dialogueand institution building to improve andexpandmicrofinance services for thepoor andwomen.
Society for Helping Awakening
Rural Poor Through Education
(India)
$52,438
To expandmicrofinance operations.
Wisconsin,University of
(Madison,WI)
$296,830
For applied research, capacity building andcommunity activism on the role of assetsinmitigating livelihood risk among theurban poor in Lucknow.
Mexico and Central America
Development finance and economicsecurity
Alternatives and Social
Participation Processes
(Mexico)
$100,000
To design the legal, operational andadministrative components for a newrural financial services cooperative,train its staff, directors andmembers intheir application and begin offeringservices.
Anadeges,A.C. (Mexico)
$150,000
To develop an ongoing strategic planningand evaluation capacity, prepare trainingmaterials and disseminate its innovativemodel for rural development in generaland rural finance in particular.
Association for Social Research
and Study (Guatemala)
$80,000
For a research and training programin the economics of international tradein Central America.
Cooperative Housing Foundation
on behalf of Housing andHabitat
Foundation (Silver Spring,MD)
$1,000,000
To consolidate a home improvement andcredit program and expand its operationsin the U.S.-Mexico border region.
Desarrolladora de
Emprendedores,A.C.
(Mexico)
$100,000
To strengthen programming,manage-ment and information services for amicrofinance program inMexico City.
GuatemalanNetwork of
Microfinance Institutions
(Guatemala)
$70,000
To strengthen the network’s training,information generation and policyanalysis capabilities.
Integrated Services forWomen
Entrepreneurs (Mexico)
$100,000
To train indigenousMexicanwomenin microfinance practices andmicro-entrepreneurship and to refineand disseminate a gender-sensitiveapproach tomicrofinance.
Interdisciplinary Group on
Women,Work and Poverty
(Mexico)
$235,000
For fellowships to students at Mexicanuniversities to research how poor womenuse remittance income to improve theirlivelihood opportunities and the welfareof their families.
International Labour
Organization (Switzerland)
$100,000
To develop and deliver courses to improvethe quality and increase the supply ofprofessionals offering technical assis-tance tomicroentrepreneurs in CentralAmerica.
International Network for
Production System Research
Methodology (RIMISP)
(Mexico)
$70,000
To develop amethodology to assess andcertify the skill levels of executives andstaffmembers ofMexican developmentfinance institutions.
Juan Diego Foundation
(Mexico)
$60,000
To develop an equity investment fundto channel capital to microenterpriseinstitutions that promote povertyalleviation in disadvantagedMexicancommunities.
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Costa Rica)
$100,000
For research on the potential utility ofinserting Central American microenter-prises into global circuits that mightfacilitate flows of technology, investmentand trade.
Mexican Association for
Advancement and Social Culture
(Mexico)
$20,000
For twomeetings to discuss how a philos-ophy of ethics and an understandingof human development needs can frameamore socially oriented approach tomicrofinance.
Mexican Council for Popular
Savings and Credit (COMACREP)
(Mexico)
$100,000
For a coalition ofMexican developmentfinance institutions to implement learn-ing and administrative programs thatrespond to a new regulatory environmentfor popular savings and credit.
National Association of Social
Sector Credit Unions (Mexico)
$100,000
To institute a decentralized technicalassistance program,develop financialmanagement tools and design a federa-tion for microfinance organizationsserving disadvantaged people in Oaxacaand Puebla.
Nicaraguan Association of
Microfinance Institutions
(Nicaragua)
$100,000
To strengthen its training, informationand policy analysis programs.
Economic Development
90
ProDevelopment: Finance and
Microenterprise (Mexico)
$100,000
For strategic planning and organizationaldevelopment to enhance its capacityto help development finance institutionsrespond to the challenges and opportu-nities of a new regulatory framework.
ProDevelopment: Finance and
Microenterprise (Mexico)
$45,000
To support participation by LatinAmericans in theMicroCreditSummit Campaign’s October 2001Latin American RegionalMeetingin Puebla.
ProDevelopment: Finance and
Microenterprise (Mexico)
$25,000
For seminars and publication on develop-ment finance issues.
Union for Rural Efforts
(Mexico)
$60,000
To publish and disseminate analyticaland training materials on developmentfinance and to assess the diffusion andadoption of an innovative microfinancemethodology.
Middle East and North Africa
Development finance and economicsecurity
American University in Cairo
(Egypt)
$100,000
To enable the Group for Alternative Policiesfor Sudan (GAPS) to continue examiningpast and present policies in critical areasof Sudanese national life.
Palestine Economic Policy
Research Institute (West Bank)
$50,000
For research on the performance of thePalestinian economy in light of the currentconflict and for a survey of foreign tradein services.
Russia
Development finance and economicsecurity
Friends of WWB/USA, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$101,500
For technical assistance to the RussianWomen’s Microfinance Network and itsmembers, and activities to create anenabling environment formicrofinanceprograms in Russia.
Women’sMicrofinance Network
$900,000
For activities to help Russianmicrofinanceinstitutions that extend credit to low-income women entrepreneurs and toincrease its revolving loan fund.
Southern Africa
Development finance and economicsecurity
Women’s Development Bank
Trust (South Africa)
$75,000
For planning and design of a capacity-building program for rural basedmicrofinance institutions in SouthernAfrica.
Work-force development
JET Education Services
(South Africa)
$1,500,000
To providework-force development servicesto South African employers,workers andjob seekers.
West Africa
Development finance and economicsecurity
Community Development
Foundation (Nigeria)
$520,000
To consolidate the programs,upgradethe information systems and developthe staff and organizational capac-ities of Nigeria’s leadingmicrofinanceintermediary.
Development Alternatives and
Resource Centre (Nigeria)
$80,000
To carry out an assessment of theNigerian component of theWest AfricanElectronic Community, an NGO electronicnetwork supported by the AssetsWestAfrica program.
Enterprise for Development
International Limited/GTE
(Nigeria)
$200,000
To provide technical assistance formicro-finance and environmental enterprisedevelopment in Nigeria.
Fate Foundation
(Nigeria)
$240,000
For training,networking and financialservices for emerging entrepreneurs.
S.O.F.T. Company Limited
(Ghana)
$100,000
To adapt loan fundmanagementsoftware for Nigerianmicrofinanceorganizations.
Grants to Individuals$40,000
Total, Economic Development$66,434,012
(includes program-related investmentsof $16.5million; details on page 119)
Asset Building and Community Development
91
selected books, articles andreports
Bbenkele, Edwin Kachesa and
George SombeMukuka.
An Incomplete AnnotatedBibliography of Small,Micro andMedium Enterprise (SMME)Research in South Africa.Pietermaritzburg, South Africa:
CEPPERT,University of Natal, School
of Business, 2000.
Bina Swadaya’s Team.
PengalamanMendampingi PetaniHutan:Kasus Perhutanan Sosialdi Pulau Jawa (Experience inAccompanying Forest Farmers:The Case of Social Forestry onthe Island of Java).Cimanggis-Depok (West Java),
Indonesia: PT. Penebar Swadaya,
2001.
Bonfil, Paloma and Blanca Suarez.
De la tradición almercado:microempresas demujeresartesanales (FromTradition toMarket:Women Artisans andMicroentrepreneurship).Mexico City: Interdisciplinary Group
onWomen,Work and Poverty
(GIMTRAP), 2001.
Center for the Study ofWomen—
Honduras.
Lasmujeres en la reconstrucción(Women in the ReconstructionProcess).Tegucigalpa,Honduras:Center for
Women’s Studies, 2001.
Changbin, Jiang and Robert Ross
(eds.).
Cong Duizhi Zouxiang Huanhe(FromConfrontation to Détente).Beijing:World Knowledge Press,
November 2000.
Chengxu,Yang andWuMiaofa (eds.).
XinTiaozhan—Guoji GuanxiZhong de“Rendao Zhuyi Ganyu”(New Challenges—“HumanitarianIntervention” in InternationalRelations).Beijing:China Youth Press, 2001.
Coelho,Maria Célia N., Lígia
Simonian andNorbert Fenzi (orgs.).
Estado e Políticas Públicas naAmazônia—Gestão de RecursosNaturais (State and PublicPolicies in the Amazon—NaturalResourcesManagement).Belém,Brazil:Nucleus for Higher
Studies of the Amazon–Federal
University of Pará (NAEA/UFPA),
2001.
Darusman,Dudung et al.
Resiliensi KehutananMasyarakat diIndonesia (Resilience of CommunityForestry in Indonesia).Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Debut Press, 2001.
Del Valle,Alfredo.
Las ONGs:Un potencial dedesarrollo y cuidadanía para Chile(NGOs:A Promising Potentialfor Development and Citizenshipfor Chile).Santiago:DOLMEN Ediciones, 2000.
Diegues,A. (org.).
Etnoconservação:Novos Rumospara a Proteção da Natureza dosTrópicos (Ethnoconservation:New Paths for the Protection ofNature in the Tropics).São Paulo,Brazil:HUCITEC, 2001.
Ffrench-Davis, Ricardo (compiler).
Crisis Financieras en Países“Exitosos” (Financial Crisis in“Successful”Countries).Santiago,Chile:Cepal-McGrawHill,
2001.
Irarrázaval, Ignacio (project director).
Desempeño económico y viabilidadde lamicroempresa en Chile(Economic Performance andViabilityofMicroenterprises in Chile).Santiago,Chile: Statcom,2001.
Marques, J.
Pescando Pescadores: Ciênciase Etnociência emuma PerspectivaEcológica (Fishing Fisherman:Science and Ethnoscience in anEcological Perspective).São Paulo,Brazil: Center for Research
onHuman Population andWetlands
in Brazil (NUPAUB/USP),University
of São Paulo, 2001.
Martinez Corona,Beatriz.
Género, Empoderamiento ySustentabilidad:Una ExperienciadeMicroempresa Artesanal deMujeres Indigenas (Gender,Empowerment and Sustainability:The Experience of IndigenousWomen in an ArtisanalMicroenterprise).Mexico City: Interdisciplinary Group
onWomen,Work and Poverty
(GIMTRAP), 2001.
Perez Sainz, Juan Pablo, Katharine
Andrade-Eekhoff,Maribel Carrera
Guerra and Edith Olivares Ferreto.
Globalización y comunidades enCentroamerica (Globalization andCommunities in Central America).San José,Costa Rica: Facultad
Latinoamericana de Ciencias
Sociales, 2001.
Poats, SusanV.,WilliamH.Ulfelder,
Jorge B. Recharte and Cecilia Scurrah-
Ehrhart (eds.).
Constroyendo la conservaciónparticipativa en la reserva ecológicaCayambe-Coca, Ecuador (BuildingParticipatory Conservation in theCayambe-Coca Ecological Reserve,Ecuador).Arlington,Va.:The Nature
Conservancy, 2001.
Ramírez,Clara G. andOscarM.
Castro.
Juventud,Pobreza y Formación(Youth,Poverty and Training).Bogotá,Colombia, 2000:Universidad
Nacional de Colombia,Centro de
Investigaciones para el Desarrollo,
CID, 2000.
Ricardo,Carlos Alberto (Beto).
Povos Indigenas no Brasil(Indigenous Peoples fromBrazil).São Paulo,Brazil: Instituto
Sócioambiental–ISA (Social and
Environmental Reference
Center, 2001.
Shulong,Chu.
LengzhanHou Zhongmei Guanxide Zouxiang (Trends in Sino-U.S.Relations after the ColdWar).Beijing:China Social Sciences Press,
May 2001.
Valenzuela, ElenaM.and
Sylvia Venegas.
Mitos y realidades de lamicroempresa en Chile: unanálisis de género (Mythsand Truths ofMicroenterprisesin Chile:A Gender-orientedAnalysis).Santiago,Chile:CEM,2001.
Yunling, Zhang (ed.).
HuobanHaishi Duishou—TiaozhengZhong de ZhongMei Ri Er Guangxi(Partners or Rivals—ChangingRelationships Among China, theU.S., Japan and Russia).Beijing:China Social Science
and Documentation Press,
January 2001.
Yunling, Zhang and Zhao Jianglin
(eds.).
Zou Fazhan,Hezuo,Kaifang zhi Lu—APEC,Dongya Jingji yu ZhongguoShichang Kaifang (TowardsDevelopment,Cooperation andOpening—APEC, Economics inEast Asia and the Opening of theChineseMarket).Beijing: Economics andManagement
Press, July 2000.
Publications andOtherMedia—Economic Development
Economic Development
92
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Community development
American Baptist Seminary of
theWest (Berkeley,CA)
$30,000
To conduct a study on how faith commu-nities are shaped by culture.
American JewishWorld Service,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$250,000
For the International JewishTravel Corps,an internship program combiningcommunity service, study and leadershipdevelopment.
Arizona,University of
(Tucson,AZ)
$595,000
To launch the Native Nations Institute forLeadership,Management and Policy totrain indigenous leadership andmanage-ment and conduct policy relevantresearch and analysis.
Arizona,University of
(Tucson,AZ)
$100,000
For the Center for theManagement ofInformation to develop an onlinelexicon of community developmentterminology.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$1,500,000
Tomanage the Rural Development andCommunity Foundations Initiative.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For the Institute’s Roundtable onComprehensive CommunityInitiatives.
Atlanta Neighborhood
Development Partnership, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$150,000
To develop a plan to promote affordablehousing development inmetropolitanAtlanta.
Baltimore Urban League
(Baltimore,MD)
$150,000
For a comprehensive social equity studyto increase community awareness of thesocial, environmental and equity conse-quences of transportation infrastructureinvestments.
Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration
Corporation (Brooklyn,NY)
$250,000
For a strategic planning process to developnew program directions, improve itsorganizational structure and strengthenits financial management and fund-raising capacity.
Brookings Institution
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
To document and describe themajorcharacteristics of and challenges facingolder suburban communities.
Burden Center for the Aging, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a conference on communityvolunteerism.
California,University of
(Santa Cruz,CA)
$200,000
For the Social Change Across BordersSummer Institutes for Latino communityleaders from the United States,Mexicoand Central America and to launch theTransnational Learning Network forpast participants.
Calvin College and Seminary
(Grand Rapids,MI)
$350,000
To develop college preparatory plans forhigh-risk youth in cities participating inthe national demonstration to promotefaith-based community and youthdevelopment programs.
Center for Resource Economics
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For public education andmedia outreachon issues of poverty and urban sprawladdressed in its new publication, SprawlCity.
Center for Rural Strategies, Inc.
(Whitesburg,KY)
$500,000
To improve public understanding of ruralcommunity development issues in theUnited States.
Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Inc.
(Annapolis,MD)
$250,000
To collaboratewith the Baltimore RegionalPartnership in a regional smart-growthplan emphasizing quality of life, a thrivingeconomywith opportunity and accessfor all and social equity.
CLF Services, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$150,000
To establish a community land trust inHarlem, select appropriate sites availablefor purchase and design a developmentand financing plan.
Collins Center for Public Policy,
Inc. (Miami, FL)
$70,000
For the Funder’s Network for SmartGrowth and Livable Communities.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$25,000
For a conference examining the impactof philanthropy on racial and ethnicityissues in the United States.
Community Foundation of
Greater Greensboro, Inc.
(Greensboro,NC)
$75,000
For the faith-based community develop-ment programs of the Piedmont InterfaithCouncil.
Congress of National Black
Churches, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$1,000,000
To allow CNBC to continue to supportchurch-based community developmentefforts across the United States.
Congress of National Black
Churches, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$250,000
To develop and implement a strategic planfor self-sustainability.
Conservation Law Foundation,
Inc. (Boston,MA)
$300,000
For its Greater Boston Institute to addressurban development and smart growthissues,with an emphasis on transporta-tion policy.
Corporation for Enterprise
Development (Washington,DC)
$35,000
To evaluate the failure of the NatureConservancy’s Virginia EasternShore Sustainable DevelopmentCorporation.
DCAgenda Support Corporation
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To plan an equitable development demon-stration in theWashington,D.C. area.
Development Training Institute,
Inc. (Baltimore,MD)
$150,000
To increase understanding amongcommunity development practitionersof the importance of regionalism andsmart growth and enhance their capacityto help set agendas formetropolitandevelopment.
East Bay Community Foundation
(Oakland,CA)
$300,000
To incorporate environmental, economicand social equity issues in develop-ment plans for the uptown section ofOakland.
Enterprise Foundation
(Columbia,MD)
$310,000
To provide training and technical assis-tance to historically black collegesand universities participating in theFederal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta’sPeer-to-Peer Community DevelopmentTraining Program.
Asset Building and Community Development
Community and Resource DevelopmentApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
93
Community and Resource Development
Faith Center for Community
Development, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$350,000
For technical assistance and outreachto faith-based community developmentorganizations.
Family Resource Center at
Gorham (Gorham,NH)
$65,000
To assess and strengthen locally basedcollaborative strategies and programs topromote community development.
First Nations Development
Institute (Fredericksburg,VA)
$200,000
To complete preparations for and launchan endowment campaign for the EagleStaff Fund, the institute’s grant-makingand technical assistance unit.
FordhamUniversity (Bronx,NY)
$140,000
For the BertramM. Beck Instituteon Religion and Poverty to provide tools,training and support to help religiousleaders speak out and act to end system-atic poverty in the United States.
Fort Belknap College, Inc.
(Harlem,MT)
$100,000
To plan and implement activities toincrease student enrollment, broadensources of financial support andestablish a long-termmarketingstrategy.
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio
(Nelsonville,OH)
$500,000
To strengthen the FAO as a sustainableregional philanthropy to promotecommunity development in AppalachianOhio.
Gameliel Foundation
(Chicago, IL)
$250,000
For itsMetropolitan Equity OrganizingProject to establish and strengthen regionalalliances between inner-city communitygroups and their counterparts in adjacent,declining suburbs.
Greensboro College, Inc.
(Greensboro,NC)
$500,000
For the Center for Ethics, Public Policy andLeadership to develop programs thatpromote community engagement andcivic participation.
Housing Assistance Council
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
To build the capacity of locally basedorganizations working to promotecommunity development in underservedareas of rural America.
Howard University
(Washington,DC)
$450,000
For the Divinity School’s InternationalFaith Community Information andServices Clearinghouse and TrainingCenter.
Idaho,University of
(Moscow, ID)
$20,000
To conduct a preliminary assessmentof the foundation’s Rural CommunityCollege Initiative.
Indiana University
(Bloomington, IN)
$700,000
To analyze the implementation ofthe Charitable Choice provisions ofthe Personal Responsibility andWorkOpportunity Reconciliation Actof 1996.
Interdenominational Theological
Center (Atlanta,GA)
$240,000
To enhance the knowledge and practice offaith-based community development.
Metropolitan Area Research
Corporation (Minneapolis,MN)
$339,000
For research to understand the economicand social equity effects ofmetropolitansprawl and to develop policies to increasesocial justice and economic opportunityfor the poor.
Minnesota,University of
(Minneapolis,MN)
$55,000
To prepare and disseminate publica-tions on regionalism, race and populardiscourse.
National Black United Fund, Inc.
(Newark,NJ)
$500,000
To strengthen African-American philan-thropic capacity to promote communitydevelopment.
National Center for Black
Philanthropy, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For theThird National Conference onBlack Philanthropy.
National Coalition for Asian
Pacific American Community
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To establish a research and public policyprogram.
National Congress for Community
Economic Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For NCCED’s Faith-based CommunityEconomic Development Academy.
National Congress for Community
Economic Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
To complete an organizational reviewanddevelop a comprehensive new strategicplan.
National Housing Institute
(Orange,NJ)
$300,000
To produce and increase the reach ofits community development journal,Shelterforce.
National Neighborhood Coalition
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the Neighborhoods, Regions andSmart Growth project to strengthen therole of community-based organizationsin smart growth and regional develop-ment policy.
Neighborhood Funders Group,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For activities to strengthen, expand andimprove grant making in communitydevelopment.
NewHampshire Community
Loan Fund, Inc.
(Concord,NH)
$500,000
Tomobilize new sources of philanthropiccapital for community developmentand develop new techniques and toolsto assist low-income borrowers.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$35,000
To its research foundation, for amono-graph on Sunset Park, a Latino andAsian immigrant neighborhood, includ-ing recommendations for strategiesto promote sustainable and equitablerevitalization.
Northcote Parkinson Fund on
behalf of Manifold Productions,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For the production of “God and the InnerCity,”a PBS special examining the role ofchurches in inner-city neighborhoods.
Pennsylvania State University
(University Park, PA)
$415,000
For research on changing patterns ofcommunity economic distress in theUnited States and the implications forfederal development policies.
People for the AmericanWay
Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For the Progressive Religious PartnershipConference,which brings progressivereligious leaders together to promote amore effective force for values in thepublic arena.
PittsburghTheological Seminary
of the United Presbyterian
Church (Pittsburgh, PA)
$150,000
For the Center on Business, Religion andPublic Life to foster public awarenessand understanding of critical issues incontemporary society.
Population Resource Center
(Princeton,NJ)
$500,000
For Census 2000:A National EducationalInitiative to inform the developmentof equitable public policies with objectiveanalysis based on census data.
Portland State University
(Portland,OR)
$259,000
For its Community Geography Initiative,an assets-mapping project to strengthenthe capacity of local organizations toachieve community development in low-income neighborhoods.
Positive Futures Network
(Bainbridge Island,WA)
$500,000
To expand the reach and impact ofactivities that support citizen participa-tion in creating more sustainablecommunities.
Prison Communities
International, Inc.
(Katonah,NY)
$45,000
For a conference on the criminal justicesystem and its impact on youth,womenand the children of those incarcerated.
94
Public/PrivateVentures
(Philadelphia, PA)
$1,200,000
For Operation 2006,a violence-preventionprogram for at-risk youth.
Public/PrivateVentures
(Philadelphia, PA)
$250,000
To explore the feasibility of expandingPPV’s faith-based prevention programsfor at-risk youth.
Rural Economic Development
Center, Inc. (Raleigh,NC)
$101,605
For its Communities of Faith Initiativeto help churches and other faith-basedgroups implement community andeconomic development programs inrural North Carolina.
South African Council of
Churches (South Africa)
$150,000
For faith-based youth developmentprograms in South Africa.
Southern NewHampshire
University (Manchester,NH)
$150,000
For the Community EconomicDevelopmentprogram to develop case studies for andhold an in-person and online conferenceon Setting Economic Policy to AchieveSocial Goals.
SurfaceTransportation Policy
Project (Washington,DC)
$300,000
To develop plans and build support forits New Directions Initiative to improvetransportation policies in the UnitedStates.
Synergos Institute, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$163,000
To plan a collaborative program tostrengthen philanthropic fundingmechanisms to support locally basedcommunity development projects intheMexico-U.S. border region.
Syracuse University
(Syracuse,NY)
$150,000
For theU.S. office of the Luxembourg
Income Study,which compiles anddisseminates data on socioeconomicconditions around theworld.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$1,500,000
For the Indigenous CommunitiesMappingInitiative to strengthen the visibility andviability of indigenous claims to landand resources.
Tufts University
(Medford,MA)
$264,000
For research, documentation, curriculumdevelopment and training in the useof the positive deviance methodologyfor identifying effective developmentstrategies.
Unity Fellowship of Christ
Church NewYork City
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For educational and social outreachprograms for high-risk lesbian and gayyouth in NewYork.
Environment and development
Alliance of ForestWorkers and
Harvesters (Eugene,OR)
$320,000
To build capacity and to create economicstrategies for improved livelihoods amongimmigrant and low-income native forestworkers.
American Forests
(Washington,DC)
$102,000
For communications, outreach and policyadvocacy to enhance the involvementof local communities in forest restorationwork for firemanagement.
Arizona Humanities Council
(Phoenix,AZ)
$51,000
For a six-part radio documentary on theColorado River watershed.
Center for International Forestry
Research (Indonesia)
$200,000
To review experiences and lessons-learnedfrom international networking andadvocacy for community forestry at theinternational level.
Center for Law in the Public
Interest (Los Angeles,CA)
$100,000
For the City Project, a collaborative effortto secure equal access to parks andrecreation in the most underservedneighborhoods of Los Angeles.
Center forWatershed and
Community Health, Inc.
(Springfield,OR)
$350,000
For research and education to strengthenwork-force capacity for a conservationeconomy in the Pacific Northwest.
Centre for International
Environmental Law, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$220,000
For partnerships with public interestenvironmental and human rights lawgroups in developing countries.
Certified Forest Products Council,
Inc. (Portland,OR)
$500,000
To buildmarkers for certified forestproducts.
Clark Atlanta University, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$300,000
To broaden the dialogue surrounding“smart growth” to include communitiesof color.
Conservation Fund
(Arlington,VA)
$250,000
For conservation and development projectswith ruralminority communities in NorthCarolina.
Consumers Union of United
States, Inc. (Yonkers,NY)
$300,000
To launch the Online EcolabelingEncyclopedia and for continued advocacywork on ecolabeling.
Ecotrust (Portland,OR)
$500,000
To promote conservation-based develop-ment in the Pacific Northwest.
Ecotrust (Portland,OR)
$300,000
For an operating reserve and a loss reservewith respect to its establishment of theNational Capital Center as amarketplaceand showcase for the goods, services andideas of the conservation economy.
Environmental Defense Fund,
Incorporated (NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To develop and implement market-based approaches tomarine fisheriesconversation.
Environmental Justice Fund
(Oakland,CA)
$200,000
To plan and coordinate the SecondNational People of Color EnvironmentalLeadership Summit.
Environmental Law Institute
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For exploratory work in the developmentof community-based certificationstandards formining operations in theAndean countries.
Environmental Support Center,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$200,000
To expand its activities to increase thecapacity of community-based environ-mental justice organizations.
Fern Foundation (England)
$50,000
To develop and disseminate an explicitcomparison of the leading forest manage-ment certification systems.
First Nations Development
Institute (Fredericksburg,VA)
$300,000
To assist United States tribes with certifi-cation of their forest lands.
Flathead Economic Policy Center
(Columbia Falls,MT)
$222,000
For policy education, communication andresearch on community forestry.
Forest Stewardship Council, A.C.
(Mexico)
$5,000,000
For the international operations ofthe premier organization for accredit-ing certifiers of sustainable forestmanagement.
Forest Stewardship Council-U.S.
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For theU.S. office of the Forest StewardshipCouncil, theworldwide accrediting andmonitoring organization that certifiessustainable forest management.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For the launching of the FSC Global Fund,an independent nonprofit organizationto support Forest Stewardship Councilcertification processes worldwide.
Foundation-administered project
$80,000
For the launching of the Globalization,Environment and Local CommunitiesInitiative.
Foundation for the Development
of Social Sciences
(El Salvador)
$100,000
For research on programs that payowners of forest, farmland,genetic andwater resources for the global environ-mental services they produce andimplications for indigenous and poorrural communities.
Asset Building and Community Development
95
Community and Resource Development
Future Harvest
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For technical assistance tomembercenters of the Consultative Group onInternational Agricultural Researchsystem onmarketing their services topotential donors and diversifyingtheir funding.
GallatinWriters, Inc.
(Gallatin Gateway,MT)
$230,000
To convenewriters, public intellectuals,scientists, community leaders andpolicymakers on issues of conservationand development inwestern UnitedStates.
GeorgeWashingtonUniversity
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the Center on Sustainability andRegional Growth to develop collabora-tive legal strategies to help grassrootsleaders advance environmental justicein the United States.
Institute for Policy Studies
(Washington,DC)
$20,000
To develop a guide to ecotourism andsustainable tourism in order to informand influence the deliberations of the2002 United NationsWorld EcotourismSummit.
International CityManagement
Association (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For a conference entitled BuildingCollaborativeModels to AchieveEnvironmental Justice.
International Ecotourism Society,
Inc. (Burlington,VT)
$150,000
For worldwidemeetings of diversestakeholders in preparation for the2002 International Conference onEcotourism and for NGO participa-tion in the conference.
International Food Policy
Research Institute
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
For the Consultative Group onInternational Agricultural Research’ssystem-wide Collective Action andProperty Rights initiative.
International Institute for
Sustainable Development
(Canada)
$200,000
For research and advocacy on investmentlaw issues and sustainable developmentin local communities under NAFTA andother trade negotiations.
International Livestock Research
Institute (Kenya)
$1,000,000
To expand research programs promotingthe role of livestock as key economic assetsfor resource-poor farmers in Africa,Asiaand Latin America.
International Possibilities
Unlimited (Silver Spring,MD)
$150,000
For capacity building to bolsterstaff resources and organizationaloutreach.
International Possibilities
Unlimited (Silver Spring,MD)
$150,000
To build a global network of environmentaljustice advocates in preparation for theU.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Jesus People Against Pollution
(Columbia,MS)
$50,000
To coordinate community participationin theMississippi Environmental JusticeSummit.
Just Transition Alliance
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For collaborations between environmentaljustice communities and labor groups.
Lawyers’Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For its environmental justice project.
Mineral Policy Center
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To develop standards for certifyingsocial and environmental responsibilityinmining.
National Council for Science
and the Environment
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
For dialogueswith leaders of historicallyblack colleges and universities and otherminority-serving institutions in orderto advance environmental programs atthese academic centers.
National Network of Forest
Practioners (Boston,MA)
$500,000
For activities to integrate economicdevelopment, environmental protectionand social justice in forest-dependentcommunities.
National Network of Forest
Practioners (Boston,MA)
$190,000
To increase the capacity of under-served,forest-dependent communities to partici-pate in planning and implementationof restoration forestry to improve forestecosystems and reduce the risk of fire.
Native Lands Institute:
Research and Policy Analysis
(Albuquerque,NM)
$250,000
Legal and technical services to helpNative Americans reclaim andmanageland assets.
New England Forestry
Foundation (Groton,MA)
$239,000
For the North Quabbin CommunityForestry initiative to establish a forest-based economy in the region.
NewYork Conservation Education
Fund, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$10,000
To develop recommendations for anenvironmental justice permit andsiting policy for the NewYork StateDepartment of EnvironmentalConservation.
North American Commission
for Environmental Cooperation
(Canada)
$88,000
For research and program developmenton trade and environment issues in NorthAmerica.
Nuestras Raices
(Holyoke,MA)
$150,000
For the Centro Agricola project for urbangardening, community organizing andfood-related microenterprises utilizingcacan lots and brownfields in inner-city Holyoke.
Peace Development Fund
(Amherst,MA)
$250,000
For the Building Action for SustainableEnvironments initiative to strengthengrassroots environmental and socialjustice organizations.
Penn Center, Inc.
(St Helena, SC)
$300,000
To help African-American families inSouth Carolina retain their forestassets and increase their productivity,promote community economic develop-ment and build a sustainable forestrymovement.
Pennsylvania State University
(University Park, PA)
$350,000
Tomonitor and evaluate the foundation’snational demonstration program oncommunity-based forestry in the UnitedStates.
Pinchot Institute for
Conservation (Washington,DC)
$300,000
To review the forest management prac-tices of 30 United States Native-Americantribes and assess their readiness forcertification.
Pinchot Institute for
Conservation (Washington,DC)
$134,000
For coordination, communications,monitoring and capacity building toenhance the involvement of localcommunities in forest restorationwork for firemanagement.
Puerto Rican Legal Defense and
Education Fund, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To plan and launch an environmentaljustice project to address the environ-mental harm suffered by Latinos in NewYork City, the northeasternUnited Statesand Puerto Rico.
Rainforest Alliance, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$500,000
For the SmartWood certification programfor sustainable forest management,with special emphasis on providing assis-tance to small-scale forest landownersand communities.
Rainforest Alliance, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
To plan a new Sustainable TourismStewardship Council to set standardsand accredit certifiers for socially andenvironmentally responsible tourismand ecotourism.
Redwood Community Action
Agency (Eureka,CA)
$100,000
To increase the use of community-basedecosystemmanagement practicesby regional and national agencies andorganizations.
Research Support Fund
(Amherst,MA)
$300,000
For an international conference on asset-building strategies as applied to naturalassets.
96
Society of American Foresters
(Bethesda,MD)
$35,000
To study barriers restricting the ability ofthe U.S.Departments of Agriculture andthe Interior to involve communities in theimplementation of fuel reduction andforest restoration projects.
Texas Southern University
(Houston,TX)
$100,000
For theThurgoodMarshall School of Law’sEnvironmental Justice clinic to workwith communities to develop solutionsto environmental problems.
Toxic Comedy Pictures LLC
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To complete a documentary film,“BlueVinyl,” to support public educationabout public health and the poly vinylchloride industry.
Training Resources Group, Inc.
(Alexandria,VA)
$350,000
To assist the Consultative Group onInternational Agricultural Researchwithorganizational change strategies.
Transfair USA
(Oakland,CA)
$300,000
To expand themarketing of certifiedfair trade coffee and other products inthe United States.
Uncompaghre/Com Inc.
(Delta,CO)
$285,000
To build amulti-stakeholder processfor landmanagement and communityeconomic development in forest-dependent communities inWesternColorado.
United Nations University
(Japan)
$100,000
For research and a conference on globalgovernance issues and theWorld TradeOrganization.
VallecitosMountain Refuge
(Taos,NM)
$100,000
To host two contemplative retreats forenvironmental justice leaders.
Wallowa Resources
(Enterprise,OR)
$300,000
To improve the condition of the forestecosystem inWallowa County and gener-ate sustainable local socioeconomicbenefits from the forested land and associ-ated range and riparian areas.
WashingtonOffice on Latin
America, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$75,000
To assess the post-HurricaneMitchCentral American disaster reconstructionprocess and draw lessons to strengthencivil society participation in promotingsustainable development.
White Earth Land Recovery
Project (Ponsford,MN)
$300,000
To promote sustainable forest manage-ment on theWhite Earth Reservation.
WorldMedia Foundation, Inc.
(Cambridge,MA)
$350,000
For“Living on Earth,”a National PublicRadio program on environment anddevelopment issues.
Xavier University
(NewOrleans, LA)
$150,000
To strengthen the capacity of the DeepSouth Center for Environmental Justiceto serve environmentally degraded andthreatened communities in Louisianaand theMississippi Gulf Coast.
Yale University
(NewHaven,CT)
$150,000
To develop a research and training programon certified forest management.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Community development
Agrarian Research Group (Chile)
$65,000
For research on household responsesto poverty and social exclusion withindisadvantaged communities.
Alternativa,Center for Social
Research and Popular Education
(Peru)
$300,000
To consolidate a participatory planningprocess in the Independencia district ofLima, extend it to a second district andencourage regional cooperation in prepa-ration for urban decentralization.
Chile,University of
(Chile)
$18,000
For a component of theVIIIth NationalSocio-Economic Survey (CASEC) in theIXth region of Chile.
Colombian Corporation for
Municipal Community
Development (PROCOMUN)
(Colombia)
$70,000
To update a set ofmunicipal managementand development case studies and assesstheir continuing pedagogic value.
Consultancies for Development,
Inc. (Chile)
$95,000
For an antipoverty and social exclusionpolicy network to consolidate knowledge,review best practices and prepare a feasi-bility study for a new center.
Frontier,University of the
(Chile)
$75,000
For an interdisciplinary university centerfor local and regional development, policyresearch and publications in Temuco,Chile.
International Development
Research Centre
(Canada)
$33,000
For research and publications on theimpact of community developmentactivities by mining and other naturalresource companies in Chile, Colombiaand Peru.
National Foundation for the
Eradication of Poverty (Chile)
$65,000
To develop a framework for local commu-nity development in Chile through trainingworkshops on existing local initiativesand exchange visits with successfulcommunity-based programs in LatinAmerica.
Research and Popular Education
Center (CINEP)
(Colombia)
$90,000
For research on communities andhuman rights with special referenceto theMagdalenaMedio region ofColombia.
SimonDe Cirene Corporation
(Chile)
$210,000
To provide technical assistance to ChileanNGOs throughworkshops and learningcircles and to strengthen private sector-NGO partnerships.
Texas,University of
(Austin,TX)
$800,000
For in-depth comparative analyses of theimpact of government-designed socialpolicies on poor rural and urban commu-nities in Argentina,Chile and Peru.
United Nations Economic
Commission for Latin America
and the Caribbean
(Chile)
$100,000
To analyze the impact of decentralizationon cultural autonomy and developmentof Mapuche communities in Argentinaand Chile.
University of Arts and Social
Sciences (Chile)
$31,000
For research, publications andmeetingson Mapuche land titles and the impactof changing property laws and landreform.
Vocational Training Council of
Rosario and Its Region
(Argentina)
$200,000
To expand the quality, coverage andrange of its services andmeet growinglocal demands for training.
Brazil
Environment and development
Acre Network forWomen and
Men
$90,000
For community-based training programsto integrate sexuality and reproductivehealth, sustainable development andincome generating activities.
Brazilian Biodiversity Fund
$350,000
To establish a grant-making partnershipto promote sustainable development inthewestern Amazon state of Acre.
Brazilian Institute ofMunicipal
Administration
$100,000
For applied case study research and publicconsultations on development financeand development finance institutions inBrazil.
Center forWorkers of Amazonia
on behalf of IntegratedWomen’s
Movement of the Amazon
$100,000
For the IntegratedWomen’s Movementof the Amazon to advance its women’srights agenda and strengthen its affiliatesand to send two directors to the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Asset Building and Community Development
97
Community and Resource Development
Coordinating Body for
the Indigenous Peoples’
Organizations of the Amazon
Basin (Ecuador)
$100,000
For applied research and advocacy tomitigate the impacts ofmining andpetroleum extraction on indigenouspeoples in the Amazon and for itssixth quadrennial congress.
Federal Agrotechnical School
of Manaus
$90,000
For a training program in sustainableforest management.
Federal University of Acre
Foundation
$400,000
To strengthen an inter-departmentalprogram of research, training and exten-sion on sustainable development inthewestern Amazon.
Federation of Agencies of Social
and Educational Assistance
$130,000
For research, public forums,publicationsand networking on trade and sustainabledevelopment,with a special emphasison the negotiations of the Free TradeAgreement for the Americas.
Federation of Agencies of Social
and Educational Assistance
$20,000
To organize Brazil’s first major conferenceon environmental justice and publishthe conference proceedings in Portugueseand English.
Institute for Alternative Policies
for the Southern Cone
$150,000
For applied research,workshops, publica-tions and other activities to promotesustainable development and democraticgovernance.
Institute ofMan and Environment
in the Amazon
$380,000
For research, publications, training andextension to promote sustainable develop-ment in the Amazon.
Instituto del Bien Comun
(Peru)
$230,000
For applied research, publications anddissemination on community-basednatural resourcemanagement initiativesin the Amazon Basin.
ISA–Socio-Environmental
Institute
$400,000
For applied research, advocacy, legalaction and dissemination on sustainabledevelopment and human rights in theAmazon and Atlantic forests and toprepare for the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Nawa Institute
$100,000
For applied research and extension topromote community-based sustainabledevelopment in theWestern Amazon.
Rio de Janeiro, Federal
University of
$100,000
For amultimediamuseum exhibitionon the history, peoples and cultureof a land reform process in northeasternBrazil.
Technical Assistance in
Alternative Agriculture (AS-PTA)
$185,000
For research, advocacy, technical assis-tance and networking to promotesustainable rural development,withspecial attention to the needs of small-scale producers and agrarian reformsettlements.
Vitae Civilis–Institute for
Development, Environment
and Peace
$185,000
For applied research,policy review, trainingand extension on sustainable develop-ment and democratic governance inBrazil’s Atlantic Forest region.
Vitoria Amazonica Foundation
$85,000
To strengthen a training program fordisadvantaged youth in the ancient artof stringed instrument making andwood-working using sustainably-harvestedwood.
China
Environment and development
Center for Biodiversity and
Indigenous Knowledge
$315,000
For work on the cultural dimensions ofnatural resourcemanagement and for asmall grants program.
Center for International Forestry
Research
$50,000
For an international symposium onChina’s forestry policy.
Center for International Forestry
Research
$17,250
For translating a tool kit for developingcriteria and indicators into Chinese.
China Agricultural University
$45,800
For two case studies of poverty alleviationresettlement schemes in Yunnan andNingxia provinces.
China Agricultural University
$32,000
For aworkshop for central governmentofficials on participatory approaches toinvestment projects.
China National Forestry
Economics and Development
Research Center
$90,000
For a study on poverty, tenure andcommunity forestry in China.
China Poverty Research
Association
$100,000
For a survey on human development inpoor areas in China.
Chinese Academy of Forestry
$125,000
For a network and newsletter oncommunity-based social forestry inChina.
Chinese Academy of Forestry
$60,000
To establish a NationalWorking Groupon Forest Certification in China.
Chinese Academy of Sciences
$600,000
For theTask Force on Forests and grasslandsto conduct case studies and developrecommendations on the impact of newforest policies on upland asset building.
Chinese Academy of Sciences
$60,000
For a project on participatory rehabilitationof degraded Karst lands in Yunnan.
Chinese Academy of Sciences
$12,000
For aworkshop on gender andland-tenure rights.
Guizhou Academy of Agricultural
Sciences
$65,910
To study the natural resourcemanage-ment systems of theMiao and Dong inGuizhou Province.
Guizhou Academy of Social
Sciences
$10,400
For training and study tours to buildthe capacity of its Rural DevelopmentInstitute.
GuizhouNormal University
$15,700
For an exchangemeeting of participatoryresearch and action practitioners insouthwestern China.
HorizonMarket Research&
Policy Analysis, Inc.
$50,000
To establish an Internet-based environ-mental volunteer organization inChina.
International Centre for Research
in Agroforestry
(Kenya)
$50,000
For fieldwork, training andworkshopson watershedmanagement in YunnanProvince.
International Crane Foundation,
Inc. (Baraboo,WI)
$100,000
To establish a training program atthe Caohai Nature Reserve in GuizhouProvince.
Regional Community Forestry
Training Center for Asia and the
Pacific (Thailand)
$52,500
For training and other assistance tocommunity forestry projects insouthwestern China.
Sichuan Academy of Social
Sciences
$10,000
For a conference on the upland conversionpolicy in Sichuan province.
Sichuan Provincial Forestry
Department
$130,000
To coordinate a community forestryproject in the Yangtze watershed.
Southwest Forestry College
$198,300
For curriculumdevelopment and fieldworkin community forestry.
Wetlands International-
Asia Pacific
$16,000
For the translation and adaptation ofa handbook for community involvementinwetlandsmanagement.
98
YunmanDevelopment Institute
$76,000
For developing a set of practical activitiesto facilitate the implementation ofthe upland conversion policy in LushuiCounty.
Yunnan Institute of Forestry
Exploration and Designing
$42,000
For a project on forest protection andmanagement by using indigenousknowledge of different ethnic groupsin China.
Yunnan Provincial Association for
theTreatment and Development
of Karst Areas
$50,000
For capacity building for povertyreduction in degraded Karst areasin Yunnan Province.
Eastern Africa
Community development
AfricanWildlife Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To build the capacity ofmembers of theKijabe Group Ranch to establish andmanage an ecotourism lodge in partner-ship with a commercial tour operator.
Gender Sensitive Initiatives
(Kenya)
$75,000
To build the capacity of communitydevelopment organizations to developand implement poverty reductionprograms.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$295,500
For Eastern African participation inthe International Philanthropy FellowsProgram.
KPMG PeatMarwick
(Kenya)
$200,000
Formanagement and related advisoryservices to foundation grantees in EasternAfrica.
Maji na Ufanisi (Water and
Development)
(Kenya)
$100,000
To build democratic institutions andcommunity assets within the slumsof Nairobi.
Environment and development
African Conservation Centre
(Kenya)
$125,000
To facilitate networking in natural resourcemanagement in East Africa.
Arid Lands Information Network
(Eastern Africa)
(Kenya)
$65,000
For the provision of information resourcesto community development workers usingnew information technologies.
Cooperative for Assistance
and Relief Everywhere Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$67,000
To build capacity for community-basedmanagement of natural resources onPemba Island, Zanzibar.
East AfricanWild Life Society
(Kenya)
$50,000
Provision of technical support toCommunity Forest ManagementCommittees in Kenya.
Ecotourism Society of Kenya
(Kenya)
$50,000
To link communitymanaged conservationwith the commercial tourist sector.
Environment Liaison Centre
(Kenya)
$25,000
For aworkshop on information accessand exchange for environmental NGOsin Africa.
Forest Action Network
(Kenya)
$50,000
To strategically plan the network andprepare for implementation of a newforest legislation in Kenya.
International Union for
Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources
(Switzerland)
$50,000
For the November 2001 regional workshopon forest landscape restoration in EastAfrica.
Kenya Professional Association
of Women in Agriculture and
Environment
(Kenya)
$78,000
To extend e-mail and Internet access toits provincial offices and conduct trainingworkshops formembers.
LewaWildlife Conservancy
(Kenya)
$100,000
To establish the Ngare Ndare Forest Trustand develop an integrated approach toecotourism in Northern Kenya.
Makerere University (Uganda)
$250,000
Tomonitor institutional arrangements forforest management in Uganda.
Sokoine University of Agriculture
(Tanzania)
$250,000
To participate in Indiana University’sInternational Forest Resources andInstitutions program, amulticountrystudy of forests and the institutionsthat govern,manage and usethem.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$310,000
To link community-level public healthtraining and the conservation ofmedicinalplants in Bwindi Forest,Uganda.
WorldWide Fund for Nature–
Eastern Africa Regional Program
Office (Kenya)
$75,000
For technical assistance in implementingcommunitymanagement of the KayaKinondo sacred forest.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Community development
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$5,298
To cover a cost overrunwith respect toactivities to improve demand-responserelations between government andresearch and extension staff and theirfarmer clients.
Society for Participatory Research
in Asia (India)
$50,000
For research and analysis tomap thedimensions of the nonprofit sector in sixstates for the Indian component of theJohns Hopkins Comparative NonprofitSector Project.
Environment and development
Asian Institute of Technology
(Thailand)
$50,000
To publish a synthesis volume on Asianirrigation systems in transition.
Centre for Science and
Environment (India)
$350,000
For research, technical assistance, publiceducation and an awards program toadvance equitable and sustainable waterharvesting andmanagement systems.
Centre for Social Research and
Development (Nepal)
$45,000
To enhance public awareness on environ-mental justice issues in Nepal.
Development Centre for
Alternative Policies
(India)
$125,000
For legal research, advocacy and publicdialogue governance andmanagementof water resources.
Development Support Centre
(India)
$200,000
To strengthen and consolidate its researchand policy advocacy capacity.
DHAN (Development of Humane
Action) Foundation
(India)
$200,000
To expand participatory tankmanage-ment in South India and to create localwater users federations.
FarmerManaged Irrigation
System PromotionTrust
(Nepal)
$100,000
For community innovations and equityin water resourcesmanagement.
Indian Institute of Science
(India)
$250,000
To coordinate and administer the Ecologicaland Economics Research Network andconduct a participatory assessment ofjoint forest management.
Indian Network on Participatory
IrrigationManagement
(India)
$100,000
For research, documentation,networking,training and advocacy to promoteparticipatory irrigationmanagementin India.
Institute for Social and
Environmental Transition
(Boulder,CO)
$100,000
For research and publications on localresponses towater supply, conservationand environmental justice issues.
Asset Building and Community Development
99
Community and Resource Development
Institute of Economic Growth
(India)
$300,000
To endow a chair in seed research fund-ing for environmental and resourceeconomics.
Institute of Economic Growth
(India)
$121,900
For comparative research on the social,economic and environmental implicationsof gender equity in community forest-basedmanagement institutions in Indiaand Nepal.
International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For collaborative action research onparticipatorymonitoring and learningin natural resourcemanagementprojects.
International Centre for
IntegratedMountain
Development (Nepal)
$150,000
For policy analysis, dialogues and capacitybuilding for sustainablemanagementof common property resources in theHind-Kush Himalayas.
International Centre for
IntegratedMountain
Development (Nepal)
$100,000
For planning activities with respect tothe International Year of theMountain(2002).
International Development
Research Centre (Canada)
$100,000
For activities to enhance the livelihoodsof collectors, small-scale growers andtraders ofmedicinal and aromatic plantsin two remote districts in Nepal.
International Food Policy
Research Institute
(Washington,DC)
$170,000
To study existing institutional arrange-ments for divertingwater fromagricultureto other sectors; identify key stakeholders;and assess the consequences for livelihoods,equity and rural landscapes.
Mahila SewaTrust
(India)
$336,155
To strengthen women’s leadership innatural resources-based livelihoods.
Max Planck Society for the
Promotion of Scientific Studies
(Germany)
$150,000
For training,networking and publicationscentered around the 13th Congress ofthe Commission on Folk Law and LegalPluralism,with a focus on the culturaldimensions of natural resourcemanagement.
Nehru Foundation for
Development (India)
$400,000
For post-earthquake rehabilitationactivities in Gujarat.
Panos Institute (England)
$100,000
To promote environmental justice issuesthroughmedia in South Asia.
South AsiaWatch onTrade,
Economics and Environment
(Nepal)
$350,000
For activities to secure farmers’ rights tosustainable livelihoods in the Hindu-KushHimalayas.
TribhuvanUniversity (Nepal)
$75,000
To develop a database on non-timberforest products of Nepal.
Utthan:Centre for Sustainable
Development and Poverty
Alleviation (India)
$150,000
For research, publication and extensionactivities to encourage cultivation of25 commercially valuable and endangeredmedicinal plant species.
Winrock International India
(India)
$700,000
For a small grants program on naturalresourcemanagement and studieson environmental justice.
Winrock International Institute
for Agricultural Development
(Morrilton,AK)
$350,000
ForWinrock’s Nepal program and toexplore emerging environmental equityand justice concerns in water resourcesmanagement in Nepal.
Zimbabwe,University of
(Zimbabwe)
$250,000
To organize and host The Commonsin an Age of Globalization, the 2002biennial conference of the InternationalAssociation for the Study of CommonProperty.
Indonesia
Environment and development
Foundation-administered project
$40,000
A program associateship in the Jakartaoffice to support the Community andResource Development portfolio, andprovide exposure to internationalphilanthropy.
Hasanuddin University
$153,000
To develop amulti-stakeholder communityforestry program involving villagers,local government agencies, universityresearchers and NGOs.
Lampung,University of
$85,000
For a collaborative research program forcommunity forestry in thewatershedof Bandar Lampung city.
Pesticide Action Network North
America Regional Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For community-basedmonitoring ofagricultural development projects fundedbymultilateral banks.
Regional Community Forestry
Training Center for Asia and
the Pacific (Thailand)
$15,000
To review and assess its policy in Indonesiain order to develop a collaborative programwith local institutions.
Yayasan Damar
$192,000
To develop alternativemodels of village-based collaborative forest managementthat promote the rehabilitation andsustainable use of forest resources tobenefit local communities.
Yayasan Lembaga Ekolabel
Indonesia
$100,000
To develop and implement a forestcertificationmonitoring system andpromote public awareness of therole of certification in sustainableforest management.
Mexico and Central America
Environment and development
Alternatives and Social
Participation Processes (Mexico)
$600,000
To establish a center for learning andtraining on an innovative participatoryapproach to community watermanage-ment and delivery systems in thesemi-arid regions of Mexico.
Association for the
Advancement of the Social
Sciences in Guatemala
(Guatemala)
$80,000
To broaden its research capacity toinclude an environmental approach andhelp indigenous and peasant organiza-tions promote community-based naturalresourcemanagement as an asset-build-ing strategy.
Association of Forestry
Communities of Peten
(Guatemala)
$150,000
To strengthen community forestry institu-tions and their efforts to sustainablymanage andmarket timber and non-timber forest products.
Autonomous Group for
Environmental Research
(Mexico)
$80,000
For communitymanagement and protec-tion of common property resourcesin watersheds of a coastal tourist resortin Oaxaca.
California,University of
(Santa Barbara,CA)
$50,000
To develop a permanent institutionalframework for the managementand operations of the El PilarMayanprotected area and archaeological siteon the Guatemala-Belize border.
Center for Popular Legal
Assistance
(Panama)
$100,000
To inform and educate indigenouscommunity groups on the new legalenvironmental tools available for thedefense of their land and land-userights when threatened by large-scaledevelopment projects.
Central American University
(Nicaragua)
$150,000
To strengthen research capacity for knowl-edge building on the social, culturaland economic dynamics of agriculturaland forest-based communities inNicaragua.
College of the Southern Border
(Mexico)
$70,000
To explore the key elements necessaryfor the successful promotion of in situconservation ofmaize genetic diversityin southernMexico.
100
Commission for Solidarity and
Defense of Human Rights
(Mexico)
$100,000
To strengthen professional skills ofindigenous community leadership andorganizational capacities for sustainablemanagement of national resources innorthernMexico.
Ecological Association of
Chalatenango
(El Salvador)
$80,000
To implement pilot projects for waterresourcemanagement on communityfarms and forests and to documentresults for developing national levelpolicies for payment for environ-mental services.
Environment Nicaragua
(Nicaragua)
$200,000
To promote community participationin sustainablemanagement of forests inNicaragua through training, servicedelivery, advocacy and developmentcertification standards.
Environmental andNatural
Resources Law Center
(Costa Rica)
$100,000
To design and implement a learningprocess for improving community-levelcapacity to participate in formulatingpolicies for environmental and naturalresourcesmanagement.
Environmental LawAlliance
Worldwide (Eugene,OR)
$300,000
For training,workshops and technicalassistance to help communities in LatinAmerica exercise their rights in defenseof their natural resources.
Environmental Law Center and
Development Promoters
(Nicaragua)
$70,000
To promote the enforcement of socially-sensitive environmental legislationand foster the harmonization of officialenvironmental policy throughoutCentral America.
Florida International University
(Miami, FL)
$165,000
To review existing literature oncommunity-based forestry inMexico,to study the ecological impact andeconomic viability of CBF and publishthe findings.
Foundation for Salvadoran
Program on Environment
and Development (PRISMA)
(El Salvador)
$200,000
To help Salvadoran community organiza-tions and government agencies developamodel framework for implementingenvironmental services to improve rurallivelihoods while increasing wateravailability.
Institute for Food and
Development Policy, Inc.
(Oakland,CA)
$250,000
For aworldwide study on land reform andits effects on poverty, economic develop-ment, natural resource use and communityempowerment and to create an activist-researcher network.
Interdisciplinary Group for
Appropriate Rural Technology
(Mexico)
$85,000
To help communities strengthen theircapacities for sustainablemanagementof their forestry resources and establishmechanisms for community leadersto participate in analysis of forestrypolicies.
IXETOUnion of Forestry
Communities (Mexico)
$38,000
To implement community forestrymanagement plans,monitor the social andenvironmental impacts of harvestingpractices and developmarket recognitionfor soundmanagement strategies.
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Guatemala)
$200,000
For a training and research program oncommunity-based forestry for NGO staffand community leaders throughoutCentral America.
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Guatemala)
$25,000
To develop a regional program for train-ing and research on community-basedforestry in Central America.
Mexican Council for Sustainable
Forestry (Mexico)
$200,000
To stimulate sound forest managementpractices and foster payment for environ-mental services for indigenous andcommon-property forestry communitiesinMexico.
National Autonomous University
of Mexico (Mexico)
$200,000
For interdisciplinary research on theeffects of community organization andland use on fragile forest ecosystems.
Texas Center for Policy Studies,
Inc. (Austin,TX)
$100,000
To expand and consolidate the provisionof environmental legal assistance andeducation for indigenous communitygroups as a tool for the defense of theirland and resource rights.
Trust Fund for Biodiversity
(Mexico)
$70,000
To design a collaborative research programfor the use and conservation of biologicalresources as collective natural assetsand promote this approach for rural devel-opment in southernMexico.
Middle East and North Africa
Community development
Aga Khan Foundation
(Switzerland)
$86,000
To disseminate an integrated set of educa-tional and reference tools designedto promotemobilization of indigenousresources for development in selectedAfrican and Asian countries.
Aga KhanTrust for Culture
(Switzerland)
$400,000
For a low-income housing improvementprogram in Cairo’s historic Islamic district.
American Research Center in
Egypt, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$46,000
For the restoration of a historically andculturally significant mosque in IslamicCairo.
Birzeit University (West Bank)
$15,000
For the Across Borders Project to providetraining and operational support tothe community Internet center at theKhan Younis refugee camp in theGaza Strip.
Cairo University (Egypt)
$50,000
For policy-oriented research on povertyin Egypt designed to bring togetheracademics,practitioners and policymakersto develop appropriate poverty allevia-tion programs and policies.
Culture and FreeThought
Association (Gaza)
$150,000
To operate four community centers inunderserved areas of the Gaza Strip.
Early Childhood Resource Centre
(West Bank)
$100,000
For a training program to strengthenthe capacities of West Bank communitiesand institutions to provide crisis inter-vention services and promote enablingenvironments and sound care forchildren.
Environmental Quality
International (Egypt)
$100,000
For a pilot project in the SiwaOasis todevelop and test models for sustainablepublic-private partnerships for solidwastemanagement.
Expanding Cultural Horizons
andOptions (Austin,TX)
$200,000
For a documentary film on innovativeapproaches to architectural conserva-tion and community developmentinMedieval Cairo.
Hands Along the Nile
Development Services, Inc.
(Akron,OH)
$350,000
To strengthen the capacity of communityorganizations in low-income urbanand rural areas in Egypt and to promotedevelopment of an Egyptian voluntarymovement.
International Centre for
Environment and Development
(Switzerland)
$150,000
To establish an electronic network andprovide training to enable EgyptianNGOs to exchange information andexperiences and strengthen theirdevelopment efforts.
Middle East Nonviolence and
Democracy (West Bank)
$85,000
For programs to provide crisis interven-tion services and enhance skills andcapacities of youth living in conflictand promote values and practicesof nonviolence.
Near East Foundation
(NewYork,NY)
$75,000
To establish a volunteer services centerto promote volunteerism and facilitatevolunteer placement services forEgyptian youth.
Asset Building and Community Development
101
Community and Resource Development
Netherlands Organization for
International Development
Cooperation (Netherlands)
$170,000
To expand its education and advocacyprogramwith quarry workers in UpperEgypt’sMinyaGovernorate and launcha similar programwith Minya’s fishingcommunities.
Palestinian Agricultural Relief
Committees (West Bank)
$90,000
For a program of economic relief forfarmers in theWest Bank and Gaza.
Palestinian Counseling Center
(West Bank)
$125,000
To establish amental health and educa-tion resource and training center inJerusalem’s Old City and develop youthandwomen support networks in twoEast Jerusalem neighborhoods.
Palestinian Counseling Center
(West Bank)
$15,000
For the provision of crisis interventiontraining and counseling.
Palestinian Youth Union
(West Bank)
$150,000
To strengthen the program and organiza-tional capacity of a network of communitycenters workingwith youth in the ruralWest Bank and Gaza Strip.
Palestinian Youth Union
(West Bank)
$25,000
For a youth volunteer program to assistPalestinian farmers in olive picking duringthe current state of emergency.
Save the Children Federation, Inc.
(Westport, CT)
$400,000
For knowledge building and public educa-tion promoting leadership for socialchange and to enhance developmentopportunities for emerging leadersin fourMiddle East countries.
Sudanese Development
Initiative, Inc. (Palm Beach, FL)
$50,000
To strengthen SUDIA’s organizationaland programmatic capacities to supportcommunity initiatives for refugees anddisplaced persons in Egypt.
Tamer Institute for Community
Education (West Bank)
$300,000
For activities to strengthen the role ofyoung people as agents of social changewithin their communities.
Welfare Association
(East Jerusalem)
$50,000
To train staff of the Old City of JerusalemRevitalization Programme in architec-tural conservation and communitydevelopment.
Women’s Affairs Technical
Committee (West Bank)
$150,000
For an education and awareness programto engage rural Palestinianwomenin advocating for gender equity andpromote fuller civic participation ofwomen in their communities.
World Education, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$50,000
For a pilot training program in threeUpperEgyptian villages to assess the effectivenessof strengthening community institutionsand schools as a vehicle for communitydevelopment.
Environment and development
Institute of Development Studies
(England)
$30,000
For publications on common propertyresourcemanagement.
International Development
Research Centre
(Canada)
$250,000
For aMiddle East regional research networkon environmental health.
Minia,University of
(Egypt)
$30,000
For a symposium on poverty and environ-mental justice issues in Egypt.
The Philippines
Community development
Ateneo deManila University
(Philippines)
$40,000
For the university’s Institute of PhilippineCulture to conduct a research study togenerate an accurate profile of the urbanpoor of MetroManila.
Environment and development
Institute of Environmental
Science for Social Change, Inc.
(Philippines)
$730,000
For training and technical support tolocal governments and communities inwatershedmanagement and environ-mental policy and to create a nationalwatershed database.
Southern Africa
Community development
Impumelelo Innovations Award
Trust (South Africa)
$249,531
For an innovations awards programdesigned to highlight and encourage repli-cation of successful poverty reductionprojects in South Africa.
Maradadi Handicraft
Development Corporation
(South Africa)
$50,000
For technical and business skills trainingfor rural women in theWestern Cape.
Micro Enterprise Alliance
(South Africa)
$10,000
For a special session on HIV/AIDS duringan annual general meeting of amember-ship organization of microenterprisedevelopment practitioners.
Micro Finance Regulatory Council
(South Africa)
$200,000
To conduct an educational campaign forborrowers and lenders in South Africa.
Olive (Organisation Development
andTraining) (South Africa)
$100,000
To provide organizational developmenttraining to NGOs and for internal organi-zational development and in-servicetraining for staff.
Rural-Peoples’ Institute for Social
Empowerment in Namibia
(Namibia)
$75,000
To provide assistance to farmers’associa-tions across the northern region inleadership training, cooperativemanage-ment and the development of savingsand credit programs.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$50,000
For the networking, knowledge-buildingand dissemination activities of the AfricaGrantmakers’ Affinity Group.
UrbanTrust of Namibia
(Namibia)
$250,000
For urban policy research, design andprogram implementation.
Environment and development
Africa Resources Trust
(South Africa)
$329,000
To promote and support land uses basedon conservation and sustainable use ofbiological diversity and encourage trans-boundary land-use initiatives to benefitlocal communities in southern Africa.
AfricanWildlife Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
To establish a transfrontier naturalresourcesmanagement programin southern Africa.
Bekezela College (South Africa)
$40,000
To implement a pilot environmentaleducation and leadership program forJohannesburg inner city youth.
Centre for Applied Social Sciences
Trust on behalf of Theatre for
Africa (Zimbabwe)
$210,000
For Theatre for Africa to produce a playdepicting community experiences ofenvironmental governance since the RioEarth Summit for the 2002 Rio+10summit.
Centre for Rural Legal Studies
(South Africa)
$100,000
For a research project on PromotingSustainable Rural Livelihoods.
EduardoMondlane University
(Mozambique)
$480,000
For staff development and doctoraltraining for teaching and researchstaff of the Faculty of Agronomy andForestry Engineering.
Integrated Rural Development
andNature Conservation
(Namibia)
$57,000
For training, technical support andnetworking activities to help remote areadwellers establish and run communalarea conservancies tomanage theirnatural resources and derive economicbenefit from them.
International Union for
Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources
(Switzerland)
$300,000
For activities to improve transboundarynatural resourcesmanagement practicesin southern Africa.
102
International Union for
Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources
(Switzerland)
$250,000
For IUCNMozambique’s integratedenvironment and natural resourcesmanagement program and todevelop a forest products certificationprogram.
International Union for
Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources
(Switzerland)
$45,000
For a seminar series on land and sustain-able use of natural resources in an eraof land reform and change in southernAfrica.
Mafisa Planning and Research
(South Africa)
$48,510
To refine and electronically publish areport on African game lodges and rurallivelihoods in Southern Africa.
Makuleke Communal Property
Association (South Africa)
$92,000
Tomanage the Pafuri triangle regionof Kruger National Park on behalf of theMakuleke tribal community.
Mozambican Association
ofMutual Support
(Mozambique)
$350,000
For applied policy research into the impactsof new land allocations for commercialfarming on the land rights and livelihoodsof smallholders in theManica province.
NatalMidlands Rural
Development Network (Midnet)
(South Africa)
$70,000
For the Legal Entities Assessment Projectto increase the tenure security of peoplelivingwithin common property systems.
National Land Committee
(South Africa)
$300,000
For the Land Rights Unit to develop aneffective, community drivenmechanismfor large-scale land restitution aimedat securing the livelihoods of beneficiaryhouseholds.
South African National Parks
(South Africa)
$320,000
To build the capacity of the Social Ecologyunit to make national parks assets forneighboring communities.
Southern Africa Political Economy
Series Trust Fund (Zimbabwe)
$200,000
For research and policy development landreform and resettlement in Zimbabwe.
Southern Alliance for Indigenous
Resources (Safire)
(Zimbabwe)
$100,000
To lay the groundwork for and establishthe Southern African Community-BasedTourism Association.
Surplus People Project,Western
Cape (South Africa)
$75,000
For an organizational developmentprogram focused on staff training anddevelopment, community capacitybuilding, gender and overall organiza-tional development.
Talent ConsortiumTee Vee
(South Africa)
$66,000
To develop and produce a series of regionalvideo documentaries on environmentand development.
Western Cape,University of the
(South Africa)
$333,000
For the Pan-African Project on Land andResources Rights to build an informedgroup of researchers and practitionersandmake the rich body of knowledgeaccessible to African scholars andactivists.
Western Cape,University of the
(South Africa)
$220,000
For the Program for Land and AgrarianStudies.
World Library Partnership, Inc.
(Bahama,NC)
$100,000
For the partnership’s South Africa fieldoffice to provide training and technicalassistance for sustainable informationdevelopment in peri-urban and ruralcommunities in Southern Africa.
Vietnam and Thailand
Environment and development
Center for Gender, Environmental
and Sustainable Development
Studies (Vietnam)
$199,000
For field research on relationshipsamong land allocation, local land tenureand upland livelihoods and to train20Vietnamese in theory,methods andissues relevant to the study of landtenure.
Hanoi Agricultural University
(Vietnam)
$450,000
For staff development, field research inthe northern uplands, creation of innova-tive teaching programs and continuedcollaborative exchanges with Khon KaenUniversity in Thailand.
Institute of Socio-Economic
Development and Enterprise
Management (Vietnam)
$90,000
For research and training on the effectsof international economic integrationonVietnamese economic performanceand income distribution.
Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development
(Vietnam)
$540,000
To strengthen theMinistry’s capacity todesign and analyze policies for uplandsmanagement by fundingmaster’s degreetraining and research in applied economicsand other social sciences.
Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development
(Vietnam)
$80,000
To improve forestry information systems,conduct policy analyses on upland forestmanagement and hold a national confer-ence on uplands production systems inVietnam.
National Economics University
(Vietnam)
$21,000
For field research inVietnam’s uplandsfor 60 second-year students of develop-ment economics from two leadinguniversities.
Thai NguyenUniversity of
Agriculture and Forestry
(Vietnam)
$71,000
To strengthen research and teachingprograms directed to the developmentof Vietnam’s northern uplands.
Vietnam Forestry Science-
Technology Association
(Vietnam)
$40,000
For surveys,workshops and consultationsleading to Forest Stewardship Councilapproval of forest certification standardsfor Vietnam.
West Africa
Environment and development
African Research Association
Limited (Nigeria)
$200,000
For environmental enterprises and conser-vation initiatives in southeasternNigeria.
Bruce Onobrakpeya Foundation
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For environmental awareness program,networking and institutional development.
Communicating for Change
(Nigeria)
$300,000
Formarket research andmedia programsto raise Nigerians’awareness about theenvironment and development and tostrengthen administrative and financialmanagement systems.
Community Conservation and
Development Initiatives 2000
(Nigeria)
$300,000
For innovative environmental enterprisesand community-based initiatives to fosterecologically sustainable development.
Savanna Conservation Nigeria
(Nigeria)
$200,000
For community-based conservation andlivelihood activities in northern Nigeria.
West Africa Rural Foundation
(Senegal)
$1,000,000
For grant-making, technical assistanceand networking programs to assistcommunity-based institutions inWest Africa and for board and staffdevelopment.
Grants to Individuals$76,770
Total, Community and ResourceDevelopment$75,320,129
Asset Building and Community Development
103
Community and Resource Development
Publications andOtherMedia—Community and Resource Development
selected books, articles andreports
Acharya,Manjusha.
Comparative Analysis of the EffectiveFunctions of the FPCs in Terms ofCommunity Participation (Technicalpaper).
Calcutta: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
January 2001.
Akhtar, Shamsul.
Roles ofWomen in FPC—AMicro-level Study inMidnapurDistrict (Technical paper).Calcutta: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
January 2001.
Arnaud,Apoteker.
Introducción a los OrganismosGeneticamenteModificados(Introduction to GeneticallyModified Organisms).Mexico City:Center for Studies of
Change in theMexican Countryside,
2001.
Banerjee, Lopamudra.
Role of NTFP as Economic IncentiveTowards SustainableManagement(Technical paper).
Calcutta: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
January 2001.
Bhat,D.M,M.Gadgil, K.S.Murali and
N.H. Ravindranath.
Phenology of Understory Species ofTropicalMoist Forests ofWesternGhats of Uttara Kannada Districtin South India (Technical ReportNo. 83).
Bangalore:Centre for Ecological
Sciences, 2001.
Bhat, P. R., K. S.Murali,G.T.Hegde,
C.M. Shastri,D.M.Bhat, I. K.Murthy
andN.H Ravindranath.
Yield Estimations in SomeNTFPSpecies in theWestern Ghatsof Karnataka, Southern India(Technical Report No. 84).
Bangalore, India:Centre for
Ecological Sciences, 2001.
Bhattarai, Keshav.
Household Landownership andthe Use of Forests in Bara District,Central Tarai Region of Nepal(Doctoral thesis).
Bloomington: Indiana University,
May 2001.
Chopra,Kanchan,Charles
Perrings,U.R. Rao,Kirit Parikh
and C.H.Hanumantha Rao
(lead contributors).
Ecological Economics for SustainableDevelopment.NewDelhi:Academic Foundation,
2001.
DucVien,Tran (ed.).
Rural Uplands,ResearchTowardSustainable Development (Selectionof studies done in 1997–2000).
Hanoi,Vietnam:Agricultural
Publishing House, 2001.
DucVien,Tran (ed.).
Achievements and Challenges onNatural ResourcesManagementand Rural Livelihoods in Vietnam’sUplands,Workshop Proceedings.Hanoi,Vietnam:National Political
Publishing House, 2001.
DucVien,Tran and PhamThi Huong
and collaborators.
Tac Dong cua Chinh sach Nongnghiep,Nong thon DenQuan ly Tainguyen va Cuoc songNguoi DanVungThuongNguon Luu vuc SongCa (ResourceManagement in theCa River Basin: Policies, Peopleand Poverty) (published in bothVietnamese and English).
Hanoi,Vietnam:National Political
Publishing House, 2001.
Jianchu,Xu (ed.).
Links between Cultures andBiodiversity: Proceedingsof the Cultures and BiodiversityCongress 2000.Kunming,China:Yunnan Science and
Technology Press,November 2000.
Junchen,Zhao et al. (eds.).
Zhongguo YunnanshengTianranlinZiyuan Baohu yuTuigeng HuanlinHuancao Gongcheng Shequ DiaoyanBaogao (Reports on Natural ForestResources Protection and ConversionPolicy in Yunnan Province).Kunming,China:Yunnan Science and
Technology Press,April 2001.
Mukherjee, R.
Joint Forest ManagementProgramme inWest Bengal.(Technical paper).
Calcutta: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
November 2001.
Mukhopadhyay,D.
Role of Elected People Representativein Nature ResourceManagement:Case Studies from Joint ForestManagement. (Technical paper).Calcutta: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
November 2001.
Mwongozowa nyanjani wa Kilimocha Kujitosheleza kwa AfrikaMashariki na Kusini (Swahiliversion). Sustainable AgricultureExtensionManual for Easternand Southern Africa.Nairobi, Kenya: International
Institute of Rural Reconstruction
(IIRR), 2001.
Ostrom,Elinor.
El Gobierno de los Bienes Comunes(Governing the Commons); SpanishFondo de Cultura Economica(Spanish translation).
Mexico City:National Autonomous
University ofMexico, 2001.
Pandey,DeepNarayan.
Ethnoforestry Practices forBiodiversity Conservation andManagement inMewar Regionof Rajasthan (Doctoral thesis).Dehra Dun, India: Forest Research
Institute,DeemedUniversity,
August 2001.
Pikun,He et al. (eds.).
Forests,Trees andMinorities.Kunming,China:YunnanNationality
Press, July 2000.
Rao,R. J., K. S.Murali and
N.H. Ravindranath.
Joint Forest Planning andManagement (JFPM) in Karnataka:Current Status and Future Potential(Technical Report No.90).
Bangalore, India:Centre for
Ecological Sciences, 2001.
Rosencranz,Divan.
Environmental Law and Policy inIndia.NewDelhi:Oxford University Press,
2001.
Roy, S. B.,G.Yadav and R.Mukherjee.
Contemporary Studies in Joint ForestManagement: CommemorativeVolume on 16th Anniversaryof IBRAD.NewDelhi: Inter India Publication,
2001.
Roy, S.B.
Systemic Approach to ParticipatoryForest Management (Technicalpaper).
Calcutta, India: Indian Institute of
Bio-Social Research&Development,
November 2001.
Sanchez Pardon,Maria Fernanda.
Estudio sobre la politica forestaly sumarco juridico—repercusionesambientales (Study on ForestryPolicy and its Legal Framework—Environmental Consequences).Mexico City:Mexican Center for
Environmental Law, 2001.
Shaoting, Yin.
People and Forests—YunnanSwidden Agriculture in Human-Ecological Perspective.Kunming,China:Yunnan Education
Publishing House, September 2001.
Shastri, C.M.,D.M.Bhat,
B.C.Nagaraja,K.S.Murali and
N.H. Ravindranath.
Agroforestry in a HumidTropicalVillage Ecosystem inWesternGhats: Present Status and FutureImplications (Technical ReportNo.90).
Bangalore, India:Centre for
Ecological Sciences, 2001.
Shouhu,Du andGuo Xiaoming (eds.).
“Sihuang”Ziyuan Liuzhuan: Lilun,Zhengce, Shijian (TheTheory,Practice and Countermeasures onTransformation of UncultivatedLand).Beijing:China Encyclopedia Press,
October 2000.
104
journals and periodicals
Roy, S. B.,G.Yadav and
D.Mukhopadhyay.
The Question of Social Changeand Joint Forest Management:Case Studies fromAndhra PradeshandWest Bengal.Calcutta: Journal of IndianAnthropological Society, 2001.
Roy. S. B.,D.Mukhopadhyay and
Subrata Das.
Strengthening Institutions in JointForest Management: SystemicApproach to Forest Conservation.NewDelhi: Journal of Social Science.January–April 2001.
monographs
Filipinas Heritage Library.
Katutubo (A Process Document).Makati City, Philippines:Ayala
Foundation and Filipinas Heritage
Library, 2001.
The Urban Research Consortium.
A SocialMovement of the UrbanPoor:The Story of Sama-sama.Quezon City, Philippines:The Urban
Research Consortium,2001.
Tiwari,Dina Nath,Kaushal Kumar
and Arti Tripathi.
Centella Asiatica (Linn) Urban;PlantagoOvata Forsk;WithaniaSomnifera (Linn) Dunal; BacopaMonnieri (L.) Pennell; Aloe Vera.Series on keymedicinal plants
of India by Utthan-Centre
for Sustainable Development
and Poverty Alleviation in
Allahabad, India.
NewDelhi:Ocean Books, 2001.
selected videos/films
Filipinas Heritage Library.
Katutubo (Glimpses of PhilippineIndigenous Culture).Makati City, Philippines:Ayala
Foundation, Inc., 2001.
The Bold Steps Towards SustainableIntegrated Area Development.Quezon City, Philippines:
PhilDHRRA, 2001.
Asset Building and Community Development
105
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Children, youth and families
Academy for Educational
Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For its National Training Institute forCommunity YouthWork to produce ayouth development handbook.
Action Alliance for Virginia’s
Children andYouth
(Richmond,VA)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families in Virginia.
Arizona, State of
(Phoenix,AZ)
$100,000
To develop credible indicators of children’sschool readiness, gather relevant data anddisseminate the findings.
Arkansas Advocates for Children
and Families (Little Rock,AR)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commit-ment to working-poor families inArkansas.
Arkansas Advocates for Children
and Families (Little Rock,AR)
$200,000
To build a national research network toenhance the capacity of state-based childpolicy organizations.
Arkansas, State of
(Little Rock,AR)
$100,000
To develop credible indicators of children’sschool readiness, gather relevant data anddisseminate the findings.
Association for Children
of New Jersey
(Newark,NJ)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commit-ment to working-poor families inNew Jersey.
Brookings Institution
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For briefings and policy analysis ofissues related toworking families andthe reauthorization of the PersonalResponsibility andWork OpportunityAct.
Center for Impact Research
(Chicago, IL)
$200,000
To design and implement strategies tohelp responsible fatherhood programsaddress family violence.
Center for Law and Social Policy
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For national and state-based efforts toenhance the debate around reauthori-zation of the Child Care DevelopmentFund.
Center for Law and Social Policy
(Washington,DC)
$25,000
For theWingspread Conference on FamilyFormation, Poverty andWelfare reform.
Center for Policy Alternatives
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For theWork and Family InvestmentInitiative to promote national and state-based efforts to address the needs ofworking-poor families.
Center for Public Policy Priorities
(Austin,TX)
$150,000
For the Texas Fragile Families Initiative,a statewide,multi-site demonstrationproject.
Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities (Washington,DC)
$500,000
For research and education projectson U.S. social welfare policy affectinglow- andmoderate-incomeworkers,minorities andwomen.
Center on Fathers, Families and
Public Policy (Madison,WI)
$75,000
For enhanced organizational developmentand expanded communications capacity.
Chicago,University of
(Chicago, IL)
$200,000
To disseminate findings about the impactof welfare reform in organizationalsettings such as thewelfare office andlow-wageworkplace.
Children’s Action Alliance, Inc.
(Phoenix,AZ)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families in Arizona.
Children’s Defense Fund
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families inMinnesota.
Colorado Children’s Campaign
(Denver,CO)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commit-ment to working-poor families inColorado.
Colorado, State of (Denver,CO)
$100,000
To develop credible indicators of children’sschool readiness, gather relevant data anddisseminate the findings.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For research and publications on newparents and children in the newworldof welfare reform.
CommunityMedia Production
Group, Inc. (Yellow Springs,OH)
$150,000
For the production and distribution of afilm on adolescent sexuality issues.
Connecticut Voices for Children,
Inc. (NewHaven,CT)
$45,000
For the Campaign to Fight Poverty andBuild Economic Security.
Douglas Gould and Company, Inc.
(Larchmont,NY)
$395,000
To plan a public education campaignon the problems low-income familiesface in their struggles to achieveself-sufficiency.
Finance Project Toward Improved
Methods of Financing Education
andOther Children’s Services Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For theWelfare Information Network todisseminate information to researchersand decisionmakers on a broad array ofissues impacting low-income families.
Finance Project Toward Improved
Methods of Financing Education
andOther Children’s Services Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the Grantmakers Income SecurityTaskforce to promote understanding ofincome security issues among lendersand advance collaborative strategies.
Foundation-administered project
$160,000
To explore ways to improve thewell-beingand life prospects of children inworking-poor families.
Fund for the City of NewYork
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For the fund’s YouthDevelopment Instituteto produce a manual on its technicalassistance and capacity-building strategyfor youth development organizations.
Goodwill Industries of
SoutheasternWisconsin, Inc.
(Milwaukee,WI)
$200,000
For theWisconsin Partnership for FragileFamilies to advance the long-term involve-ment of low-skilled, never-married, noncustodial fathers in their children’s lives.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$454,000
To develop awork/family index to helpevaluate American public policy on suchissues as access and availability of childcare, elder care and family leave.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$362,500
To study the effects of welfare reform ontheworking poor.
Asset Building and Community Development
HumanDevelopment and Reproductive HealthApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
Human Development and Reproductive Health
106
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$76,000
For the Institute for GovernmentInnovation to conduct ameeting onthe role of the states in supportingthe early education of children, frombirth to six years old.
Institute onTaxation and
Economic Policy (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For research and public education onthe impact of tax policy at the state andfederal levels.
International Youth Foundation
(Takoma Park,MD)
$200,000
For internship and fellowship programsproviding professional developmentopportunities for young leaders interestedin the allied youth fields.
Jewish Fund for Justice, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$400,000
For the Funders’ Collaborative onYouth Organizing for regranting to youthorganizing groups and to strengthenphilanthropic support for youth organiz-ing as a youth development activity.
John E. Fetzer Institute, Inc.
(Kalamazoo,MI)
$250,000
For the Legacy Project, a comprehensivestrategy for cultural and social changein communities arising from the institute’sHealing the Heart of Diversity initiative.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$250,000
For the Center for American Indian Healthto conduct a pilot program aimed atre-engaging American Indian fathersof teen-formed families.
Kentucky,Commonwealth of
(Frankfort, KY)
$100,000
To develop credible indicators of children’sschool readiness, gather relevant data anddisseminate the findings.
Kentucky Youth Advocates, Inc.
(Louisville, KY)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families in Kentucky.
Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation
(NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
To disseminate information about success-ful work support programs and providetechnical assistance to states and citieswishing to adopt them.
Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For program development, informationdissemination and technical assistanceactivities.
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
(Princeton,NJ)
$300,000
For research on the role of parents inthe development of infants and toddlersenrolled in Early Head Start Programs.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$350,000
For the School of SocialWork’s researchand training program on poverty andpublic policy.
Morehouse College (Atlanta,GA)
$85,000
To develop a book,African American
Fathers and Their Families in
Contemporary American Society.
National Academy of Sciences
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
To synthesize research and disseminatefindings on paid leave from employmentand its impact on child and familywell-being.
National Center for Strategic
Nonprofit Planning and
Community Leadership
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For the Partners for Fragile FamiliesDemonstration project.
National Center for Strategic
Nonprofit Planning and
Community Leadership
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
Tomonitor, document and providetechnical andmanagement assistanceto the Strengthening Fragile Familiesinitiative.
National Conference of State
Legislatures (Denver,CO)
$150,000
For the National Conference’s NurturingResponsible Families Project to distributeinformation about existing fatherhoodprograms.
National Governors’Association
Center for Best Practices
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For roundtables and policy analysis ofTemporary Assistance to Needy Families(TANF) and other issues impactingworking-poor families.
National Network for Youth, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For the publication and disseminationof the Community Youth DevelopmentJournal, a national journal focusing onyouth and community development.
National Partnership forWomen
& Families, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$750,000
For the Family Leave Benefits initiativeand a related project to develop newapproaches and increase access to paidfamily leave.
National Practitioners Network
for Fathers and Families
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To increasemembership and enhance theengagement of existingmembers, includ-ing a state development project.
National Youth Employment
Coalition, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
To expand the Promising and EffectivenessPractices Network.
9 to 5,WorkingWomen Education
Fund (Milwaukee,WI)
$90,000
Tohelp low-incomewomendevelop leader-ship skills to advocate for the considerationof work/family issues in the debate overreauthorization of Temporary Assistanceto Needy Families (TANF).
North Qwa-Qwa, the University
of (South Africa)
$50,000
To build the capacity of the university’sStudent Development and SupportServices Division to offer workshopsaddressing topics such as the legacyof apartheid and the impact ofHIV/AIDS.
Policylink (Oakland,CA)
$2,000,000
To promote community building at thefederal, state and local levels.
Public Health Institute
(Berkeley,CA)
$28,000
For its BerkeleyMedia Studies Group todevelop a communications strategyfor an initiative on the well-being ofchildren inworking-poor families.
Public/PrivateVentures
(Philadelphia, PA)
$250,000
For the final phase of the CommunityChange for Youth Development demon-stration project.
Rhode Island Kids Count, Inc.
(Providence,RI)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families in Rhode Island.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$100,000
For data gathering and communicationsactivities related to the StrengtheningFragile Families Initiative.
SouthernMaine,University of
(Portland,ME)
$100,000
For the Edmund S.Muskie School of PublicService to conduct focus groups with low-incomeworking parents in Virginia.
SouthernMaine,University of
(Portland,ME)
$85,000
For the Institute of Child and FamilyPolicy to build the capacity of state-level child policy groups to bring aboutpolicy changes that benefit childrenof theworking poor.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$1,000,000
To coordinate, implement and dissemi-nate the findings of an evaluation ofthe foundation’s Youth Leadership forDevelopment Initiative.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$515,000
For its Innovation Center for Communityand Youth Development.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$27,500
For the Rockridge Institute to undertakeresearch and develop a paper on a concep-tual and communications frameworkto guide efforts on behalf of low-incomechildren.
United Nations Youth Fund
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To increase participation of young peoplefrom the least developed countries inthe Fourth Session of theWorld YouthForum.
Urban Institute
(Washington,DC)
$1,000,000
For Assessing the New Federalism,aproject tomonitor, analyze and reporton the devolution of social programsto the states.
Asset Building and Community Development
107
Human Development and Reproductive Health
Village Foundation
(Alexandria,VA)
$500,000
To enhance and expand its capacityto serve as a national resource forcommunity-based and grassrootsorganizations working to build civilsociety for African-Americanfamilies.
Voices for Alabama’s Children
(Montgomery,AL)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families in Alabama.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$3,000,000
For the Center for Social Development todevelop and implement an internationalpolicy and research agenda on nationalcommunity service.
Wider Opportunities for
Women, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$1,690,000
To strengthen the debate on the self-sufficiency standard as it relates towelfare reauthorization and policy onlow-income,working families.
William J. Brennan Jr. Center
for Justice, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$60,000
To explore the distinct problems encoun-tered by women involved in the criminaljustice system and the impact on theirfamilies.
Wisconsin Council on Children
and Families, Inc.
(Madison,WI)
$200,000
For activities to increase state commitmenttoworking-poor families inWisconsin.
Wisconsin, State of
(Madison,WI)
$100,000
To develop credible indicators of children’sschool readiness, gather relevant data anddisseminate the findings.
Youth Law Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$500,000
For theW.Haywood Burns Institute forJuvenile Justice, Fairness and Equityto address the overrepresentation ofminority youth in the juvenile justicesystem.
Sexuality and reproductive health
Academy for Educational
Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
To increase the capacity of community-based organizations in Oklahoma City,Minneapolis and Seattle toworkeffectively with local public healthauthorities to prevent sexuallytransmitted diseases.
AIDS Alliance for Children,Youth
and Families
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For a research and advocacy project todocument the adverse health effects ofabstinence-only sexuality educationon gay and bisexual youth and youngwomen of color.
Alan Guttmacher Institute–
A Corporation for Research, Policy
Analysis and Public Education
(NewYork,NY)
$1,500,000
For research, policy analysis and publiceducation to strengthen sexual andreproductive health rights.
Alan Guttmacher Institute–
A Corporation for Research, Policy
Analysis and Public Education
(NewYork,NY)
$69,500
For research and planning to enhanceA.G.I.’s fund-raising capacity.
Association for the Promotion
of TraditionalMedicine
(Senegal)
$100,000
For travel,workshops and post-conferenceactivities to ensure full participation bytraditional healers and traditional medi-cine organizations in the 12th Conferenceon AIDS and STDs.
Association of American Indian
Physicians, Inc.
(Oklahoma City,OK)
$300,000
For culturally competent capacity-buildingassistance to foundation-supported,Native Americanwomen-led, community-based organizations that program inreproductive health.
BostonWomen’s Health Book
Collective, Inc. (Boston,MA)
$200,000
To disseminate reproductive healthresourcesworldwide and conduct women’shealth advocacy on reproductive healthand rights.
California BlackWomen’s Health
Project, Inc. (Inglewood,CA)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
California Syringe Exchange
Network (Encinitas,CA)
$18,200
For ameeting of needle exchangeprograms to discuss how to promoteand expand services in communitiesof color.
CaliforniaWomen’s Law Center
(Los Angeles,CA)
$100,000
For an initiative to preserve access toreproductive health services.
Education Fund of Family
Planning Advocates of NewYork
State, Inc. (Albany,NY)
$100,000
For the activities ofMergerWatch toprevent the loss of reproductivehealth services due to religious andsecular health care institutionmergers.
Essential Information, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To advocate for poor people’s access toHIV/AIDS prevention and treatmentprograms and provide critical analysisof world trade policies and intellectualproperty structures that block thisaccess.
Foundation-administered project
$400,000
For the Reproductive Health AffinityGroup’s activities to advance sexualityand reproductive health programsand policies worldwide.
Foundation-administered project
$195,000
To explore and identify effectivegrant-making strategies that wouldcontribute to institution building andleadership development of womenof color organizations.
Georgia Campaign for Adolescent
Pregnancy Prevention, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$75,000
To survey low-income teen mothers toidentify those not receivingTemporaryAid to Needy Families (TANF) support anddetermine why they are not receivingbenefits.
Global Evaluation&Applied
Research Solutions
(Decatur,GA)
$50,000
For aMay 2001 symposiumon complemen-tary therapies and to begin developmentof a curriculum on alternative healthcare.
Global Health Council, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
To build programmatic linkages andnetworking opportunities between organi-zationsworking onHIV/AIDS in theUnitedStates and other countries.
Hampshire College
(Amherst,MA)
$100,000
For the Civil Liberties and Public PolicyProgram to strengthen its campus-basedactivism and pro-choicemovementbuilding.
HarmReduction Coalition
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For HIV/AIDS public policy development topromote local, regional and nationalharm-reduction programs andinterventions.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$175,000
For the Radcliffe Institute to fund a BuntingFellowship on the impact of globalization,health sector reform and fiscal devolutionon poor women’s access to reproductivehealth care in China.
HealthReachNY, Inc.
(Flushing,NY)
$100,000
To build institutional capacityand increase community outreachand education.
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
(Menlo Park,CA)
$500,000
To stimulate discussion on the futurerole of U.S. domestic and foreign policyon AIDS in developing countries.
Hesperian Foundation
(Berkeley,CA)
$300,000
To develop and distribute new reproduc-tive healthmaterials and to strengthengrassroots women’s health education inunderserved communities worldwide.
108
Indigenous Peoples Task Force
(Minneapolis,MN)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
International Center for Research
onWomen (Washington,DC)
$750,000
To build the capacity of sexuality andreproductive health advocates tomakelinkages between sexual and reproductivehealth and rights and larger economicpolicies and trends.
International Planned
Parenthood Federation/
Western Hemisphere Region, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To promote sexual health and genderawareness in the Latin American andCaribbean region.
Kokua Kalihi Valley
Comprehensive Family Services
(Honolulu,HI)
$40,000
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
Lovett Productions, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To produce“NoOne Dies of AIDS,”avideo documentary on the impact ofHIV/AIDS in southern Africa.
MEE Productions, Inc.
(Philadelphia, PA)
$213,300
For qualitative research on the attitudesand behavior of African-American urbanteens regarding their sexuality, reproduc-tive health practices and views on genderequity.
Morehouse School of Medicine,
Inc. (Atlanta,GA)
$80,000
To publish two special issues of theAmerican Journal of Health Studies onthe health of women of color.
Ms. Foundation forWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$325,000
For the Reproductive Rights Coalitionand Organizing Fund’sWelfare ReformInitiative to address reproductive healthand rights issues for women receivingpublic assistance.
National Association of People
with AIDS (Washington,DC)
$80,000
To lay the groundwork for implementinga national program to combat HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination.
National Center for Human
Rights Education, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
National Health Law Program,
Inc. (Los Angeles,CA)
$80,000
For activities tomitigate the negativeimpacts of welfare reform andMedicaidchanges on low-incomewomen’s accessto reproductive health services.
National Latina Health
Organization (Oakland,CA)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
Native American Community
Board (Lake Andes, SD)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
NewYork Academy ofMedicine
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To evaluate the impact of NewYork State’sderegulation of the sale and distributionof hypodermic syringes.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$35,000
For seminars and information exchangesamong a consortium of academics fromNYU and the University of Capetownto promote interdisciplinary and populardiscussions on the ethical issues ofHIV/AIDS.
Pacific Institute forWomen’s
Health (Los Angeles,CA)
$200,000
For worldwide activities and projectsupport for adolescent reproductiveand sexual health activities in easternAfrica.
PapaOla Lokahi
(Honolulu,HI)
$100,000
To support outreach efforts for an actionagenda onmulticultural health.
Planned Parenthood Federation
of America, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
For an Emergency Campaign for Choice todevelop effective strategies andmessagesin order tomobilize broad public supportfor preserving women’s reproductiverights.
Planned Parenthood of NewYork
City, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$450,000
For the initial phase of a national campaignto expand public debate and understand-ing of comprehensive sexuality education.
Population Communication
Africa Trust (Kenya)
$95,000
To collect information, facilitate prepara-tions for a roundtable discussion andreport on effective strategies for address-ing the issue of sexuality in Africa.
Population Council, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$461,000
For the gender, family and developmentprogram to conduct and encourage activi-ties aimed at advancing gender-sensitivereproductive health programs,policiesand research.
Program for Appropriate
Technology in Health
(Washington,DC)
$1,000,000
For a Global Campaign forMicrobicides,an international effort to educate aboutthe need for private and public invest-ments intomicrobicides.
Project Azuka, Inc.
(Savannah,GA)
$32,500
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
Reproductive Health Alliance
Europe (England)
$35,000
To establish an International ConsortiumonMedical Abortion.
ReproductiveHealthTechnologies
Project, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$240,000
For public education and a coalition-building effort on new reproductivetechnologies.
Research Foundation forMental
Hygiene, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$395,000
To develop a sexuality research train-ing and technical support program forcommunity-based practitioners.
St. James Infirmary
(San Francisco,CA)
$150,000
To develop effectivemethods forgovernment agencies and communityorganizations to address the occupa-tional health and safety needs of sexworkers in the San Francisco BayArea.
Sexuality Information and
Education Council of the
United States Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
To promote comprehensive sexualityeducation and expand educationaloutreach activities, particularly to under-served communities.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$2,000,000
For the Sexuality Research FellowshipProgram.
Spectrum Publishers, Inc.
(NewOrleans, LA)
$41,000
To publish proceedings of the sympo-sium entitled Improving the Health ofUnderserved Populations Through PublicHealth Collaborations at HistoricallyBlack Colleges and Universities.
State of theWorld Forum
(San Francisco,CA)
$150,000
For the Equal Access project to use digitalsatellite broadcasting to deliver humandevelopment and HIV/AIDS informationto underserved communities in develop-ing countries.
Stichting Global Network of
People Livingwith HIV/AIDS
(Netherlands)
$50,000
To hold the 10th International Conferenceof People Livingwith HIV/AIDS in Port ofSpain,Trinidad,October 27–31, 2001.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$550,000
For syringe exchange programs in commu-nities of color across the United States.
Asset Building and Community Development
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Human Development and Reproductive Health
Twelfth International Conference
on AIDS and STDs in Africa
(Burkina Faso)
$250,000
To provide scholarship funds for Africansand people livingwith HIV/AIDS to attendthe conference.
Wellesley College
(Wellesley,MA)
$85,000
For a research study entitled BeyondPregnancy and AIDS: Further
Development of a NewConception
of Female Adolescent Sexual
Health.
WiseWomenGathering Place
(Green Bay,WI)
$60,000
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
Wisconsin,University of
(Madison,WI)
$300,000
For culturally competent capacity-buildingassistance to foundation-supported,Asian-Americanwomen-led, community-based organizations that program inreproductive health.
Women’s House of Learning
Empowerment (Oxnard,CA)
$65,000
To participate in the SisterSong Collective,conduct research, disseminate informa-tion and develop an advocacy agenda onreproductive health issues affectingwomen of color.
World Health Organization
(Switzerland)
$200,000
For training and outreach activities ongender and reproductive rights.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Sexuality and reproductive health
AssociationMinga Peru
(Peru)
$260,000
For community-based radio education,training and advocacy activities onreproductive and sexual health amongindigenous peoples in the PeruvianAmazon.
Catholics for Free Choice in
Latin America (Argentina)
$100,000
For activities to strengthen the network’sinstitutional development and advocacyskills.
Center of PeruvianWomen
“FloraTristan” (Peru)
$60,000
For research and dissemination onthemagnitude and characteristics ofabortion in Peru and to design strategiesto reduce the level and impact ofunsafe abortions.
Chile,University of (Chile)
$75,000
For the production and disseminationof educational materials and to trainteachers on sexuality, reproductivehealth and ethics.
Chilean Corporation for AIDS
Prevention (Chile)
$100,000
For strategic planning and other activitiesto enhance its institutional capacity andorganizational stability.
Chilean Institute of Reproductive
Medicine (Chile)
$95,000
To foster sexual and reproductive healthpolicies that are based on scientificevidence and consistent with genderequity andwomen’s rights.
Education andHealth Institute
(Peru)
$100,000
For participatory research and communityeducation focusing on sexual and repro-ductive health and services for adolescentsin an underprivileged neighborhood inLima.
Education to Improve Quality
of Life–EDUK (Chile)
$274,000
To develop and implement a community-basedmodel for sex education foradolescents in a low-income districtofmetropolitan Santiago.
Evangelical Lutheran Church
(Chile)
$300,000
For the Cooperative Education in HealthProgram’s community-based educationalstrategy on sexual and reproductive healthand rights, targeting health providersand community activists in Chile.
Foundation for Studies and
Research onWomen (Argentina)
$30,000
To strengthen and consolidate a nationalyouth network for sexual and reproduc-tive health.
Group of Social Studies Limited
(GES) (Chile)
$50,000
For research on the influence of teach-ings and discourse about sexualityand sexual and reproductive health byChristian churches and ecumenicalgroups on Chilean society and publicpolicymaking.
Institute of Peruvian Studies
(Peru)
$1,750,000
To create a competitive fund for researchand community-based initiativesthat promote citizen participation andstrengthen democratic institutionsat the local and national level.
Latin American and Caribbean
Committee for the Defense of
Women’s Rights (Peru)
$286,000
To disseminate the results of its researchon sexual and reproductive rights in LatinAmerica and develop a legal frameworkto protect these rights.
Latin American and Caribbean
Women’s Health Network (Chile)
$225,000
For training and advocacy programson sexuality and reproductive health andto strengthen institutional capacity inLatin America.
National Network of Education,
Sexual Health and Development
for the Youth (Peru)
$55,000
To facilitate and organize the VI LatinAmerican Congress of Social Sciencesand Health in Peru.
Office for the Defense of the
Rights ofWomen (Peru)
$200,000
To promote women’s rights throughlitigation and public education and forstrategic and financial planning.
Ombudsman’s Office of the City
of Buenos Aires (Argentina)
$100,000
To design and implement an innovativemodel for monitoring and enforcingwomen’s sexual and reproductive healthrights in the public health system.
Vivo Positivo (Chile)
$100,000
For a community-based network to carryout citizen rights advocacy and publiceducation for andwith people livingwithHIV/AIDS.
Vivo Positivo (Chile)
$100,000
For research, publications and workshopson the health needs of HIV/AIDS affectedwomen and on the exercise of their sexualand reproductive rights.
Women’s House of
Arica-Cedemu Ltd.
(Chile)
$65,000
To study the sexual and reproductivehealth needs of Aymarawomen innorthern Chile and design and dissemi-nate an intercultural model of servicestomeet these needs.
Brazil
Sexuality and reproductive health
Bahia, Federal University of
$120,000
For the Institute of Collective Health tocomplete the Salvador, Bahia componentof a collaborative project on adolescentpregnancy, sexuality and reproductivehealth.
Brazilian Interdisciplinary AIDS
Association
$200,000
For analysis, documentation anddissemination of information on thesocial impact and policy response toHIV/AIDS.
Ceara Group for the Prevention
of AIDS
$50,000
For public education activities on repro-ductive health and HIV/AIDS.
Center for Higher Studies
of Social Promotion and
the Environment
$400,000
For the Center to strengthen itscommunity-based programsintegrating health and sustainabledevelopment in the easternAmazon.
Center for Study and Research
in Collective Health
$160,000
To complete the Rio de Janeiro compo-nent of a collaborative project onadolescent pregnancy, sexuality andreproductive health.
Center for Study and Research
in Collective Health
$158,000
For training on researchmethodologyin gender, sexuality and reproductivehealth.
110
Center for Study and Research
in Collective Health
$100,000
For training and research in gender,sexuality and reproductive health.
Center of Black Culture of
Maranhao
$200,000
To promote sexual and reproductivehealth and rights in Afro-Brazilianreligious centers.
Cunha–Feminist Collective
$110,000
For outreach and leadership training insexuality, reproductive health and politicalparticipation.
Executive Secretariat of the
National Feminist Network for
Health and Reproductive Rights
$300,000
To promote information disseminationand public debate on reproductive healthand rights.
Federal Fluminense University
$72,000
To include a sexuality and reproductivehealthmodule in a national opinionsurvey on current social issues and forrelated workshops, seminars andtraining.
Foundation-administered project
$70,000
Networking support and applied researchand data analysis training for newgrantees.
Minas Gerais, Federal University
of
$200,000
For the Center for Regional Developmentand Planning to develop research capacityin the use of race variables in the fieldof reproductive health.
N’zinga-Group of BlackWomen
$50,000
To build capacity on African Brazilianwomen’s health and rights advocacy.
Pernambuco, Federal University
of
$300,000
For applied research, community outreachand public education on sexuality andreproductive rights.
Rio Grande do Sul, Federal
University of
$120,000
To complete the Porto Alegre compo-nent of a collaborative project onadolescent pregnancy, sexuality andreproductive health.
SOS Corpo Gender and
Citizenship
$120,000
For dissemination, public debate andpolicymonitoring on reproductive healthand rights.
China
Sexuality and reproductive health
Affiliated Hospital of Medical
College,QingdaoUniversity
$121,000
For Friends Exchange, China’s onlyjournal for gaymen,and a symposiumonHIV/AIDS.
Beijing Sexuality Education and
Research Association
$35,000
For the publication of the results offour surveys on sexual and reproductivehealth.
California,University of
(Irvine,CA)
$94,600
For studies aimed at reforming China’spopulation policy.
China Family Planning
Association
$10,000
For an AIDS awareness-raising concert.
China Health Economics Institute
$50,100
For Health and Development Forumactivities with respect to the potentialimpact of AIDS/HIV on rural healthservices and the possible re-integrationof health and family planning in poorrural areas.
China Population Information
and Research Center
$95,700
For studies aimed at reforming China’spopulation policy.
China Population Information
and Research Center
$60,000
To incorporate gender perspectives intofamily planning programs.
Chinese Academy of Preventive
Medicine
$11,650
To organize a national workshop onHIV/AIDS research ethics for provincialhealth professionals.
Foreign LoanOffice,Ministry
of Health
$200,000
To incorporate reproductive healthservice into the reform of basic levelhealth service in China.
Hampshire College
(Amherst,MA)
$34,300
For a study of unregistered Chinese childrenand for publication of an internationaladoption book in China.
Hesperian Foundation
(Berkeley,CA)
$100,000
To develop and test Chinese adaptationsof reproductive healthmaterials forwomen and girls.
International Council on
Management of Population
Programmes (Malaysia)
$50,000
To improve the quality of care and repro-ductive health in family planning programsin China.
Melbourne,University of
(Australia)
$35,000
For a peer education program for HIVprevention among urban Chinese highschool students.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$55,000
To improve quality of care in familyplanning services in China.
Nanjing College for Population
ProgramManagement
$25,900
For evaluation of a gender-specific HIVprevention program for youth.
National Research Institute for
Family Planning
$36,600
For translation, printing and distributionof a Chinese version of Outlook.
National Research Institute for
Family Planning
$32,900
For a study of the acceptability of femalecondoms among sexworkers in China.
Peking University
$30,000
For research and interventions to improvecommunity support for menopausalwomen.
People’s University of China
$46,700
For the Sexuality Research InformationCenter and to train family planningworkers to better understand sexualhealth and journalists to accuratelyand sensitively report on sexualissues.
PublicMedia Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For reproductive health training for familyplanning officials.
Save the Children Fund
(England)
$42,100
To provide training and technical assis-tance to the Dehong PrefectureWomen’sand Children’s Development Centre’sHIV/AIDS counseling and health servicesprogram for commercial sexworkers.
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$15,000
For a study of divorce in contemporaryChina.
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$6,800
For a study of divorce in contemporaryChina.
Shanghai Institute of Planned
Parenthood Research
$23,000
To publish papers and policy recommenda-tions from the International Symposiumon Reproductive Health Research andPolicy Issues of Adolescent and UnmarriedYoung Adults.
Sichuan Family Planning
Research Institute
$33,300
For intervention and evaluation to improvesexual and reproductive health servicesfor unmarried adolescents in rural south-eastern China.
State Family Planning
Commission
$200,000
To improve quality of care and reproduc-tive health and to incorporate gender andreproductive health perspectives withinChinese family planning programs.
Tibetan Poverty Alleviation Fund,
Inc. (Cambridge,MA)
$100,000
To strengthen rural reproductive healthservices in Tibet.
United Nations Development
Programme (NewYork,NY)
$23,900
To establish an AIDS Awareness andMedia Award in China.
WorldWomen’sVision
$50,000
To produce a newsletter for free distribu-tion to university students and youngworking women, hold a contest to raiseawareness about breast cancer and contin-ue its column on health crisis.
Asset Building and Community Development
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Human Development and Reproductive Health
Xi’an JiaotongUniversity
$48,200
For reproductive health training anda community intervention projectto improve female child survival inrural China.
Yunnan Reproductive Health
Research Association
$150,000
To organize and host the 6th Asian andPacific Conference on Social SciencesandMedicine.
Zhejiang Academy of Social
Sciences
$50,400
For developing a newapproach to prostitu-tion research and intervention in China.
Eastern Africa
Sexuality and reproductive health
AfricanWomen and Child
Information Network Limited
(Kenya)
$90,000
Formedia activities to raise awareness ofreproductive health and family issues andpolicies in eastern Africa.
Association of AfricanWomen
for Research and Development
(Senegal)
$130,000
For research andmeetings on HIV and thefamily in eastern Africa and to develop amember database and continue its schoolvisitation program.
DisabledWomenNetwork and
Resource Organisation
(Uganda)
$50,000
For activities to promote the rights andwell being of the disabled in Uganda,withan emphasis onwomen and girls.
Family Care International, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To produce a catalogue of resourcematerials for East African youth andyouth-serving programs and an evalu-ation of their effectiveness.
Family Planning Private Sector
(Kenya)
$450,000
For community interventions to helpmultigenerational families deal withthe burdens caused by the HIV/AIDSepidemic in eastern Africa,with a focuson elderly people caring for AIDSorphans.
Faraja Trust Fund Registered
Trustees (Tanzania)
$600,000
For programs to help HIV/AIDS-affectedchildren and families caring for them.
International Family Health
(England)
$560,000
For growth and institutionalization ofthe African Regional Forum of ReligiousHealth Organizations working inreproductive health.
ISIS–Women’s International
Cross-Cultural Exchange
(Uganda)
$200,000
For women’s human and reproductiverights exchange programs.
Kenya Girl Guides Association
(Kenya)
$40,000
For workwith youngwomen on AIDSprevention, volunteerism and positivetraditional practices in Kenya.
KenyaVoluntaryWomen
Rehabilitation Centre
(Kenya)
$200,000
To research, design and documentcredit, savings and training programsto improve the health andwell-beingof women sex workers affected byHIV/AIDS in Nairobi.
Kenyatta University
(Kenya)
$150,000
For research on African traditional herbaltherapies for opportunistic infectionsrelated to HIV.
Kibera Community Self-Help
Programme,Kenya
(Kenya)
$600,000
For programs to help HIV/AIDS-affectedchildren and the families that carefor them and to provide HIV/AIDS healthservices in Nairobi slum communities.
Media for Development
International, Inc.
(Glenwood Spring,CO)
$250,000
For script development and pre-productionactivities for the“Yellow Card” televisionseries project.
Ntanira NaMugamboTharaka
WomenWelfare Project (Kenya)
$75,000
For alternative rite of passage programsinMeru district, Kenya.
Population Council, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$450,000
For the second phase of a credit, savings,health and social support program forKenyan adolescents living in peri-urbanand rural low-income communities.
Research,Action& Information
Network for the Bodily
Integrity ofWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$400,000
To build strategic pan-African alliancesaroundwomen’s and girls’ sexual andreproductive health issues and developprograms for African immigrantand refugee women in the UnitedStates.
Uzima Foundation (Kenya)
$175,000
For youth leadership, livelihood andsexual health programs in Kenya.
Women’s Dignity Project, Inc.
(Pelham,NY)
$200,000
For a regional program to addressobstetric fistula from a human rightsand equity perspective.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Sexuality and reproductive health
AhmedabadWomen’s Action
Group (India)
$75,000
To train grassroots women both in ruraland urban areas on issues of women’srights.
Centre for Feminist Legal
Research (India)
$100,000
For research on gender, sexuality andrelated issues.
Centre for Social and
Technological Change (India)
$150,000
For research onwomen’s care-seekingbehavior, the quality of care available toaddress their reproductive health needsand NGO interventions in relation to theHIV/AIDS pandemic in India.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$175,000
For six fellows from India to attend theuniversity’s Program for the Study ofSexuality, Gender, Health and HumanRights.
Global Alliance Against Traffic in
Women (Canada)
$250,000
To develop innovative collaborativepartnerships with select organizationsin South Asia in the areas of sexuality,migration, sexwork and trafficking.
Low Cost StandardTherapeutics
(India)
$70,000
To promote awareness regarding theneed for and the availability of low pricedmedicinal options for reproductive andsexual health problems.
Nalamdana (India)
$250,000
For its endowment and to expand,strengthen and sustain its work in thearea of HIV/AIDS awareness andprevention.
Naz FoundationTrust (India)
$150,000
To address issues of HIV/AIDS, gender,sexuality and human rights in Indiaand South Asia and strengthenNETWORKS, a national coalitionof HIV/AIDS NGOs.
North East Network (India)
$200,000
For community-based reproductive healthand human rights education trainingand to conduct strategic planningwork-shops for NGOs.
SadbhavanaTrust (India)
$50,000
For curriculum development, training,capacity building, advocacy, research anddocumentation informed by a genderand rights perspective.
SAMA–Resource Group for
Women andHealth (India)
$150,000
For training and capacity building foradolescent girls andwomen on reproduc-tive health and rights issues.
Sanchetana Community Health
and Research Centre (India)
$150,000
To sustain, strengthen and expandwork inthe field of women’s reproductive healthand empowerment.
Sexuality Information and
Education Council of the United
States Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$235,000
To build on existing partnerships withIndian NGOs to work together oncapacity building and public educationon sexuality.
112
South India AIDS Action Program
(India)
$100,000
For technical assistance to community-based organizations working onsexuality and HIV/AIDS preventionand care activities.
Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for
Medical Sciences andTechnology
(India)
$150,000
For a small grants research competition toaddress existing gaps in the field of repro-ductive and sexual health.
UshaMultipurpose Co-Operative
Society Ltd. (India)
$210,000
For activities to protect the rights of sexworkers and their children.
Vacha Charitable Trust (India)
$105,000
To establish a health awareness resourcecentre for poor girls and youngwomeninMumbai’s municipal schools.
VikalpWomen’s Group (India)
$100,000
To improve the reproductive healthof women and build community-pressuregroups to reduce incidence of violenceagainst women.
World Health Organization
(Switzerland)
$30,000
For an international conference onadolescent health in India.
Indonesia
Sexuality and reproductive health
Australian National University
(Australia)
$200,000
For a study on gender and sexual healthin four countries of Southeast Asia:Indonesia, Philippines,Thailand andVietnam.
Fatayat Nahdlatul ’Ulama
$240,000
For education and outreach on Islam,women’s reproductive rights andpluralistic values.
Institut Agama IslamNegeri
Sunan Kalijaga
$150,000
To hold a seminar course on Islam,genderand reproductive health.
KaPaL Perempuan
$210,000
For alternative education to improvewomen’s autonomy, pluralistic valuesand leadership in three Indonesianprovinces.
MataramUniversity
$120,000
To develop an integrated reproductivehealth services system and a socio-economic empowerment program forfemale traditional earthenwaremakers on Lombok island.
Pacific Institute forWomen’s
Health (Los Angeles,CA)
$310,000
To collaborate with the IndonesianPartnership in Health and HumanityFoundation on education programson emergency contraception amongindustrial and commercial sexworkers.
YayasanHotline Surabaya
$140,000
For an innovative pilot project tointegrate reproductive health care atthe subdistrict level in the provinceof East Java, Indonesia.
Yayasan Kalyanamitra
$95,700
For publications and institutional develop-ment to advance the concept and ideologyof women’s human rights in Indonesia.
Yayasan Kesehatan Perempuan
$320,000
To assist with the start-up and for appliedresearch to protect women’s rights toavoid unsafe abortion.
Yayasan Lembaga Konsumen
Indonesia
$330,000
For reproductive health advocacy, trainingand community-based consumer watchgroups in sixmajor cities.
Yogya Institute of Research,
Education and Publication
$485,000
For a resource and training center formedia, gender and reproductive health,including AIDS.
Mexico and Central America
Children,youth and families
Archbishopric of Guatemala
(Guatemala)
$340,000
To systematize and disseminate theprocess of building the historic memoryof Guatemala’s conflict and buildan integrated community psychosocialreparationmodel.
Foundation Points of Encounter
for Changes in Daily Life
(Nicaragua)
$180,000
For amedia, training and communitynetworking program to strengthen socialsupport systems and services for youngpeople in Nicaragua.
Ibero-AmericanOrganization for
Youth (Spain)
$100,000
To strengthen the capacity of governmentagencies participating in the developmentof youth policies and services in CostaRica,Guatemala and Nicaragua througha training and exchange program.
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Guatemala)
$150,000
For research on youth employment andeconomic participation in Guatemalaand on shared challenges for youth devel-opment across Central America and toexpand its youth program.
Mexican Institute for Youth
(Mexico)
$100,000
For state-level analyses of the results ofMexico’s National Youth Survey andto create a national network for youthresearch.
Milpas de Oaxaca (Mexico)
$270,000
For organizational development andtraining to strengthen youth groupsand networks in Oaxaca.
Sexuality and reproductive health
Arizona,University of
(Tucson,AZ)
$250,000
For a cross-border university consortiumto consolidate its collaborative programson gender and reproductive health.
Middle East and North Africa
Sexuality and reproductive health
American University in Cairo
(Egypt)
$200,000
For the Social Research Center’s annualprogram of regional workshops on repro-ductive health and research on keyreproductive health topics.
Egyptian Fertility Care Society
(Egypt)
$266,000
To design a research program on thelong-term health effects of female genitalmutilation in Egypt.
Hands Along the Nile
Development Services, Inc.
(Akron,OH)
$67,000
To document, analyze and disseminatethe lessons learned fromHANDS’experi-ences of the different programs andapproaches applied to eradicate femalegenital mutilation.
Ministry of Health,National AIDS
Program (Egypt)
$180,000
For the AIDS Hotline, to establish volun-tary counseling and testing centers andto sponsor Egypt’s Third National AIDSconference.
Partners in Population and
Development (Bangladesh)
$75,000
For training programs and capacity build-ing for reproductive healthmanagers inpolicy analysis and presentation skills.
Population Council, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$580,000
For the research and public educationprograms of the Reproductive HealthWorking Group.
Population Council, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$188,000
Tomaintain and expand theMEAwardsprogram,designed to build the capacity ofsocial science research in theMiddle Eastand North Africa region.
Population Council, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To develop guidelines for normal deliverypractices in teaching hospitals.
Population Reference Bureau, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$73,000
To develop, publish and distribute twopolicy briefs on population and reproduc-tive health issues in the North Africa/Middle East region.
Union of PalestinianMedical
Relief Committees (West Bank)
$293,000
To produce audiovisual and printed healtheducationmaterials promoting healthybehavior amongwomen,adolescents andthe general population.
United States NavalMedical
Research Unit NumberThree
(Egypt)
$320,000
To develop a comprehensive communica-tion strategy for the prevention of HIVand other sexually transmitted and bloodborne pathogens of high prevalence inEgypt.
YoungWomen’s Christian
Association of Jerusalem
(West Bank)
$275,000
To train youngwomen in life skills andthe provision of basic and emergencyhealth care and to strengthen the organi-zational capacity of key East Jerusaleminstitutions.
Asset Building and Community Development
113
Human Development and Reproductive Health
The Philippines
Sexuality and reproductive health
Action for Health Initiatives
(Achieve), Inc.
$55,000
To promote understanding and awarenessof the sexual and reproductive healthneeds among spouses and partners ofoverseas Filipinoworkers.
Al-Mujadilah Development
Foundation, Inc.
$87,500
For activities to raise awareness of genderand reproductive health issues amongFilipinoMuslims for both amedical anda theological perspective.
Creative Collective Center, Inc.
$175,000
For a traveling visual art exhibit onwomen’s sexuality and reproductive rightsthat promotes public debate and policyadvocacy.
Health Action Information
Network, Inc.
$409,000
For skills training in research and infor-mationmanagement in the field ofreproductive health.
IPS–Inter Press Service (Italy)
$52,000
For amedia campaign on the reproductivehealth needs of Philippinemigrantworkersin Asia and theMiddle East.
KapisananNgMga Kamag-Anak
NgMigrantengManggagawang
Pilipino, Inc.
$100,000
For a radio campaign to increase publicawareness on issues related to reproduc-tive health and gender-based violencein themigrant sector.
Lawig Bubai Association, Inc.
$37,000
For theater performances to promotepolicies and programs that protect thedignity, rights and health of womenin prostitution.
Lunduyan para sa
Pagpapalaganap,Pagtataguyod,
at Pagtatanggol ng Karapatang
Pambata Foundation, Inc.
$137,000
To produce a cross-cultural theater play onadolescent reproductive health.
Philippine NGOCouncil on
Population,Health and
Welfare,Inc
$100,000
For the February 2001 first Asian PacificConference on Reproductive Health.
Philippines,University of the
$140,000
For research, publications and paneldiscussions on gender, sexuality andreproductive health.
Pilipina Legal Resources Center,
Inc.
$174,000
For workshops and publications on Islam,gender and reproductive health.
Positive Action Foundation
Philippines, Inc.
$50,200
For a national consultation process andconsensus meeting on access and treat-ment of Filipinos livingwith HIV/AIDS.
Probe Productions, Inc.
$95,000
For amultimedia campaign on sexual andreproductive health specifically targetedto children and adolescents.
Remedios AIDS Foundation, Inc.
$300,000
To establish a community-based center forpeople with HIV/AIDS inManila.
San Carlos,University of
$104,000
For a series of courses on gender, sexualityand reproductive health.
Women’s Crisis Center
Incorporated
$260,000
To establish an information resourcecenter on violence against women andto hold courses on preventing it for bothPhilippine and other Asian NGOs andgovernment institutions.
Southern Africa
Children,youth and families
Ashoka (Arlington,VA)
$350,000
To fund Ashoka Global Fellowships forSouth African emerging social entrepre-neurs with innovative ideas for thepublic good.
Sexuality and reproductive health
AIDSLink
(South Africa)
$150,000
For LivingTogether, a cultural heritageproject using art, performance andjournalism to address the stigma ofAIDS amongHIV-infected and affectedcommunities in South Africa and theUnited States.
CapeTown,University of
(South Africa)
$100,000
For the new interdisciplinary AIDS andSociety Research Unit.
Centre for Development and
Population Activities
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For exchange programs andworkshops toincrease the capacity of southern andeasternAfrican youth development organi-zations to respond to the AIDS pandemicin their respective countries.
Free State,University of the
(South Africa)
$215,000
For the Centre for Health Systems Researchand Development to conduct researchon sexual and reproductive health andonHIV/AIDS.
Institute for Democracy
in South Africa
(South Africa)
$363,000
For activities to engage policymakers andcivil society organizations in addressingthe HIV/AIDS epidemic and containing itsimpact.
Institute for Security Studies
(South Africa)
$300,000
To study the implications of the HIV/AIDSepidemic for stability, security and gover-nance in South Africa.
Khanya Community Theatre
(South Africa)
$43,110
For community initiatives tomitigate thesocial and economic impact of HIV/AIDS.
Kwakhanya Productions
(South Africa)
$40,000
For educational activities addressingthe social stigma and denial associatedwith HIV/AIDS in five Cape Towntownships.
Life Line Durban (South Africa)
$37,500
To develop an intervention that willaddress broader community needs suchas rape, drug abuse, domestic violence,prostitution and HIV/AIDS.
London School of Hygiene and
TropicalMedicine (England)
$100,000
To develop, implement and evaluate amodel for addressing the HIV/AIDSepidemic in South Africa through anexpandedmicrocredit program.
Natal,University of
(South Africa)
$180,000
To develop a documentary video to increaseawareness of and influence attitudestoward children in difficulty, particularlythose affected by HIV/AIDS.
Natal,University of
(South Africa)
$100,000
To trainmid-level education professionalsin strategic planning techniques and skillsfor mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDSonministries of education in sub-SaharanAfrica.
Natal,University of
(South Africa)
$38,060
To study the nature and extent of HIV inthe prison population of Kwa ZuluNatal.
Pretoria,University of
(South Africa)
$200,000
To expand the work of the Center for theStudy of AIDS to four satellite campusesand to distance-learning students.
Trust for Health Systems
Planning and Development
(South Africa)
$300,000
To strengthen the capacity of local govern-ment authorities to address critical sexualand reproductive health issues in areasof their jurisdiction.
Vietnam and Thailand
Sexuality and reproductive health
Deakin University
(Australia)
$478,000
For a situational analysis of HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination inAsia and participation in satellitemeet-ings and booths at the 6th InternationalConference on AIDS in Asia and thePacific.
Ha Long City Youth Union
(Vietnam)
$2,900
For a collaborative youth developmentproject in Ha Long City that integratessexual and reproductive health informa-tion, counseling and services.
Hanoi School of Public Health
(Vietnam)
$235,000
To strengthen faculty social scienceresearch and training skills, develop socialscience curricula and establish a socialscience research program on sexualityand reproductive health.
114
Health Center of District 6
(Vietnam)
$99,000
For a collaborative program of health carepeer education, reproductive and primaryhealth care and income-generation activi-ties in District 6 of Ho Chi Minh City.
Ho ChiMinh City AIDS
Committee (Vietnam)
$4,100
For a collaborative program of health carepeer education, reproductive and primaryhealth care and income-generation activi-ties in District 6 of Ho ChiMinh City.
HueMedical College
(Vietnam)
$246,000
For a pilot project to develop andimplement a comprehensive, community-oriented curriculum to strengthen repro-ductive health education in Vietnam.
Institute for the Protection of
theMother andNewborn
(Vietnam)
$42,000
To develop and test a pilot trainingprogram on comprehensive abortioncare services in national OB/GYNtraining hospitals Hanoi and Ho ChiMinh City.
International Projects Assistance
Services, Inc. (Chapel Hill,NC)
$87,000
To develop and test a pilot trainingprogram on comprehensive abortioncare services in national OB/GYNtraining hospitals in Hanoi and HoChiMinh City.
KhanhHoa Provincial AIDS
Committee (Vietnam)
$80,000
To implement an HIV/AIDS peer educa-tion, job and small business trainingandmicrocredit program among sexworkers and drug users in KhanhHoa Province.
Lang Son Provincial Committee
for AIDS Prevention and
Drug and Prostitution Control
and Development of Cultural
Life (Vietnam)
$50,000
For a collaborative HIV/AIDS preventionand peer education program for injectingdrug users in Lang Son.
Mahidol University (Thailand)
$1,000,000
To strengthen and sustain the university’sHealth Social Science InternationalProgram.
Mahidol University (Thailand)
$149,000
For research, training and technicalassistance to strengthen sexual andreproductive health services inKhon Kaen.
Mahidol University (Thailand)
$106,000
To expand and improve hospital andcommunity-based legal and socialservices for women victims of gender-based violence in Khon Kaen.
Mahidol University (Thailand)
$13,300
To develop and test indicators formeasur-ing themagnitude of and progress towardaddressing gender-based violence.
Maternal Child Health and Family
Planning Department (Vietnam)
$35,000
To develop and test a pilot trainingprogram on comprehensive abortioncare services in national OB/GYNtraining hospitals in Hanoi and HoChiMinh City.
Medecins duMonde
(France)
$7,600
For sexual, reproductive and primaryhealth care peer education and services,counseling, advocacy and incomegenerating activities for the homelessin District 6,Ho ChiMinh City.
Mother and Child Healthcare
and Family Planning QuangNinh
Provincial Center (Vietnam)
$3,300
For a collaborative youth developmentproject in Ha Long City that integratessexual and reproductive health informa-tion, counseling and services.
National AIDS Standing Bureau
(Vietnam)
$47,000
For a collaborative HIV/AIDS preventionand peer education program for injectingdrug users in Lang Son.
National AIDS Standing Bureau
(Vietnam)
$19,000
To organize HIV/AIDS and sexualityroundtablemeetings to help the founda-tion’s Asia officers develop regionalgrant-making strategies on their issues.
National Center for Social
Sciences andHumanities
(Vietnam)
$1,300
For researchers of the center’s Instituteof Sociology to develop a research agendaon sexuality.
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Hospital of Ho ChiMinh City
(Vietnam)
$42,000
To develop and test a pilot trainingprogram on comprehensive abortioncare services in national OB/GYNtraining hospitals in Hanoi and HoChiMinh City.
Pathfinder International
(Watertown,MA)
$193,000
To help HueMedical College developand implement a comprehensive,community-oriented curriculum tostrengthen reproductive healtheducation in Vietnam.
Research andTraining Centre for
Community Development
(Vietnam)
$32,000
For a needs assessment, training anddesign of a youth development projectaddressing the sexual and reproductivehealth needs of young people in HaLong City.
Thailand Business Coalition
on AIDS (Thailand)
$17,600
For technical assistance to theVietnamChamber of Commerce and Industryfor training and strategic planning todevelop the business response to AIDSin Vietnam.
VietnamChamber of Commerce
and Industry (Vietnam)
$50,000
To develop aVietnam business coalitionon AIDS and planworkplace HIV/AIDS-prevention programs.
West Africa
Sexuality and reproductive health
Association for the Promotion of
TraditionalMedicine (Senegal)
$858,000
For clinical research, intellectual propertyprotection and networking activitiesfor African herbalmedicines for the treat-ment of HIV/AIDS,hepatitis, dermatosisandmalaria.
Association for Reproductive
and Family Health
(Nigeria)
$250,000
For adolescent reproductive health educa-tion and capacity-building activities acrossNigeria.
Bioresources Development
and Conservation Programme
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For an international conference andassociated publications on traditionalmedicine in HIV/AIDS andmalariain Africa.
Centre for Social Science Research
and Development (Nigeria)
$350,000
For research, training and outreach activi-ties to better understand and promotenew leadership in Nigeria.
Development Alternatives and
Resource Centre (Nigeria)
$275,000
For technical assistance activities tostrengthen emergent NGOs in Nigeria.
Development Researchers
Co-operative Society (Nigeria)
$80,000
To establish a skills acquisition and recrea-tional center to provide poor youth inmetropolitan Lagos with opportunitiesfor self-development.
Forward Africa (Nigeria)
$120,000
For reproductive health and economicempowerment programs for poor,rural women and youth in southeasternNigeria.
Global Health and Awareness
Research Foundation (Nigeria)
$100,000
For reproductive health and economicempowerment activities among pooradolescents in southeastern Nigeria.
HealthMatters, Inc.
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For HIV prevention education, income-earning skills and training activities inhard-to-reach urban communities.
Inter-African Committee on
Traditional Practices Affecting
the Health ofWomen and
Children (Nigeria)
$300,000
For grassroots outreach and policy advo-cacy to eradicate customary practices andbeliefs harmful to the health and statusof women and children in Nigeria.
International Centre for Gender
and Social Research (Nigeria)
$150,000
For an integrated program of activities toimprove the economic and reproductivehealth status of female adolescents in themiddle belt of Nigeria.
Asset Building and Community Development
115
Human Development and Reproductive Health
Life Link Organization (Nigeria)
$150,000
For a program of HIV/AIDS/STI preventionand control in prison communities acrossNigeria.
LifeVanguards (Nigeria)
$170,000
For activities to promote youth develop-ment and adolescent sexual health insouthwestern Nigeria.
Nigeria AIDS Alliance (Nigeria)
$150,000
To expand its network of autonomousHIV/AIDS support group’s and for train-ing, technical assistance andmediaoutreach.
Nigerian Institute ofMedical
Research (Nigeria)
$400,000
To develop a center for excellence forHIV/AIDS surveillance and evaluationresearch in Nigeria.
Ogoni Youth Development
Project (Nigeria)
$100,000
For an integrated program of reproductivehealth and economic empowermentinterventions among youth in the Ogoniarea of the Niger Delta.
Pathfinder International
(Watertown,MA)
$450,000
To strengthen the capacity of sexualhealth NGOs and support pathfindingHIV/AIDS preventionwork in hard-to-reach communities.
Society forWomen and AIDS
in Africa (Nigeria)
$250,000
For HIV/AIDS education, counseling andhome-based care among poorly educatedwomen in Nigeria, especially those livingwith HIV/AIDS.
Women’s Health and Action
Research Centre (Nigeria)
$450,000
For research, training, policy advocacyand publications on reproductive healthin Nigeria.
Grants to Individuals$167,776
Total,HumanDevelopment andReproductive Health$76,034,096
116
selected books, articles andreports
Abrar,Ana Nadhya (ed.).
Konstruksi Seksualitas:AntaraHak dan Kekuasaan (The Constructof Sexuality: Between Rights andPower).Yogyakarta (Central Java),
Indonesia: Population Studies
Center–University of Gadjah
Mada, 2001.
Association of Universities and
Institutes of Higher Education
(ANUIES).
II Coloquio Internacional deServicio Social Comunitario(Second International Colloquiumon Community Service).Mexico:ANUIES, 2001.
Barsted, Linhares Leila, Jacqueline
Hermann and Simone deOliveira
Teixeira.
Brasil: AsMulheres e a Legislaçãocontra o Racismo (Brazil:Womenand Legislation Against Racism).Rio de Janeiro:CEPIA–Centro de
Estudos e Pesquisa em Saúde
Reprodutiva (Citizenship, Study,
Research, Information and
Action), 2001.
Beichuan,Zhang.
Friend Exchange—Special Issue forHomosexuality/AIDS InterventionWorkshop and Friend ExchangeProgram Seminar.Qingdao,China:Qingdao University,
April 2001.
Berquó, Elza S. (ed.).
Olhar sobre aMedia(A Look at theMedia).São Paulo,Brazil: Brazilian
Commission on Citizenship and
Reproduction, 2001.
Berquó, Elza S. and EstelaMaria
G.P. da Cunha (eds.).
Morbimortalidade Feminina noBrasil (1979–1995) (FemaleMorbidityin Brazil, 1979–1995).Campinas, SP,Brazil: State University
of Campinas, 2001.
Blanck, Fanny et al.
Sexualidad y derechos ciudadanos(Sexuality and Citizen’s Rights).Lima,Peru:Centro de laMujer Flora
Tristán, 2001.
BreakingThe Silence: KenyanFamilies Copingwith HIV/AIDS.Nairobi: Family Planning Private
Sector, 2001.
Boy,Cajetan. Illustrated by Bella
Kilonzo.
Nuru (published both in English andKiswahili).
Nairobi:Ambatana Educational
Trust, 2001.
Calvin,Maria Eugenia andMaria
Stella Toro (eds.).
Serie: Investigación ySistematización de Experiencias—Año 3,No.2:Violencia sexualconyugal y oferta públicade servicios para su atención(Series: Research andSystematization of Experiences—Year 3,No.2: Sexual ViolenceAmong Couples and Public HealthResponses).Santiago,Chile: EPES, 2001.
Choudhary, Jayeeta.
Nirantar’s Health Intervention:A StepTowards AlternativeEducation.NewDelhi:AVEHI Periodical, 2001.
Collaborative Effort by Pathfinder
International,Muslim Sisters
Organization,Kano StateMinistry
of Health,Kano.
TrainingManual with IslamicPrinciples for the Trainingof Traditional Birth Attendants.Kano State,Nigeria: Pathfinder
International, 2001.
Collaborative effort by the Nigeria
Country Office of Pathfinder
International, in conjunctionwith
the NigeriaManagement &
Training Network.
Strengthening Your Organization.Lagos: Pathfinder International, 2001.
Costa, Sérgio Ibiapina F. and Dora
Diniz.
Bioética: Ensaios (Bioethics: Essays).Brasília,DF,Brazil: Instituto de
Bioética,Direitos Humanos
e Gênero–ANIS, LetrasLivers
(Publisher/Editor), 2001.
Esiet,Adenike (ed.).
Annual Report 2000.Lagos:Nigeria Action Health
Incorporated, 2001.
Ford Foundation Asia RegionalHIV/AIDS Roundtable Report.The Ford Foundation, 2001.
Ghaly,Whaba.
Reproductive Health and SexualEducation and Arabic Society(in Arabic).
Cairo:MENTOR, February 2001.
Idigbe, E.O. et al. (eds.).
HIV/AIDS in Nigeria Technical ReportSurvey of Health& LaboratoryFacilities 1989–1999.Lagos:Nigerian Institute ofMedical
Research, 2001.
Idigbe, E.O. et al. (eds.).
HIV/AIDS In Nigeria, Past, Present,Impacts.Lagos:Nigerian Institute ofMedical
Research, 2001.
La Rosa, Liliana.
Servicio diferenciado, serviciodiferente.Gestión de la atenciónde salud de los adolescentesy jóvenes en Chile y Perú.(Differentiated Services,DifferentService.Adolescent Health CareManagement in Chile and Peru).Lima,Peru: Sociedad Peruana de
Adolescencia y Juventud, 2001.
Lihua,Xie.
Nongcun Funu ShengmingWeijiGanyu Shouce (RuralWomen’sLife Crisis InterventionManual).Beijing:RuralWomen Knowing
All Magazine Group, 2001.
Maguire,Daniel C.
Sacred Choices:The Right toContraception and Abortion inTenWorld Religions.Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001.
Maguire,Daniel C.
Sacred Energies:When theWorld’sReligions Sit Down toTalk aboutthe Future of Human Life and thePlight of This Planet (Threepublications).
Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2000.
Muhammad,KH.Husein.
Fiqh Perempuan:Refleksi Kiai atasWacana Agama danGender (Womenin Fiqh: an Ulama’s Reflection onReligious Discourse and Gender).Jakarta:RAHIMA,2001.
Navallo, Julio, et al.
Counseling Personswith HIV/AIDS:AManual.Manila, Philippines:Remedios AIDS
Foundation, Inc., 2001.
Oey-Gardiner,Mayling and Carla
Bianpoen (eds.).
IndonesianWomen:The JourneyContinues.Canberra:RSPAS Publishing–
The Australian National University,
2000.
Okonofua, F.E. (ed.).
WHARC Annual Report July 1999—June 2000.Benin, Edo,Nigeria:Women’s Health
&Action Research Center,August
2001.
Okonofua, F.E. and R.C. Snow (eds.).
African Journal of ReproductiveHealth.Benin, Edo,Nigeria:Women’s Health
&Action Research Center,August
2001.
Olavarría, José.
Y todos querían ser (buenos) padres.Varones de Santiago de Chile enconflicto (AndThey AllWanted toBe (Good) Fathers. SantiagoMen in Conflict).Santiago,Chile: FLACSO, 2001.
Poerwandari, E. Kristi and Rahayu
Surtiati Hidayat.
Perempuan Indonesia DalamMasyarakat YangTengah Berubah(IndonesianWomen in a Societyin Transition).Jakarta: Post Graduate Report
onWomen Studies,University of
Indonesia, 2000.
Proceeding of IPPA’s External
AdvocacyWorkshop.
MembangunOtonomi bagiPeningkatan Kualitas KesehatanReproduksi Perempuan (BuildingAutonomy to Improve theQuality ofWomen’s ReproductiveHealth).Jambi (Sumatra), Indonesia:
Perkumpulan Keluarga Berencana
Indonesia, 2000.
Raines, John C. and Daniel C.Maguire
(eds.).
WhatMenOwe toWomen:Men’sVoices fromWorld Religions.Albany: State University of NewYork
Press, 2001.
Asset Building and Community Development
Publications andOtherMedia—HumanDevelopment and Reproductive Health
117
Sama.
Women and RTIs. (English andHindi). Brochure on how gender
and sexuality are linked to RTIs
and information about different
kinds of RTIs.
NewDelhi:Nirantar, 2001.
Santos, Liberty, et al.
Exploring Alternative andComplementary Therapies forPeople Livingwith HIV/AIDS.Manila, Philippines:Remedios AIDS
Foundation, Inc., 2001.
Santos, Soliman,Merci Llarinas-
Angeles and Roberto Ador.
Justice and Healing:TwinImperatives for the Twin LawsAgainst Rape.Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine
Legislators’Committee on
Population and Development
Foundation, Inc., 2001.
Shuzhuo, Li and Zhu Chuzhu.
Zhongguo Ertong ShengcunXingbie Chayi de Yanjiu he Shijian(Research and Community Practiceon Gender Difference in ChildSurvival in China).Beijing:China Population Publishing
House,November 2000.
SisterSongNativeWomen’s
Reproductive Health and Rights
Roundtable.
Moving Forward the NativeWomen’sReproductive Rights Agenda.Lake Andes, South Dakota:Native
AmericanWomen’s Health Education
Resource Center, 2001.
Sklar,Holly, LaryssaMykyta and
SusanWefald.
Raise the Floor:Wages and PoliciesthatWork for All of Us.NewYork:Ms. Foundation for
Women, 2001.
Swasthya Ki KhojMein.
In Search of Health:Healtheducationmanual on adolescence,reproductive health, sexuality andAIDS—Volume 3.NewDelhi:Nirantar, 2001.
Tripon,Olivia.
Body and Soul:A Forumon Abortion:Illegal but Real.Quezon City, Philippines:Women’s
Feature Service Philippines, 2001.
Tripon,Olivia.
Body and Soul:A ForumonLesbianism and Religion.Quezon City, Philippines:Women’s
Feature Service Philippines, 2001.
Tripon,Olivia.
Body and Soul:A ForumonReligion and Reproductive HealthTechnologies.Quezon City, Philippines:Women’s
Feature Service Philippines, 2001.
Viet Nam SCOPE.Baltimore,Md.: Johns Hopkins
University,Center for Communication
Programs, 2001.
Viveros,Mara; José Olavarría and
Norma Fuller.
Hombres e identidades de género:Investigaciones desde AméricaLatina (Male and Gender Identities:Research from Latin America).Bogotá,Colombia:Universidad
Nacional de Colombia, Facultad
de Ciencias Humanas,Centro
de Estudios Sociales, 2001.
Yiyun,Chen.
Qingchunqi Xingjiankang JiaoyuDuben (Adolescent Sexual HealthEducationManual—For SeniorMiddle School).Beijing:People’s Education
Publishing House, 2001.
journals/periodicals
Choudhary, Jayeeta.
Nirantar’s Experience in BuildingAwareness on Health and Gender.NewDelhi:AVEHI Periodical,
November 2001.
Nian,Cui.
‘ChengduDiquWeihunQingnianXing Zhishi yu Xing XingweiDiaochao’ (Survey of Sex-relatedKnowledge and Behavior ofUnmarried Youths in Chengdu)Journal ofModern PreventiveMedicine,Vol. 28,No 3.Beijing: September 2001.
Jornal da RedeSaúde (RedeSaúdeJournal), I & II.
São Paulo,Brazil: Rede Nacional
Feminista de Saúde e Direitos
Reprodutivos (Brazilian Feminist
Network for Health and
Reproductive Rights), 2001.
monograph
Tripon,Olivia.
Body and Soul:A ForumonMedia&Religion.Quezon City, Philippines:Women’s
Feature Service Philippines, 2001.
selected videos
Tañedo,Rochit.
Patay-Sindi (Red Light District).Quezon City, Philippines: Linangan
ng Kababaihan, Inc., 2001.
TV Cultura.Una voz que llega lejos(A Voice That Carries Far).Lima,Peru:Minga Peru, 2001.
Human Development and Reproductive Health
118
Asset Building and Community Development
ProgramwideFiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Manchester Craftsmen’s Guild
(Pittsburgh, PA)
$130,000
For a planning and assessment processin preparation for the expansion of its jazzmusic recording and sales enterprise.
NewHampshire,University of
(Durham,NH)
$100,000
For a study of community effects on singlemothers’mental health and ability tocope.
Simmons College (Boston,MA)
$875,000
For the Center for Gender in Organizationsto pursue its dual agenda of equity andeffectiveness in work organizations.
Overseas ProgramsEastern Africa
African Economic Research
Consortium, Inc. (Kenya)
$1,250,000
To establish a Research Innovations Fund.
Institute of Economic Affairs
(Kenya)
$150,000
To explore the leadership needed andthe challenges to be faced to implementinclusive democracy and economic growthin Kenya and to develop similar visionsfor Uganda and Tanzania.
Panos Institute (England)
$350,000
For convenings, documentation,monitor-ing and evaluation of activities of the newleaders initiative in Africa.
Society for International
Development (Italy)
$300,000
For research, publications and publicdebates on scenarios describing alternativefutures and challenges to the evolutionof new leaders in East Africa.
Mexico and Central America
Help for Progress Limited (Belize)
$100,000
To design an innovative community-basedmodel for themanagement of commoncultural and natural heritage at theEl Pilar archaeological reserve on theBelize/Guatemala border.
Middle East and North Africa
Birzeit University (West Bank)
$50,000
To develop a database, documentary,student and family survey, and to traintraditional birth attendants in responseto the wave of violence in theWestBank.
National Center for Nonprofit
Boards (Washington,DC)
$70,000
For board development efforts amongEgyptianNGOs through a series of trainingworkshops and consultations.
Union of PalestinianMedical
Relief Committees (West Bank)
$75,000
To develop a first aid network andpurchase emergency supplies and ambu-lance services.
Southern Africa
Namibian Catholic Bishops
Conference (Namibia)
$100,000
For a Namibian NGO that providesHIV/AIDS care and preventionservices.
Vietnam and Thailand
VietnamNational University–
Ho ChiMinh City (Vietnam)
$42,000
For amultimedia language laboratoryto expand the Center for Foreign Study’scapacity to provide advanced Englishinstruction to staff of the foundation’sVietnamese grantees and to InternationalFellowships Program fellows.
Grants to Individuals$39,325
Total, Programwide$3,631,325
119
Asset Building and Community Development
Program-Related InvestmentsFiscal Year 2001Approvals
Program-related investments (PRIs)are usually loans, although theymayalso be loan guarantees or equityinvestments.The primary purpose ofthese investments is to helpmeet thecredit needs of organizations in low-income communities that lack capitalto finance important projects.Thedistinguishing feature of PRIs is that,unlike grants, they are recoverable.
PRIs help recipients close credit gaps,leverage additional financing fromother public and private sources, andaccumulate assets. In this way, theyhelp build strong, sustainable devel-opment organizations.
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Coastal Enterprises, Inc.
(Wiscaset,ME)
$3,000,000
To provide capitalization of two enterprisedevelopment funds for creating andretaining employment opportunitiesfor disadvantaged people.
Enterprise Corporation of the
Delta (Jackson,MS)
$1,500,000
To help capitalize the expansion of itssmall business lending in the lowerMississippi Delta region through creditenhancement of private sector debt.
Focus:Hope (Detroit,MI)
$3,000,000
To capitalize a student loan fund for usein financing tuition costs of participantsin educational programs.
Loan IncomeHousing Fund
(Oakland,CA)
$3,000,000
To provide additional capital for a revolv-ing loan fund to increase homeownershipopportunities for disadvantaged people.
National Federation of
Community Development
Credit Unions, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$3,000,000
To expand its capitalization program toassist community development creditunions tomeet new regulatory standardsand to provide“predatory relief” loans.
TRF Urban Growth Partners LP
(Philadelphia, PA)
$3,000,000
To provide capitalization of an enterprisedevelopment fund to create smallbusinesses and create quality jobs forlow-income people.
Total ProgramRelatedInvestments$16,500,000
Program-Related Investments
120
Peace and Social Justice
Human Rights and International CooperationApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Human rights
Academy for Educational
Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$1,307,500
For a fellowship program to promotenew voices in the fields of human rightsand international cooperation.
Adalah:The Legal Center for Arab
Minority Rights in Israel
(Israel)
$600,000
For activities to achieve equal rights forPalestinian Israelis.
Adva Center (Israel)
$150,000
For research, analysis and educationalactivities on the social impact of theIsraeli national budget.
AfricanWomen’s Development
Fund (Ghana)
$500,000
For institutional development andgrant making.
AAUWLegal Advocacy Fund, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$76,600
For the publication, distribution anddissemination of the findings of a researchproject examining Title IX enforce-ment efforts by the U.S.Department ofEducation’s Office for Civil Rights.
American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$900,000
For litigation, advocacy and public educa-tion on behalf of minority voting rightsand racial justice.
American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$465,000
For the advocacy, litigation and technicalassistance activities of the ImmigrantsRights Project with respect to immigrantand refugee civil rights and libertiesissues.
American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For the Lesbian and Gay Rights Projectto address the needs of typicallyunderservedmembers of the gayand lesbian community.
American University
(Washington,DC)
$88,000
For technical assistance and advocacyrelated to the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Amnesty International of the
U.S.A., Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To utilize the occasion of theU.N.WorldConference Against Racism to mobilizepublic opinion to end human rightsviolations.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$52,000
For a project entitled The Legacy ofAbuse–Justice and Reconciliation in
a New Landscape.
Association for Applied Social
Research in the Arab Sector
(Israel)
$525,000
For the development of an appliedsocial science research institute for thePalestinian-Israeli minority.
Astraea Foundation
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For general support and subgrants tocommunity-based organizations address-ing social, political and economic justice,especially those focused on lesbians andother sexualminorities.
Black Leadership Forum
Incorporated
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
To develop aWeb-based technologynetwork to facilitate the exchange ofinformation among civil rightsgroups.
BSR Education Fund Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$300,000
For the Business and Human RightsProgram to provide training and technicalassistance to companies interestedin respecting and promoting humanrights.
California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$200,000
For research, publications and lectureson human rights and racial justice issuesin Brazil.
Canadian Journalists for Free
Expression (Canada)
$170,000
To develop the Developing CountriesOutreach Program of the InternationalFreedomof Expression eXchange (IFEX).
Center for Afro Study and
Research (Uruguay)
$100,000
For human rights training and advocacyon behalf of communities of Africandescent in Latin America.
Center for Gender Equality, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To conduct a feasibility study for a nationaldata center on women and recruit a vicepresident of communications.
Center for Justice and
Accountability (San Francisco,CA)
$50,000
To launch the Anti-Impunity Resource,an information clearinghouse detailingefforts worldwide to end the impunityof human rights violators through theuse of universal jurisdiction.
Center for Justice and
International Law
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For efforts to strengthen theInter-American Human RightsSystem.
Center for Reproductive Law and
Policy, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For legal advocacy and education activitieson women’s reproductive health andrights in the United States and develop-ing countries.
Children’s Defense Fund
(Washington,DC)
$350,000
To develop a public education programto advance racial justice for Southern ruralwomen in the U.S.
Cine QuaNon, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For capacity building and outreach activi-ties in connection with implementationofmediarights.org, aWeb site linkingfilmmakers, journalists and advocatesworking on human rights topics.
Clarity Educational Productions,
Inc. (Berkeley,CA)
$250,000
To complete a film on the history of theworldwide anti-apartheidmovement.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For the Human Rights Institute to providelegal research and assistance to groupsworking on human rights in the UnitedStates.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For research,writing and dissemination oncomparative racial justice enforcement.
Community Partners
(Los Angeles,CA)
$250,000
For the Advocacy Project to providetechnical assistance on race-based issuesto civil rights activists and communitygroups.
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$170,000
For the Refugee Studies Project to serve asa forum forU.S.policymakers,practitioners,journalists and scholars to exchangeinformation on key refugee and relatedhumanitarian issues.
Dade Community Foundation
(Miami, FL)
$225,000
For the International Relations Programtomake grants for collaborative projectsbringing together recent immigrantsand longtime residents.
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Human Rights and International Cooperation
Decade of Human Rights, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For human rights education andorganizingaimed at promoting economic, social andcultural rights.
EarthTimes Foundation
(NewYork,NY)
$125,000
To produce a daily print andWebnewspaper at the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Epidavros Project, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$75,000
To study the feasibility of a documentaryfilm on the unfolding campaign for legali-zation of undocumented immigrants.
Equal Rights Advocates, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$800,000
For the Higher Education Research andAdvocacy Project and for relocationcosts.
Equality Now, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For the communications activities of itsworldwide, rapid-response grassrootsaction network of women’s rights organi-zations and individual activists.
FirelightMedia, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For media documentation of the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
First Nations Development
Institute (Fredericksburg,VA)
$49,000
For a Native American organizationseeking to promote human rights anddevelopment for indigenous peoplesaround theworld.
Forum-Asia (Thailand)
$300,000
To strengthen the capacities of andcollaborations among human rightsorganizations in South and SoutheastAsia.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For information sharing,networking andconvening of NGOs in preparation for theU.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Galilee Society: the Arab National
Society for Health Research and
Services (Israel)
$450,000
For a computerized databank of statisticalinformation on the socioeconomic statusof the Palestinianminority within Israel.
GeorgetownUniversity
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For research and public education onaffirmative action and diversity in highereducation.
Gill Foundation (Denver,CO)
$100,000
For grantmaking and technical assistanceto gay, lesbian,bisexual and transgendercommunities of color on issues of sexualorientation and race.
HebrewUniversity of Jerusalem
(Israel)
$250,000
For the research and training activities oftheMinerva Center for Human Rights.
Hugh Pilkington Charitable Trust
(England)
$240,000
To develop, publish and provide trainingon the use of amanual to help AfricanNGOs use regional human rights instru-ments to protect refugees.
Human RightsWatch, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$50,000
To ensure an effective InternationalCriminal Court and advance the useof universal jurisdiction.
Immigration and Refugee
Services of America
(Washington,DC)
$700,000
For public information and advocacy oninternational refugee issues.
Institute forWomen’s Policy
Research (Washington,DC)
$300,000
For state-by-state research and reports onwomen’s political participation, employ-ment and health status.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$1,528,000
For travel by NGO leaders to the U.N.World Conference Against Racism andrelated events.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$600,000
For the International Human RightsInternship Program.
Inter-American Dialogue
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the Inter-AgencyTask Force on Racein the Americas.
International Centre for the Legal
Protection of Human Rights
(England)
$400,000
For programs to advance respect forhuman rights worldwide throughinternational and comparative humanrights law.
International Commission of
Jurists (Switzerland)
$250,000
For activities to promote the rule of lawand the legal protection of human rightsthroughout theworld.
International Council on Human
Rights Policy (Switzerland)
$900,000
For applied policy research on humanrights issues.
International Federation of Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies
(Switzerland)
$500,000
For pilot testing, analysis and evaluationof an effort to increase the accountabilityof humanitarian aid groups to thebeneficiaries of aid.
International JusticeMission
(Alexandria,VA)
$300,000
To help evangelical churchministriesaround theworld protect and promotehuman rights.
InternationalWomen Judges
Foundation (Washington,DC)
$100,000
For international judicial education toenhance the application of human rightsconventions in resolving cases.
IsraelMovement for Progressive
Judaism (Israel)
$150,000
For activities of the Israel Religious ActionCenter to advance religious freedomandpluralism in Israel.
IsraelWomen’s Network
(Israel)
$150,000
For the network’sWomen’s Policy ResearchCenter to conduct research onwomen andwork and onwomen’s leadership.
Ittijah–Union of Arab Community
Based Associations (Israel)
$200,000
To coordinate and provide technicalassistance to Palestinian Israeli NGOs,including activities related to the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Kav La’Oved-Workers’Hotline for
the Protection of Workers’Rights
(Israel)
$152,500
For theMigrantWorkers OutreachProgram,which provides legaland humanitarian assistance toforeignworkers in Israel.
Lambda Legal Defense and
Education Fund, Inc
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For litigation and advocacy and projectsupport for the Foster Care Initiative onbehalf of lesbian and gay youth in theU.S. child welfare system.
Lawyers’Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
(Washington,DC)
$900,000
For advocacy and litigation to advanceracial justice.
Lawyers’Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For conferences and publications topromote effective U.S.NGO participationin the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights (NewYork,NY)
$1,700,000
For activities to promote human rightsworldwide and for projects on refugeerights, labor rights and the use of videoto target unlawful policies and practices.
Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights (NewYork,NY)
$800,000
To increase its program and advocacyexpertise, redesign and expand itscommunications capacity and developa diverse financial base.
Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights (NewYork,NY)
$130,000
To build a network onuniversal jurisdiction.
Leadership Education for Asian
Pacifics, Inc. (Los Angeles,CA)
$300,000
For the research, community educationand networking activities of its AsianPacific American Public Policy Institute.
M.A.A.L.A. Business for Social
Responsibility in Israel
(Israel)
$200,000
To expand educational and consultativeworkwithin the Israeli business communityon issues of corporate social responsibility.
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Peace and Social Justice
Management Assistance Group
(Washington,DC)
$1,800,000
For technical assistance to foundationgrantees and to develop and implementa long-term financial plan.
Maryland,University of
(College Park,MD)
$150,000
For an international conference, aWebsite and amonograph on perpetratortestimony as a resource for human rightspromotion.
Mexican American Legal Defense
and Educational Fund
(Los Angeles,CA)
$600,000
For national civil rights advocacy andlitigation on behalf of Latinos.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$600,000
For research and public education onaffirmative action and diversity in highereducation.
Migrants Rights International
(Switzerland)
$125,000
To internationalize NGO and civilsociety participation onmigration andxenophobia issues at the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Migration Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$1,250,000
For start-up costs of a new policy andresearch center dedicated tomigrant andrefugee issues.
Migration Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To assist with the start-up of a new policyresearch institute onmigration issues.
Minnesota,University of
(Minneapolis,MN)
$300,000
For the research, public education andtechnical assistance activities of theInstitute on Race and Poverty.
Ms. Foundation forWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For the NewVoices, Proactive Strategiesinitiative to continue its grant making,convening and technical assistanceactivities for organizations engaged inorganizing low-wagewomenworkers.
NAACP Special Contribution Fund
(Baltimore,MD)
$500,000
For the fund’s core civil rights advocacyactivities.
National Advocates for Pregnant
Women, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For litigation andother advocacy to protectpregnant women and their children frompunitive drug and fetal rights policy.
National American Indian Court
Judges Association (Boulder,CO)
$50,000
For an educational program to familiarizefederal judgeswith tribal judges and courts.
National Asian Pacific American
Legal Consortium
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For strategic planning and institutionalcapacity building.
National Center for Human
Rights Education, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$200,000
To develop trainingmaterials and conductworkshops on human rights for socialjustice activists and for the BeyondTolerance program.
National Council of La Raza
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
For the research, education andadvocacy activities of the Civil Rightsand Immigration Projects.
National Gay and LesbianTask
Force Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For theTask Force’s Racial and EconomicJustice and Aging Initiatives.
National Immigrant Legal
Support Center (Los Angeles,CA)
$300,000
For strategic planning and to build thecenter’s capacity to satisfy the growingdemand for its expertise in immigrationlaw and related issues.
National Immigration Forum, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$95,000
For research and development of a theaterpiece about the immigrant experience inthe United States.
National Korean American
Service and Education
Consortium, Inc. (Flushing,NY)
$160,000
For advocacy and education on behalfof Korean Americans.
National Network for Immigrant
and Refugee Rights
(Oakland,CA)
$140,000
To coordinate participation of U.S. immi-grant and refugee groups at the U.N.World Conference Against Racism andconduct post-conference activities.
Native American Rights Fund, Inc.
(Boulder,CO)
$1,500,000
For litigation, advocacy and outreach andfor litigation to recover Indian trust funds.
NCAI Fund (Washington,DC)
$250,000
For public education,outreach and analysison Native American issues.
New Israel Fund
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
Emergency support for organizing andeducational activities of Palestinian-IsraeliNGOs, including activities related to theU.N.World Conference Against Racism.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For theWomen of Color Policy Network’sactivities to expand the participation ofwomen of color in thewomen’s rights andhuman rights arenas.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For research on the potential roleof private bill legislation in civil rightsenforcement.
Northern California Grantmakers
(San Francisco,CA)
$60,000
For Grantmakers Concerned withImmigrants and Refugees, a funders’affinity group.
Notre Dame,University of
(Notre Dame, IN)
$750,000
For the Center for Civil and Human Rightsto establish an accountability resourcecenter and conduct related activities.
NOWLegal Defense and
Education Fund, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$660,000
To advancewomen’s rights and genderequality and for Beyond Federalism,a multidisciplinary project to developnew strategies to preserve and expandcivil rights.
Penal Reform International
(England)
$200,000
For a project on racism and the criminaljustice system related to the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Physicians for Human Rights, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$300,000
To utilize the skills and knowledge ofphysicians and health professionals toadvance human rights.
Public Interest Projects
(NewYork,NY)
$1,500,000
For a grant-making and technical assis-tance program for immigration lawprograms and local and statewide immi-gration policy advocacy coalitions.
Puerto Rican Legal Defense and
Education Fund, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For the U.S.NGO Coordinating Committeeto increase participation of U.S.-basedNGOs in theU.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
Refugee Consortium of Kenya
(Kenya)
$310,000
For advocacy, legal services, public educa-tion and networking among and onbehalf of refugees in East Africa.
RefugeeWomen’s Network, Inc.
(Decatur,GA)
$150,000
For workwith and on behalf of refugeeand immigrant women.
Resource Center of the Americas
(Minneapolis,MN)
$200,000
To build public understanding of economicglobalization andmobilize support forpolicies that respect human rights.
Robert F. KennedyMemorial
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For theYouthAgainst Racismproject aimedat involving young people in theU.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$100,000
For research and publications on race andgender discrimination inmajor metropol-itan employment markets.
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Human Rights and International Cooperation
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$65,000
For activities to strengthen thewomen’shuman rights network in its workon the intersection of gender, race andclass in connectionwith theU.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Songmasters, LLC (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a project to utilize popularmusic toeducate young people about the historyof the fight for human rights and socialjustice in the United States.
Southern Coalition for
Educational Equity, Inc.
(Jackson,MS)
$50,000
To help Southern rural women developstructures and strategies to ensuretheir full participation in and accessto economic and social justice.
Southern Education Foundation,
Inc. (Atlanta,GA)
$500,000
To implement the findings of theComparative Human RelationsInitiative and participate in the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Southern University and A.&M.
College (Baton Rouge, LA)
$25,000
For a human rights symposium:Intersectional Issues FacingWomenof Color.
Stichting Africa Legal Aid
(Netherlands)
$100,000
To build the capacity of an organizationworking to promote human rights inAfrica through legal protection.
Stichting Centre onHousing
Rights and Evictions
(Switzerland)
$150,000
For research, training, legal advocacyandmonitoringwith respect to evictionsand housing rights.
Tel Aviv University (Israel)
$200,000
For activities of the Public Interest LawResearch Center.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$4,000,000
To assist with the start-up of theInternational Center for TransitionalJustice.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$10,500
For a project of the International HumanRights Funding Group to identify newfunding sources for human rights.
Tougaloo College
(Tougaloo,MS)
$25,000
For a civil rights scholarship fund inmemory of Frank R. Parker, a respectedcivil rights attorney and authority onvoting rights.
Tufts University
(Medford,MA)
$75,000
For a project on lessons learned by inter-national humanitarian organizationsresponding to refugee crises.
Tufts University
(Medford,MA)
$54,180
For a project on lessons on human rightslearned by international humanitarianorganizations regarding post-cold warrefugee crises.
United Nations Association of
the United States of America, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$218,000
For a U.S. public education campaign onthe International Criminal Court.
U.S.Women Connect
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For a network of groups working toadvance women’s rights domesticallywithin the human rights framework.
Urban Justice Center
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For litigation and advocacy on gay andlesbian youth issues.
Vassar College
(Poughkeepsie,NY)
$250,000
For the African American Policy Forumto conduct research and advocacy onsocial change at the intersection of race,gender and class.
Wellesley College (Wellesley,MA)
$100,000
For theWomen’s Rights Network topublicize and address child custody anddomestic violence issues in the UnitedStates.
William J. Brennan Jr. Center for
Justice, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$400,000
For programs on democracy, poverty andcriminal justice.
Women Living UnderMuslim
Laws (England)
$200,000
For institutional development,networkingand projects on fundamentalisms,militari-zation and peacebuilding.
Women of Color Resource Center
(Berkeley,CA)
$70,000
For work related to the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Women’s Environment and
Development Organization
(WEDO) (NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
For programs on sustainable develop-ment, economic justice and gender andgovernance.
Women’s Institute for Leadership
Development for Human Rights
(San Francisco,CA)
$335,000
To expand the leadership of women ofcolor and youngwomen to facilitate theirparticipation in the national and globalhuman rights agenda, including the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Women, Law andDevelopment
International (Washington,DC)
$248,900
To incorporate a strategic approachto human rights advocacy into effortsto combat domestic abuse.
Women’s Learning Partnership
for Rights,Development and
Peace, Ltd. (Bethesda,MD)
$150,000
For the Cyber Institute to create culture-specific,multimedia education tools forindividuals and organizations supportingMuslimwomen’s participation andleadership.
Women’s Research and Education
Institute (Washington,DC)
$100,000
For theWomen in theMilitary project.
World Federalist Movement
Institute for Global Policy Ltd.
(NewYork,NY)
$602,000
For the NGO coalition for an InternationalCriminal Court.
Yedid-The Center forMutual
Support and the Advancement of
Social and Community Activities
(Israel)
$200,000
For community-based activities topromote cultural, social and economicrights in Israel.
International cooperation
Africa Policy Information Center
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
For strategic planning for themerger ofthree organizations focused on U.S. policytoward Africa.
American Friends of the Ludwig
Foundation of Cuba
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a program to create opportunities forcultural exchange among flagship U.S.and Cuban cultural institutions.
Arias Foundation for Peace and
Human Progress (Costa Rica)
$250,000
For the Central American Dialogue forSecurity and Disarmament.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$275,000
To disseminate the findings of a project toidentify new approaches to enhancingpublic understanding of and support forcooperative U.S. involvement inworldaffairs.
AutonomousTechnological
Institute ofMexico (Mexico)
$300,000
For policy research on U.S.-Latin Americarelations,with a special focus on trade,the environment, immigration, laborrights and Cuba.
Bradford,University of (England)
$100,000
To enhance transparency, accountabilityand restraint in the transfer of conven-tional arms by strengthening the U.N.Register of Conventional Arms and otherinternationalmechanisms.
British American Security
Information Council
(Washington,DC)
$260,000
For projects on nuclear arms control anddisarmament, the international armstrade and cooperative security relationsin Europe.
Cambridge,University of
(England)
$400,000
For research on the regulation of interna-tional financialmarkets and disseminationof the results to developing countrypolicymakers.
Cambridge,University of
(England)
$160,000
For curriculum development and twosummerworkshops on advances indevelopment economics.
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Peace and Social Justice
Canadian Centre for Policy
Alternatives on behalf of Polaris
Institute (Canada)
$450,000
For activities to build the capacity of publicservice unions and allied civil societygroups to participate in the debate overprivatizing public services.
Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace
(Washington,DC)
$350,000
For the Global Policy Program.
Center for Cultural andTechnical
Interchange Between East and
West, Inc. (Honolulu,HI)
$200,000
For research and publications on theimplementation and impact of techno-logical investment projects in emergingeconomies of the Asia Pacific region.
Center for International Policy,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$295,000
For the research, policy and networkingactivities of the center’s Cuba andColombia programs.
Center for National Policy
(Washington,DC)
$80,000
For a research, publication and policyforums project,New Perspectives on theU.S.Trade Policy Debate.
Center for Research on the
Mesoamerica Region
(Guatemala)
$135,000
To implement a strategic plan and providepost-earthquake emergency relief to itssister organization, the El Salvador-basedGallard Library.
Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For analysis of and public education onU.S.military spending.
Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For educational activities to promotemore informed U.S. policies on Africa.
Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For a conference and papers on Chinain the U.S. political imagination.
Centre for Conflict Resolution
(South Africa)
$65,000
For continued research,workshops andpublications on South Africa’s chemicaland biological warfare program in theapartheid era.
Colorado,University of
(Boulder,CO)
$40,000
For an exchange program between youngU.S. and Chinese scholars and analysts.
Commonwealth Foundation, Inc.
(Cambridge,MA)
$90,000
For research and analysis on U.S.militarypolicy and its budgetary implications.
Constituency for Africa Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For educational and organizing activitiesregarding U.S. policies on AIDS in Africa.
Cordell Hull Institute
(Washington,DC)
$149,500
For roundtablemeetings on internationaltrade negotiations and efforts to improveglobal equity in trade relations.
Cornell University (Ithaca,NY)
$200,000
For a five-country research study onRevitalizing the LaborMovement:A Comparative Perspective.
Cornell University (Ithaca,NY)
$54,000
For a conference publication on currentintersections among gender, economicdevelopment and globalization.
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For a study group on U.S. approachesto global issues and internationalcooperation and to implement a profes-sional development program for itsjunior research staff.
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a study group onmilitary economicsissues.
Cuban Committee for Democracy,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$51,000
For efforts at promoting pluralism anddemocratic practices within the Cuban-American community and a peacefultransition toward democracy inCuba.
Duke University
(Durham,NC)
$174,000
For a collaborative project among keypublic,nonprofit and private-sector groupsconcerned with U.S. foreign policy toexplore alternatives to the use of economicsanctions as a policy instrument.
Economic and Social Research
Foundation (Tanzania)
$100,000
For start-up activities in the creation of aresearch fellowships program enablingscholars to explore the impact of globali-zation on development strategies inAfrican economies.
Economic Cooperation
Foundation (Israel)
$100,000
For a research project exploring the lessonslearned from the breakdown of Israeli-Palestinian final status negotiations.
Education Fund of the American
Center for International Labor
Solidarity (Washington,DC)
$425,000
For the Asia Labor Network onInternational Financial Institutions tostrengthen the capacity of its affiliatesto address economic policies affectingthe lives of working people.
Educational Foundation for
Nuclear Science (Chicago, IL)
$300,000
For the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists andactivities to educate the public aboutglobal security issues.
Eisenhower Exchange
Fellowships, Incorporated
(Philadelphia, PA)
$200,000
For the Single Nation/Single Region fellow-ship program to bringmid-career Russianprofessionals to the United States for aseries of cultural exchanges.
Encuentro de la Cultura Cubana
(Spain)
$600,000
For research, publications and networkingamong the Cuban diaspora.
Federation of American Scientists
Fund (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For the Global Security Project to supportactivities related to nuclear arms controland disarmament.
Florida International University
(Miami, FL)
$250,000
To review and evaluate different models oftransitional justice and national reconcili-ation and to recommendwhatmight proveuseful to a Cuba in transition.
Freedom FromDebt Coalition
(Philippines)
$248,000
For the Jubilee South network to conducteducation, research and capacity-buildingactivities on the debt burden of thepoorest countries.
Friends of the Earth
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For networking, public education andadvocacy to promote expanded corporatesocial and environmental disclosurerequirements.
Fund for Peace, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For research and advocacy on lightweapons.
Fundación Amistad, Inc.
(East Hampton,NY)
$100,000
To coordinate a seminar series on collectiondevelopment, public services and preser-vation and conservation for the library atCuba’s Casa de las Americas.
GeorgetownUniversity
(Washington,DC)
$97,000
For research on international relationsand governance in Africa and their relation-ship to state reform,peace and security,and economic development.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$230,000
For a forum promoting analytical discus-sions of contemporary Asian economicpolicy issues.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$75,000
For a project to bring Iranian officialsto an executive training program atHarvard.
Humanitarian Project, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$87,000
To help initiate an international, interfaithcampaign on global spending priorities.
Institute for Caribbean and
International Studies
(Atlanta,GA)
$50,000
To organize a workshop on economicand social development strategies in theCaribbean and to identify potentiallinkages between Cuban and Caribbeaneconomies.
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Human Rights and International Cooperation
Institute for Energy and
Environmental Research
(Takoma Park,MD)
$130,000
For technical, analytical and networkingassistance to grassroots groupsworking onnuclear disarmament issues in the U.S.,Russia, France, England, China, India andJapan.
Institute for Global Economics
(Korea,Rep. of)
$129,000
To complete and disseminate a reporton international financial architecturalreforms and their impact on emergingeconomies.
Institute for Policy Studies
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
For the institute’s Peace and SecurityProgram.
Institute forWar and Peace
Reporting, Ltd. (England)
$100,000
For activities that promote independentmedia and other moderate voices withincrisis areas.
Institute of Development Studies
(England)
$200,000
For a research project to examine proposalsfor reforming the global financial gover-nance structure from the perspective oftheir impact on developing countries.
Inter-American Development
Bank (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For a program of research and consulta-tion culminating in a strategy for themodernization of Latin America’s labormarkets.
Inter-American Dialogue
(Washington,DC)
$900,000
To promote informed debate on hemi-spheric problems;advance regionalcooperation; and encourage policydiscussions among governments,international institutions and otherorganizations.
Inter-American Dialogue
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For research on economic choices inthe Andean countries and to highlightpolicies that would promote economicgrowth, social stability and securityin the region.
Inter-American Dialogue
(Washington,DC)
$130,000
For research and publication of a studyexamining the role ofmultilateral develop-ment banks inmiddle-income countries.
Inter-American Dialogue
(Washington,DC)
$93,900
To analyze the performance, leadershipstyles and legacy of eight contemporaryLatin American presidents.
International Alert–The Standing
International Forumon Ethnic
Conflict, Genocide and Human
Rights (England)
$200,000
For the International Action Network onSmall Arms and for the LightWeaponsand Peacebuilding Programme to producea trainingmanual.
International Alert–The Standing
International Forumon Ethnic
Conflict, Genocide and Human
Rights (England)
$175,000
For policy research and advocacy to bringwomen into peace processes.
International Alert–The Standing
International Forumon Ethnic
Conflict, Genocide and Human
Rights (England)
$167,000
Tomaximize the positive impact ofcompanies working in conflict-proneregions by incorporating conflict-prevention frameworks into theirbusiness practices.
International Center for
Economic Growth
(Daly City,CA)
$221,500
For research,publication anddisseminationof case studies on themanagement ofcapital flows in transitional economiesin Eastern and Central Europe.
International Institute for
Strategic Studies (England)
$350,000
For a research programon conflict resolu-tion, peace support operations andhumanitarian intervention.
International Institute for
Strategic Studies (England)
$75,000
To develop a program on the strategicimplications of advances in informationtechnology.
International Labor Rights
Education and Research Fund, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For activities to protect workers’ rightsworldwide.
International Labour
Organization (Switzerland)
$507,600
To examine and reform the priorities andgovernance structures of internationaltrade unions.
International Peace Research
Institute,Oslo (Norway)
$50,000
To develop a database on small armsproduction and trade.
Jane Addams Peace Association,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$180,000
Tomonitor the implementation ofU.N. Security Council Resolution 1325 onWomen,Peace and Security.
Jane Addams Peace Association,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$50,000
For a project on the NonproliferationTreaty.
Kalamazoo College
(Kalamazoo,MI)
$75,000
For a conference on the debate overcommon currency areas and dollarizationin the Americas and to publish theconference papers.
Kent State University
(Kent,OH)
$350,000
For the Capital Ownership Group,auniversity-based international networkand“virtual think tank,”which promotesbroadening ownership of produc-tive assets among working peopleworldwide.
Lawyers Alliance forWorld
Security, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$75,000
For a project to educate policy makersabout ways of strengthening nonprolifer-ation regimes.
Maryland,University of
(Adelphi,MD)
$400,000
To reconceptualize approaches to disarma-ment and encourage a new generationofmilitary policy experts.
Maryland,University of
(Adelphi,MD)
$400,000
For the networking activities ofWomenin International Security.
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (Cambridge,MA)
$75,000
For research and publications on ADefenseBudget for the New Century.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$50,902
For research and public policy develop-ment on globalization, tax competitionand the social insurance crisis.
Minnesota,University of
(Minneapolis,MN)
$100,000
For a symposium to assist the U.N.WorkingGroup on the Methods and Activities ofTransnational Corporations.
National Academy of Sciences
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For the China Dialogue Program,whichbrings Chinese and U.S. policy makerstogether to discuss security issues.
National Labour and Economic
Development Institute
(South Africa)
$520,000
To establish a network of union-linkedresearchers and institutions in SouthernAfrica, conduct research andbuild linkswith labor organizations in the globalSouth and developed countries.
National Policy Association
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For research and public education onMindingOur Business: Implementing theOECD Guidelines for MultinationalEnterprises.
National Priorities Project, Inc.
(Northampton,MA)
$100,000
To create an online database on thelocal effects ofmilitary and other federalgovernment expenditures.
National Security Archive Fund,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$225,000
To promote transparency and account-ability in U.S. foreign policy.
New School University
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For research and advocacy on the roleof economic factors in preventing conflictand promoting disarmament.
New School University
(NewYork,NY)
$75,000
For senior fellows at theWorld PolicyInstitute and a campaign to expand reader-ship of theWorld Policy Journal.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$2,500,000
For the Center on InternationalCooperation.
126
Peace and Social Justice
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$174,000
For the Cuba Project, a joint activityof the university’s Bildner Center forWestern Hemisphere Studies andQueens College.
Northeastern University
(Boston,MA)
$250,000
For cross-national research on labormarketcapacity, economic performance andsocial well-being leading to the develop-ment of a new labormarket statisticsarchitecture.
Norwegian People’s Aid
(Norway)
$150,000
For research andmeetings in preparationfor the 2001 edition of Reality of Aid,which provides country-by-country dataand assessments of internationaldevelopment assistance.
Pacific Council on International
Policy (Los Angeles,CA)
$350,000
To strengthen administration and developnew programs.
Physicians for Social
Responsibility, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
For a public education campaign onthe health dangers of nuclear weaponsand nuclear war.
Ploughshares Fund
(San Francisco,CA)
$50,000
For the Peace and Security Funders Group.
Royal Institute of International
Affairs (England)
$65,000
To conduct research and analysis ontransformations in Iraqi society over thepast decade.
Saferworld (England)
$375,000
For activities to curb the proliferationof conventional arms, including lightweapons.
Social Accountability
International
(NewYork,NY)
$600,000
For training,workshops and publicationsto promote greater trade union partici-pation in the analysis, development andmonitoring of voluntary workplacestandards.
Southampton,University of
(England)
$100,000
For activities of the Programme forPromoting Nuclear Nonproliferationto strengthen the nonproliferationregime.
Sustainable Development Policy
Institute (Pakistan)
$170,000
For a research and internship programon gender, security and nuclear disarma-ment in Pakistan and South Asia.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$40,000
For the Urgent Action Fund to convenemeetings on women and conflict inAfrica.
Torcuato di Tella University
Foundation (Argentina)
$250,000
To conduct and publish research onGlobalization and Regionalism:Governance, Education and Equityin the Southern Cone.
United Nations Development
Programme (NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For research, consultations, publicationand dissemination of a report on tradeand its global governance from a humandevelopment and gender perspective.
United Nations Economic
Commission for Latin America
and the Caribbean (Chile)
$397,000
For research and network building amongLatin American,Asian and African researchinstitutes on domestic policy tomanageinternational economic volatility.
Verification ResearchTraining
& Information Centre (Vertic)
(England)
$390,000
For the Arms Control and DisarmamentVerification Program.
Victoria,University of
(Canada)
$300,000
To research and compile an inventoryof current proposals for reforming interna-tional economic institutions.
Videoteca del Sur
(NewYork,NY)
$125,000
For cultural exchanges between U.S. andCuban filmmakers.
Visual Arts Research and Resource
Center Relating to the Caribbean,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$275,000
For a film retracing the history of theSantería religion in Cuba.
Wellesley College
(Wellesley,MA)
$216,000
For research and publications on incorpo-rating gender more effectively into thepolicies of peace and security agencies.
WilliamDavidson Institute at
the University of Michigan School
of Business Administration
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$75,000
For the participation of women anddeveloping country and transitioneconomy researchers in the Sixth AnnualInternational Conference onTransitionEconomics.
Wisconsin Project on Nuclear
Arms Control (Washington,DC)
$270,000
For activities to control the export ofmaterials and technology that contributeto the proliferation of weapons ofmassdestruction.
Women’s Foreign Policy Group,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$150,000
For activities to promote women’sleadership in peace and internationalcooperation.
WoodrowWilson International
Center for Scholars
(Washington,DC)
$115,000
For research on Cuban autonomousorganizations and institutions.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Human rights
Andean Commission of Jurists
(Peru)
$450,000
For regional human rights advocacy,education and litigation and to promoteawareness of the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism among local NGOs.
Association for Defense of
Human Rights (Peru)
$270,000
To document human rights violationsin Peru.
Association of Social
Communications“Calandria”
(Peru)
$146,000
Tomonitormedia coverage of the electoralprocess in Peru focusing on transitionaljustice and educational reform issues.
Center for Afro Study and
Research (Uruguay)
$150,000
For a strategic alliance of Afro-LatinAmerican and Caribbean institutions toparticipate in theU.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Center for Legal and Social
Studies (CELS) (Argentina)
$400,000
To preserve documents on state terrorismin Argentina.
Center for Legal and Social
Studies (CELS) (Argentina)
$10,000
For legal advocacy on citizen securityand human rights and the applicabilityof international law to nationaljurisprudence.
Center for Socio-Economic
Studies of Development (Chile)
$330,000
To establish an International Commissionon Police Reform for the Andean Regionand Southern Cone.
Citizen Power Foundation
(Argentina)
$249,000
For the Public Interest LawProgramand fortraining and dissemination activities topromote accountabilitymechanisms andpublic interest law in Argentina.
Colombian Commission of Jurists
(Colombia)
$475,000
To strengthen protection for human rightsin Colombia,with a focus on transitionaljustice and the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Corporation for Legal Training
for Citizenship and Democracy
(Chile)
$350,000
To train NGOs on public interest actionsin Chile.
Diego Portales University
(Chile)
$10,000
For research and training activities inpublic interest law in Argentina, Chileand Peru.
127
Human Rights and International Cooperation
Foundation-administered project
$2,207
To organize a workshop on historicalmemory,human rights and archivalpreservation.
Human Rights National
Coordinator (Peru)
$80,000
To constitute a truth commission in Peru.
Ideas Foundation (Chile)
$90,000
For three Latin American institutions toparticipate in the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Journalists for the Defense of
Independent Journalism
(Argentina)
$60,000
To promote freedom of expression andinformation in Argentina.
Legal Defense Institute (Peru)
$50,000
Tomonitor judicial reformand the armedforces during the transition to democracyin Peru.
National Security Archive Fund,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$80,000
To sustain and expand the archives’sproject of historical recovery and interna-tional accountability concerning Chile.
Universidad Alberto Hurtado
(Chile)
$100,000
For research on historical patterns ofpolitical reconciliation in Chile.
Woman’s Development
Corporation“LaMorada”
(Chile)
$161,000
For legal aid, training and other activitiesto protect women’s rights in Chile.
Brazil
Human rights
AFIRMA Communication and
Research
$75,000
For studies and publications in preparationfor the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
Afro-Reggae Cultural Group
$98,000
For community development, artistic andeducational activities promoting demo-cratic citizenship for disadvantaged youthin Rio de Janeiro.
Brazilian Society for Instruction
$21,000
For research to clarify the relationshipbetween domestic and institutionalviolence and the crimes of womenprisoners in Rio de Janeiro.
Brazilian Society for Instruction
$20,000
For studies and publications in preparationfor the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
Center for the Creation of Popular
Images
$68,760
To disseminate information on the discus-sions and proposals of the U.N.WorldConference Against Racismwith respectto the country’s African-Brazilian andindigenous populations.
Center for Studies on Relations
and Inequality in theWorkplace
$290,000
To expand its program onworkplace racediscrimination, develop a new programto combat racial inequality in schools anddisseminate its work to a broad audience.
Center for Studies on Relations
and Inequality in theWorkplace
$100,000
To promote and disseminatematerialsrelated to the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Citizenship, Studies, Research,
Information and Action
$250,000
To promote public education and debateon gender and human rights.
Executive Secretariat for
Articulation of BrazilianWomen
for Beijing ’95
$250,000
Tomonitor implementation of the BeijingPlatform of Action.
Feminist Studies and Assistance
Center
$15,000
To create a neworganization designedto change the image of women in theBrazilianmassmedia.
Geledes–Institute of Black
Women
$284,240
To restructure and strengthen its humanrights program; establish the LeilaGonzalez Studies Center towork on keygender, race and human rights issues;and evaluate its racism program.
Geledes–Institute of Black
Women
$50,000
For participation in the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Geledes–Institute of Black
Women
$21,000
To disseminate information and to enableblack women to participate in the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Global Justice Center
$40,000
For a pilot training program on interna-tional human rights law.
Human Rights Society of
Maranhao
$100,000
For legal and technical assistance to helphistoric rural African-Brazilian commu-nities to secure legal title to their land.
Institute for the Advancement
of Equity
$40,000
For legal and advocacy actions relatedto the protection of women’s rights.
Inter-American Institute of
Human Rights (Costa Rica)
$45,000
For a research paper on national and inter-national instruments against racismand to organize ameeting of indigenousand African-Brazilian leaders in prepara-tion for the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
Minas Gerais, Federal University
of
$260,000
To repeat its intensive course on quantita-tivemethods in social sciences and launchan annual household survey in the BeloHorizontemetropolitan area.
Nucleus for Black Studies
$10,000
For a seminar in the southern regionof Brazil to prepare for the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Society for Black Studies and
Citizenship in the State of Sergipe
$10,000
For a study and seminar on black womenin northeastern Brazil in preparationfor the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
International cooperation
International Human Rights Law
Group (Washington,DC)
$98,000
For training, technical assistance andinternational advocacy in favor of African-Brazilian rights.
China
Human rights
All-ChinaWomen’s Federation
$158,700
To improve legal services for womenthrough an intensive legal trainingprogram for rights protection cadres tobe piloted with the HebeiWomen’sFederation.
All-ChinaWomen’s Federation
$10,000
To improve legal services for womenthrough an intensive legal trainingprogram for rights protection cadres.
China University of Political
Science and Law
$170,000
For the Center for Criminal Law and Justiceand for comparative research conferencesand academic exchanges on criminalevidence law reform.
China University of Political
Science and Law
$100,000
For the litigation, networking, trainingand public education activities of theCenter for Legal Assistance to PollutionVictims.
China University of Political
Science and Law
$79,400
For research on enforcement of civil judg-ments rendered by Chinese courts.
Foundation-administered project
$490,500
To promote clinical legal education andto strengthen university-based legalaid centers in China.
Legislative Affairs Commission of
the National People’s Congress
$109,000
For theoretical and applied research onadministrative law.
MapleWomen’s Psychological
Counseling Center
$116,200
To provide legal and psychological servicesfor women.
National Committee onUnited
States-China Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$84,400
To host a research visit by a senior delega-tion of Chinese judges.
National Judges College
$51,000
To establish a new research center onjudicial reformwithin the national trainingcenter for judicial leadership.
128
Peace and Social Justice
National People’s Congress,
Research Office of the General
Office of the Standing
Committee
$88,200
For comparative research and publicationson foreign legislative systems and onpeople’s congresses within China.
Peking University, School of Law
$80,000
For the establishment of a center for laborlaw research and legal aid toworkers.
Peking University, School of Law
$50,400
For research on reforming reeducationthrough labor and other forms of punish-ment ofminor crimes.
Peking University, School of Law
$40,000
To study and develop legislative andelectoral systems and strengthen publicparticipation in the law-making process.
People’s University of China
$69,000
For collaborative research and publicationsby Chinese civil procedure scholars inorder to raise the profile of civil procedurelaw in China and improve the quality ofteaching and research.
People’s University of China
$47,900
For comprehensive study of implementa-tion of criminal procedure reform in China.
People’s University of China
$42,700
For the development of evidence law inChina.
Research Center on Juvenile
Legal Aid
$76,400
For research on children’s rights and publicinterest law in the field of children’s rights.
Save the Children Fund
(England)
$43,350
To advocate for juvenile justice reformin China.
Shanghai Judges’Association
$108,100
To develop a pilot project restructuringChinese judicial and legal personnel.
SichuanUniversity
$26,400
For research on barriers to access to justicein the Chinese legal system.
South Central University of
Economics and Law
$89,680
To train administrative judges.
South Central University of
Economics and Law
$21,200
For a conference on the potential ofjudicial training for professionalizingChina’s judiciary.
Spangenberg Group
(West Newton,MA)
$45,520
To provide law and advocacy skills trainingto All-ChinaWomen’s Federation cadres.
Spangenberg Group
(West Newton,MA)
$25,770
To provide technical assistance in legalservices training and system design toChinese organizations.
TsinghuaUniversity
$59,000
To train local government officials onthe legal aspects of social policy problemsand to explore legal procedures forincreased participation in social policydecisionmaking.
Yunnan Xishuangbanna
PrefectureWomen and Children
Psychological and Legal
Consultation Service Center
$6,150
For legal and psychological counseling forwomen and children in a rural,minoritiesarea of Yunnan Province in southwesternChina.
International cooperation
Association for Chinese Economic
Studies (Australia)
$10,000
For an international conference onAchieving GrowthWith Equity.
Association of Chinese Professors
of Social Sciences in the United
States (Buffalo,NY)
$25,000
For an international conference on21st Century China: Facing the Challengesof Globalization.
China Institute of Contemporary
International Relations
$110,000
For research onWestern humanitarianintervention and its implications forinternational relations.
China Institute of Contemporary
International Relations
$50,000
For a program of research on theTaiwanissue and Asia-Pacific relations.
China Reform Forum
$25,000
For an international conferenceon economic globalization and itsimpact.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$102,000
For research and a symposium on theforeign policy strategies of theUnitedStates, Russia and European powers andtheir relationship with China.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$100,000
For the APEC Policy Research Center tohold a conference on coordinatingsubregional institutions and for researchon APEC and on China’s role in APEC.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences on behalf of Chinese
Association for American
Studies
$80,000
To publish research books by Chinesescholars on American studies.
FudanUniversity
$100,000
To launch a new cooperative program ofresearch and workshops on arms controland regional security.
FudanUniversity
$77,000
For a series of research projects inAmerican studies.
FudanUniversity
$28,300
For an international conference onSino-U.S. Relations.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$82,700
For a history of Sino-U.S. relationshipsup to 1980.
Hong Kong,University of
(Hong Kong)
$31,000
For the university’s Center of AmericanStudies to conduct two summer schoolsfor students from Peking University.
Institute for Strategic Studies of
the National Defense University
$79,000
For a program of exchanges between theNational Defense University and overseasresearchers on security issues.
National Committee on
American Foreign Policy, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$77,000
To conduct a series of U.S.-China-Taiwanroundtables on U.S.-China policy andcross-strait relations.
Pacific Society of China
$40,000
For publication of Pacific Journal.
People’s University of China
$8,000
For an international conference on Chinaand theWorld in the Era of Globalization.
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$30,000
For research on China’s East Asia securitystrategy (2001-2005).
Shanghai Society of International
Relations
$15,000
For an international symposium onU.S. China PolicyMaking and China-U.S.Relations.
TsinghuaUniversity
$8,537
To translate a leading internationalstudies textbook,ContendingTheories ofInternational Relations, into Chinese.
Utah State University
(Logan,UT)
$9,400
To hold an international conference onU.S.-China relations after 1989.
Eastern Africa
Human rights
African Public Radio
(Burundi)
$75,000
For radio programs to provide news toCentral African refugee communities inTanzania and build public respect andsupport for human rights and civil society,particularly the rights of refugees.
AkinaMamawa Afrika
(England)
$100,000
For preparatory activities of East Africanwomen delegates to the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Amnesty International
(England)
$62,175
For publications on racism and humanrights in Africa and their disseminationas part of activities for the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
129
Human Rights and International Cooperation
Coalition onViolence Against
Women (Kenya)
$100,000
For a counseling and training projectfor women survivors of domestic violencein Kenya.
Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative (India)
$260,000
For comparative research andmeetingson police reform and policing budgetsin eastern Africa.
Dar Es Salaam,University of
(Tanzania)
$100,000
For teaching, research and exchanges onforcedmigration issues in eastern Africa.
Diocese ofMuranga Registered
Trustees (Kenya)
$63,000
For printing equipment for church publica-tions on religion, human rights and goodgovernance in an indigenous languagein central Kenya.
East African Law Society Limited
(Kenya)
$250,000
For research, public meetings and partici-pation of East Africans in the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism and forinstitutional development.
Human Rights Focus (Uganda)
$32,000
Research andmonitoring of violations ofhuman rights of displaced people restrictedto protected villages in the conflict zonesof northern Uganda.
Human Rights Network,Uganda
(Uganda)
$130,000
For a regional training and exchangeprogram for human rights NGOs ineastern and central Africa.
International Federation of
Women Lawyers (Kenya)
$100,000To provide pro bono legal aid servicesto poor women in Kenya.
InternationalWomen Judges
Foundation (Washington,DC)
$100,000
For training workshops for judges andmagistrates on enforcement of women’shuman rights in eastern Africa.
Legal andHuman Rights Centre
(Tanzania)
$100,000
For legal aid clinics serving indigentwomen in Tanzania.
Moi University (Kenya)
$142,000
For the research,networking and trainingactivities of the Centre for Refugee Studiesand to coordinate a multidisciplinarycollaborative research project on refugeerights and livelihoods in eastern Africa.
Northern Legal Resource Centre
(Kenya)
$70,000
To research,monitor and document humanrights violations of nomadic communitiesin northeastern Kenya.
OgiekWelfare Council (Kenya)
$55,600
For legal and constitutional advocacy onrights to ancestral land and the tradi-tional livelihoods of the Ogiek communityin the Rift Valley province of Kenya.
PamojaTrust (Kenya)
$200,000
For community organizing and policyadvocacy on rights of access to land andhousing for the urban poor in slumcommunities of Nairobi.
Release Political Prisoners (Kenya)
$100,000
To educate the public and policymakersabout the existence and plight of politicalprisoners in Kenya.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For activities of womenworking in conflictand post-conflict situations in Africa.
Voluntary Service Overseas
(England)
$109,000
For a pilot project offering noncustodialsentencing options and rehabilitativeprograms to remanded and convictedpetty offenders in Uganda.
Women Legal Aid Centre
(Tanzania)
$100,000
ForMwangaza, a radio outreach programonwomen’s legal rights in Tanzania.
Women’s Rights Awareness
Programme (Kenya)
$150,000
For a shelter for battered women inNairobi and to provide counseling, legalaid and other assistance to shelterresidents andwomenat risk of domesticviolence.
World Free Press Institute
(Walnut Creek,CA)
$29,350
For professional training of East Africanjournalists in news reporting andmediamanagement.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Human rights
American University
(Washington,DC)
$30,000
For an exploratory workshop on integrat-ing gender issues into legal educationin India.
Asia Pacific Forum onWomen,
Law andDevelopment
(Thailand)
$38,625
For a trainingworkshop to prepare SouthAsian participants for the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism and to senda Dalit woman to the conference.
Centre for Advocacy and Research
(India)
$300,000
For activities to address the relationshipbetweenmassmedia and the formationof values and policy in Indian society andformedia advocacy training for humanrights NGOs.
Foundation-administered project
$43,000
For research, dissemination and network-ing on human rights and social justiceissues and to develop new opportunitiesin the field.
Home for Human Rights
(Sri Lanka)
$117,000
To strengthen human rightsmonitoringand provide legal assistance to victimsof human rights violations in Sri Lanka’scivil war.
Human Rights Documentation
Center, Inc. (NewHaven,CT)
$100,000
For activities related to the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Indian Law Society (India)
$50,000
To study the use and impact of publicinterest litigation in India.
International Center for Research
onWomen (Washington,DC)
$224,945
For six resident fellows to conduct researchor design programs on gender, rights anddevelopment issues in India.
International Centre for Ethnic
Studies (Sri Lanka)
$61,000
For activities related to the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
International Centre for the Legal
Protection of Human Rights
(England)
$200,000
For judicial exchanges, colloquia andresearch to increase the capacity ofSouth Asian judges to enforce economic,social and cultural rights and expandaccess to justice.
Janvikas (India)
$138,000
For legal service centers, paralegal trainingand human rights campaigns in Gujarat.
Madre, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For Project Breakthrough,which useseducation and popular culture to raiseawareness of and encourage publicdialogue on human rights.
MajlisManch (India)
$100,000
For legal services and other activitiesaddressingwomen’s property rights andviolence against women.
Sakshi (India)
$100,000
To plan a campaign to implement court-ordered guidelines to prevent workplacesexual harassment in India and foractivities to sensitize South Asian judgesto gender issues and violence againstwomen.
Singamma Sreenivasan
Foundation (India)
$25,000
To develop human rights coursematerialson local issues for undergraduate institu-tions in India.
South Asians for Human Rights
(SAHR) (Nepal)
$57,000
For a conference to launch SAHR as ademocratic, regional body committed toaddressing human rights issues at bothnational and regional levels.
International cooperation
Centre for Research in Rural &
Industrial Development
(India)
$200,000
For research on emerging trends in negoti-ating ethnicity from a comparativeanalysis of four partition-related peaceprocesses.
Delhi Policy Group (India)
$75,000
To extend the South Asian ComprehensiveSecurity Dialogue and its activitiesbeyond Delhi to the capital cities ofother South Asian countries.
130
Peace and Social Justice
Foundation for Universal
Responsibility of His Holiness
The Dalai Lama (India)
$30,000
To holdworkshops on conflict transforma-tion for young South Asians.
Himalayan Research and Cultural
Foundation (India)
$140,500
To establish the Applied Ethics Instituteof India to promote social justice, educa-tion, human rights, tolerance andpluralism.
Institute of Peace and Conflict
Studies (India)
$150,000
For research by young scholars on differentaspects of security in India.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$255,000
For South AsianWomen in InternationalSecurity,which provides an academicbase in the areas of peace, security andinternational affairs for women fromthe subcontinent.
National Society for Promotion
of Development Administration,
Research&Training (India)
$250,000
For training andworkshops to disseminategood practices in citizen-oriented publicadministration and strengthen the policy-making capacity of senior officials.
Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies
(England)
$100,000
To establish a Ford FoundationVisitingFellowship.
Rajiv Gandhi Foundation (India)
$300,000
To promote volunteerism in the develop-ment sector by establishing a“GreenCorps”of volunteers initially focusedonwater issues.
Regional Center for Strategic
Studies (Sri Lanka)
$120,000
To continue the Kodikara Awards Program,conduct research and organize aworkshopfor directors of South Asian institutes ofstrategic and security studies.
Women’s Initiative for Peace in
South Asia Charitable Trust
(India)
$150,000
To build an environment for peace inSouth Asia through cultural exchangeand cooperation amongwomen.
Indonesia
Human rights
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
To explore strategies to increase tolerancefor and appreciation of diversity in thecontext of the transitional justice processin Indonesia.
Mexico and Central America
Human rights
Inter-American Institute of
Human Rights (Costa Rica)
$330,000
For activities to promote human rightsand democratic participation in LatinAmerica.
International cooperation
Association for the Development
of BlackWomen of Costa Rica
(Costa Rica)
$100,000
To strengthen the participation of CentralAmerican black women in the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Sin Fronteras, I.A.P. (Mexico)
$210,000
To strengthen collaboration and buildcapacity among nongovernmentalorganizations inMexico and CentralAmerica onmigration.
Middle East and North Africa
Human rights
Al-Mezan Center for Human
Rights (Gaza)
$100,000
For community-based advocacyworkon economic, social and cultural rightsin Gaza.
Alternatives, Inc. (Canada)
$250,000
For human rights research, publicationand workshops, and to prepare for theU.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Alternatives, Inc. (Canada)
$140,000
For activities to protect human rightsdefenders in the Arabworld, facilitatecommunication among themandpromotethe sharing of their skills and experi-ences across the region.
Association for Human Rights
Legal Aid (Egypt)
$56,000
For a program of legal aid and research onjuvenile justice and economic and socialrights in Alexandria, Egypt.
Birzeit University
(West Bank)
$1,075,000
To contribute to the endowment fund ofthe university’s Institute of Law, furtherdevelop the institute’s legal and judicialdatabase and conduct research.
Birzeit University
(West Bank)
$100,000
For an interdisciplinarymaster’s degreeprogram in democracy and humanrights.
Euro-MediterraneanHuman
Rights Network
(Denmark)
$80,000
For a conference on the future ofPalestinian refugees.
Human RightsWatch, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For an Arabic languageWeb site and for aregional project on freedom of expression.
Institute of Law in the Service
of Man Company, Limited
(West Bank)
$100,000
For advocacy and training to protecthuman rights and promote the ruleof law.
Institute of Law in the Service
ofMan Company, Limited
(West Bank)
$34,000
To increase the number of field workersdocumenting and reporting on humanrights violations in the Palestinianterritories.
LAW–Palestinian Society for the
Protection of Human Rights and
the Environment (West Bank)
$750,000
For a programof human rightsmonitoring,education, documentation and defense,including legal aid services.
LAW-Palestinian Society for the
Protection of Human Rights and
the Environment (West Bank)
$70,000
For an investigation into incidents ofhuman rights violations and excessiveuse of force in the Palestinianterritories.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
(Egypt)
$20,000
For five diplomats from theMinistry’sDepartment of Refugee Affairs to attendthe Refugee Studies Center’s SummerSchool in ForcedMigration.
Minnesota,University of
(Minneapolis,MN)
$20,000
For the Human Rights Center to createan Arabic version of itsWeb-based HumanRights Library.
Netherlands Organization for
International Development
Cooperation (Netherlands)
$100,000
For legal aid and literacy programs servingwomen in poor neighborhoods in Cairo.
Palestinian Centre for Human
Rights (West Bank)
$750,000
For legal advocacy and the defense andpromotion of human rights in Gaza.
Palestinian Centre for Human
Rights (West Bank)
$40,000
To enhance the capacity to document andreport on human rights violations in thecontext of the current crisis situation.
Palestinian Center for
Microprojects Development
(West Bank)
$60,000
For the provision of legal aid services toPalestinians to guarantee fair proceduresin accordancewith basic human rightsstandards.
Palestinian Diaspora and Refugee
Center (Shaml) (West Bank)
$100,000
For a program of research and advocacyon the rights and status of Palestinianrefugees.
PalestinianWorkingWomen’s
Society for Development
(West Bank)
$70,000
To train women in advocacy skills and forprograms onwomen’s labor and humanrights.
People’s Rights Research,
Publishing and Distribution
(England)
$100,000
For a human rights journal and forseminars and discussions on internationalcriminal law.
Queen Elizabeth House
(England)
$16,000
To develop amodule on Palestinianrefugees and the Universal Declarationof Human Rights.
131
Human Rights and International Cooperation
Teacher Creativity Center
(West Bank)
$125,000
For trainingworkshops to integrate gender,democracy and human rights conceptsinto educational curricula and for organi-zational capacity building.
United Nations Development
Programme (NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For a human rights training programfor the judiciary, police and other publicofficials in Egypt.
International cooperation
American University in Cairo
(Egypt)
$10,500
For the university’s annual conference oftheModel United Nations programand a special session on internationalphilanthropy.
Arab Studies Society
(East Jerusalem)
$250,000
To develop a network of youth organiza-tions, conduct research on issues of peaceand develop an action plan to promoteprivate philanthropy to benefit Palestinianinstitutions in Jerusalem.
Assiut University (Egypt)
$60,000
To the Center for Futuristic Studies forresearch and conferences on challengesto theMiddle East region in the postArab-Israeli conflict era.
Association des Chercheuses
Arabes en France (France)
$75,000
For a comparative research project onthe changing role of women in societiesat war in the Arabworld.
Boston University (Boston,MA)
$30,000
For a seminar of Middle East scholarson reform and renewal inMuslim societiesin a comparative perspective.
Center for the Dissemination
of Democracy and Community
Development (West Bank)
$100,000
To implement a training programdedicated to enhancing the understand-ing of and ability to contribute to goodgovernance practices.
Hawwa’a Center for Culture and
Arts (West Bank)
$40,000
To strengthen the center’s ability torespond to the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian crisis in theWest Bankand Gaza Strip.
Lebanese Center for Policy
Studies (Lebanon)
$200,000
For a regional social science fellowshipcompetition for young promising scholarsfrom theMiddle East.
Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies
(England)
$34,000
For a visiting fellowship for a scholar fromtheMiddle East to enhance internationalacademic cooperation.
Palestinian Center for
Microprojects Development
(West Bank)
$60,000
To develop a regional network of solidarityin favor of Palestinian families in need ofrelief and economic and social assistance.
Palestinian Center for Policy
Survey Research (West Bank)
$80,000
For research and a series of workshopsto analyze the strategy, structure andmethodology of Palestinian-Israeli peacenegotiations.
Palestinian Center for Policy
Survey Research (West Bank)
$70,000
To convenemeetings and produce policypapers in conjunctionwithTrack II activitiesto preserve the peace process betweenPalestinians and Israelis.
Palestinian Economic Council for
Development and Reconstruction
(East Jerusalem)
$100,000
For field research to document propertiesof Palestinian refugees and for a confer-ence to articulate a vision for a Palestinianstate in the newmillenium.
Russia
Human rights
Association–No toViolence
(ANNA)
$50,000
To complete and implement amodel ofdomestic violence prevention for healthcare workers.
Association–No toViolence
(ANNA)
$25,000
For office costs for a Moscow crisiscenter and the Russian Association ofCrisis Centers forWomen.
Center of Assistance to
International Protection
$125,000
For an advanced training course andpublications on the European Court onHuman Rights for Russian lawyers.
Charitable Foundation for
Support of Civil Society Initiatives
“The Fulcrum Foundation”
$450,000
For a small grants program forNGOswork-ing on human rights in Russia’s regions,with an emphasis on socioeconomicrights.
Charitable Foundation for
Support of Civil Society Initiatives
“The Fulcrum Foundation”
$235,000
To organize and administer a small grantsprogram to advance the efforts of theReclaiming theNames project to commem-orate the victims of political repressionin the former Soviet Union.
Citizens’Watch
$163,000
For activities to promote human rights inSt. Petersburg and for projects on policeaccountability, access to archives and theaccessibility of court decisions.
Citizens’Watch
$18,000
For Community and Police in a Large City,a collaborative project on community-police relationships in St. Petersburg.
Crisis Centre forWomen
$18,000
To strengthen the capacity of domesticviolence crisis centers in Siberia and theRussian Far East.
Helsinki Foundation for Human
Rights (Poland)
$100,000
For training seminars and a small-grantscompetition to strengthen regional Russianhuman rights organizations.
Human Rights Literature
Agency
$30,000
To produce a catalogue of Russian humanrights publications and disseminatematerials throughout Russia.
Indem Foundation
$50,000
For the research activities of Indem’s newCenter for Justice Assistance focused onpretrial detention and police behaviorin Russia.
Independent Council of Legal
Expertise
$116,000
Tomonitor legislation and rulings affect-ing constitutional and human rightsand provide legal aid to human rightsorganizations.
International League for Human
Rights, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$175,000
To ensure participation by Russian NGOsin the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism and for post-conferenceactivities.
Inter-Regional Public Foundation
“Siberian Civic Initiatives Support
Center”
$20,000
For a training seminar for legal cliniciansfrom Siberia and the Russian Far East.
“Maxsoft” Joint-Stock Company
$35,000
For the design and implementation ofa pilot version of a database andWeb sitefor Reclaiming the Names, a project tocommemorate Soviet victims of politicalrepression.
Memorial Human Rights Center
$400,000
For Migration Rights, a network of legalaid centers based in refugee and forcedmigrants communities across Russia.
“Memorial” International
Historical, Educational,
Charitable and Human
Rights Society
$3,500,000
To purchase, outfit andmaintain abuilding for the society.
“Memorial” International
Historical, Educational,
Charitable and Human
Rights Society
$50,000
For costs associated with the plannedpurchase of a building for the society.
“Memorial” International
Historical, Educational,
Charitable and Human
Rights Society
$22,000
For the preparation of manuals for adatabase to commemorate Soviet victimsof repression and formeetings of awork-ing group.
MoscowHelsinki Group
$70,000
To enhance the capacity of a leadinghuman rights organization and fora congress of activists.
MoscowHelsinki Group
$13,000
To support a conference and to republisha book on the history of dissent in theU.S.S.R.
132
Mother’s Right Fund
$110,000
For advocacy on behalf of and legal assis-tance to the parents of soldiers killed inpeacetime.
Non-Governmental Human
Rights Committee
$30,000
For the expansion of the activities of anNGO student legal aid clinic in Krasnoyarsk.
North Caucasus Social Institute
$44,000
To support an annual summer school forstudents from law clinics across Russia.
Penal Reform International
(England)
$310,000
For the second round of a small grantsprogram for NGOsworking on penalreform in Russia.
PermCivic Chamber
$140,000
To provide legal aid to citizens and exper-tise to lawmakers, expand its publicationsand extend its activities to surroundingregions.
Research and Information Centre
“Memorial”
$15,000
For an exhibition entitled “In theWorld
of TwoDictatorships”and for a confer-ence on repression in Nazi Germany andthe Soviet Union.
Russian Academy of Sciences
$25,000
For the continuation of work on a city-wide survey of attitudes to the police inSt. Petersburg, for surveys of the homelessand victims of domestic violence anda criminological analysis.
Russian Lawyers Committee in
Defense of Human Rights
$75,000
To develop mechanisms to advancehuman rights through precedent-settinglitigation.
Russian Lawyers Committee in
Defense of Human Rights
$25,000
To seek to establish precedent decisions infour critical human rights areas for Russiancitizens and asylum seekers.
St. Petersburg Institute of
Law named after Prince P.G.
Oldenburgsky
$156,000
Forwinter and summer schools for studentsfrom law clinics, a training program foryoung faculty and the development of aWeb site.
St. Petersburg State University of
Economics and Finance
$67,000
For the Community and Police in a LargeCity project to expand the citywide surveyof attitudes to the police in St. Petersburgand to survey hostel inhabitants and thoseserving conditional sentences.
Society for Free Representation of
the Rights and Legal Interests
of Socially Disadvantaged People
$86,000
For a summer school in Siberia for studentsfrom law clinics across Russia.
State Pedagogical Institute of
NizhnyTagil
$40,000
To design a database and set up aninformation network to commemorateSoviet victims of repression.
State Pedagogical Institute of
NizhnyTagil
$30,000
To coordinate a project on the creationof a database of Soviet victims of politicalrepression and to support the project’sUrals regional coordination center.
Tomsk Regional Historical,
Educational,Human Rights and
Charitable Society“Memorial”
$20,000
For work with rural secondary school-teachers and students on the history ofpolitical repression in theTomsk region.
Tver Fund of Legal Training
Support “Lawyer”
$85,000
For theTver University law clinic and itsannual human rights summer school forstudents from legal clinics and humanrights NGOs across Russia.
Ukhta–Pechora Public
Organization“Memorial”
$30,000
For archive research and public educationon victims of repression.
Southern Africa
Human rights
Academic Council on the United
Nations Systems (NewHaven,CT)
$50,000
For a two-weekworkshop for young schol-ars and practitioners on HumanitarianIntervention and the Role of InternationalOrganizations.
AkinaMamawa Afrika (England)
$50,000
To conduct a leadership training programfor youngwomen activists from southernAfrica.
Association of the Bar of the
City of NewYork Fund, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$50,000
For a pilot project to bring black SouthAfrican lawyers to NewYork for aworkand training program to enhance theircommercial practice skills.
Centre for Rural Legal Studies
(South Africa)
$100,000
To provide legal services to indigent farmworkers.
Centre for the Study of Violence
and Reconciliation
(South Africa)
$300,000
For theTransition and ReconciliationUnit to study reconciliation, racial identityand violence during transition and forthe Gender Unit to support projects ongender violence.
Community Law and Rural
Development Centre
(South Africa)
$200,000
For paralegal, capacity-building andgender-awareness training for its staffand constituents and for communica-tions initiatives.
Gender Links (South Africa)
$99,700
To train southern Africanmedia on cover-ing the issue of gender-based violence.
Human Rights Institute of
South Africa (South Africa)
$100,000
For the Human Rights Advice Line of theRights Africa Project.
Human RightsMedia Centre
(South Africa)
$60,000
To assist with the start-up of an office andto develop and disseminate oral historiesthat focus on South African humanrights issues.
Institute for Justice and
Reconciliation (South Africa)
$52,000
To establish the“Home for All”Development and ReconciliationTrust.
Institute for Justice and
Reconciliation (South Africa)
$15,000
For initiatives to encourage apartheid’sbeneficiaries to help build a stable,nonracial democracy in South Africa,including the Home for All Campaignand the Development and ReconciliationFund.
Institute for Security Studies
(South Africa)
$90,000
For the Criminal Justice Monitor,whichwill monitor, analyze and evaluate thecriminal justice system in South Africa.
Legal AssistanceTrust
(Namibia)
$200,000
For the AIDS LawUnit.
Legal Resources Trust
(South Africa)
$100,000
For legal interventions to supportand promote aboriginal land rights insouthern Africa.
Lesbian andGay Equality Project
(South Africa)
$75,000
For activities of the Gay and Lesbian LegalAdvice Centre,which promotes fulllegal and social equality for lesbian andgay people in South Africa.
MediaMonitoring Project
(South Africa)
$166,000
Tomonitor South Africanmedia coverageof race, gender and crime-related issuesand identify discriminatory patterns ofreporting.
Nkuzi Development Association
(South Africa)
$20,000
For the farm resident support program,which works with farmworkers in thenorthern and Gauteng provinces ofSouth Africa.
Pretoria,University of
(South Africa)
$200,000
For the Gender and the IntegratedBar Projects of the university’s Centrefor Human Rights.
Rural Legal Trust (South Africa)
$150,000
To provide legal representation to indigentrural citizens and farmworkers.
South African Human Rights
Commission (South Africa)
$71,860
For activities related to its role as liaisonbody for the participation of nationalinstitutions at the U.N.World ConferenceAgainst Racism.
South African National NGO
Coalition (South Africa)
$500,000
For the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacismNGO Forum Secretariat.
Peace and Social Justice
133
Human Rights and International Cooperation
Western Cape,University of the
(South Africa)
$100,000
For research on Social-Economic Rightsand Transformation in South Africa:A Focus on the GrootboomCase.
Witwatersrand,University of the
(South Africa)
$38,000
For the university’s Refugee ResearchProgrammeproject onhumanitarian alter-natives to deportation in South Africa.
Women in Law andDevelopment
in Africa (Zimbabwe)
$92,600
Tomobilize Africanwomen’s rightsorganizations to participate in the U.N.World Conference Against Racism.
Women’s Legal Centre Trust
(South Africa)
$150,000
For litigation, advocacy and trainingwith respect towomen’s rights and genderequity in South Africa.
International cooperation
Witwatersrand,University of the
(South Africa)
$600,000
To establish the African InternationalRelations Centre.
Vietnam and Thailand
International cooperation
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$50,000
For advisory services, staff training andother activities to advance the organiza-tional development of the Center forEducational Exchangewith Vietnam.
Chulalongkorn University
(Thailand)
$15,000
For the Institute of Asian Studies tohold a conference onTwenty-five Yearsof Thai-Vietnamese Relationship.
GeorgeWashingtonUniversity
(Washington,DC)
$607,000
To develop curricularmaterials and provideforeign instructors for a short course atthe Institute for International Relationsfor Vietnamese diplomats and foreignpolicy specialists.
Ho ChiMinhNational Political
Academy (Vietnam)
$98,000
For staff training, library enhancement andcurriculumdevelopment for the academy’sInstitute for International Relations.
Ho ChiMinhNational Political
Academy (Vietnam)
$9,000
For comparative research on localgovernment reforms inVietnam, Indiaand Sweden.
Institute for International
Relations (Vietnam)
$263,000
To train diplomats and foreign policyspecialists in information analysis, negoti-ation and public speaking for overseasassignments in the diplomatic serviceand U.N. agencies.
Institute for International
Relations (Vietnam)
$200,000
To enable staff to complete doctoral studiesin the United States in preparation forteaching in the institute’s newmaster’sprogram in international relations.
National Center for Social
Sciences andHumanities
(Vietnam)
$83,000
Training and advisory services for foureconomic studies on the impacts ofeconomic liberalization onVietnameseindustry.
Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(Vietnam)
$100,000
For seminars, conferences, study tours andlibrary acquisitions to support analysesand policy development for Vietnam’smultilateral diplomacy.
West Africa
Human rights
Access to Justice (Nigeria)
$100,000
For research, advocacy and publicationsaimed at strengthening the independenceand integrity of the judiciary in Nigeria.
Centre for Advanced Social
Science (Nigeria)
$1,000,000
To consolidate its programs and institu-tional capacities.
Centre for Law Enforcement
Education (Nigeria)
$125,000
For advocacy and networking on behalfof community policing and police reformin Nigeria.
Constitutional Rights Project
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For legal services and public educationwith respect to human rights and tostrengthen its organizational capacity.
Constitutional Rights Project
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For research,workshops andmediaoutreach on Nigeria’s Truth Commission.
Development Information
Network (Nigeria)
$100,000
For preparatorymeetings,media outreachand documentation for the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Forumof Conscience
(Sierra Leone)
$50,000
For workshops, advocacy and publiceducation to facilitate civil involvementin thework of Sierra Leone’s Truth andReconciliation Commission.
Lagos StateMinistry of Justice
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For the Directorate for Citizens’Rightsto conduct projects to strengthen theenforcement of human rights andconstitutional provisions for govern-ment accountability.
Leaders in Educational Action and
Research Networking (Ghana)
$100,000
For a pilot project on human rights educa-tion and networking in Ghana.
Media Foundation forWest Africa
(Ghana)
$90,000
For research,workshops,media outreachand publications on Ghana’s Truth andReconciliation Commission.
Media Foundation forWest Africa
(Ghana)
$35,000
To help the Center for DemocraticEmpowerment plan a subregional officein Abidjan and a program ofwork onissues of conflict resolution, preventingsmall-arms proliferation and demo-cratic governance.
Rencontre Africaine pour la
Défense des Droits de l’Homme
(Senegal)
$350,000
For a refugee rights network andpreparatory activities forWest Africanparticipation in the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Shelter Rights Initiative
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For advocacy,media outreach and litiga-tion of economic and social rights.
Sierra Leone,University of
(Sierra Leone)
$100,000
For research,media outreach andadvocacy on Sierra Leone’s Truth andReconciliation Commission.
Social Alert (Belgium)
$50,000
For trainingworkshops and other activitiesto build wider support for human rightsinWest Africa.
Social and Economic Rights
Action Center (Nigeria)
$100,000
To consolidate programming, strengthenits capacity to effectively advocate forsocial and economic rights and developa framework for a rights-based analysisof state and federal budgets.
International cooperation
Centre for Development and
Conflict Management Studies
(Nigeria)
$200,000
For research, advocacy andworkshops onpeace and conflict issues inWest Africa.
Grants to Individuals$763,805
Total,Human Rights andInternational Cooperation$106,886,356
134
Peace and Social Justice
selected books, articles andreports
Alekseeva, Liudmila.
Istoriya inakomysliya v SSSR(History of Dissent in the USSR)(new edition).Moscow:ZAO RITS“Zatsepa,”2001.
Baral, Lok Raj, Bertram Bastiampillai
and Rasul Baksh Rais.
Governance and DefenceSpending—Views fromSouth Asia.Colombo,Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies, 2001.
Basrur, RajeshM. (ed.).
Security in the NewMillennium.Colombo,Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies, 2001.
Beck,T.A. and I.L. Scherbakova (ed.).
Vserossiiskii konkurs istoricheskikhissledovatelskikh rabotstarsheklassnikov“Chelovek vistorii: Rossiya—20 vek” (sbornikrabot pobeditelei) (All-Russia EssayCompetition for Schoolchildren:“Man in History: Russia—XX Century” (Collection ofWinners’Works)).Moscow:Zveniya, 2001.
Behera,Navnita Chadha,
Victor Gunawardena and Raisul
AwalMahmood.
People to People Contact in SouthAsia.NewDelhi:Manohar, 2000.
Bhardwaj,Arjun and Delwar Hossain.
Globalization andMultinationalCorporations in South Asia:Towards Building a Partnershipfor Sustainable Development(RCSS Policy Studies 20.)
Colombo,Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies, July 2001.
Changbin, Jiang and Robert Ross (ed.).
Cong Duizhi Zouxiang Huanhe(FromConfrontation to Détente).Beijing:World Knowledge Press,
November 2000.
Chari, P.R. (ed.).
Security &Governance in South Asia.Colombo,Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies, 2001.
Chari, P.R., and Pervaiz Iqbal Cheema.
The Simla Agreement 1972—ItsWasted Promise.NewDelhi:Manohar, 2001.
Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative.
Human Rights and PovertyEradication:ATalisman for theCommonwealth.NewDelhi:CHRI, 2001.
Comprehensive Security for SouthAsia: Seminar Proceedings.NewDelhi:Delhi Policy Group,
September 2001.
Conflict Resolution:Trends andProspects. A Report on the AnnualSymposiumheld byWISCOMP,
Oct. 3–7, 2001.
NewDelhi:Women in Security,
Conflict Management and
Peace, Foundation for Universal
Responsibility, 2001.
Dasgupta, Sumona.
Breaking the Silence:Womenand Kashmir.NewDelhi:Women in Security,
Conflict Management and
Peace, Foundation for Universal
Responsibility, 2001.
Dasgupta, Sumona.
Women and Kashmir:A Report.NewDelhi:Women in Security,
Conflict Management and
Peace, Foundation for Universal
Responsibility, 2001.
Dingjian,Cai andWang Chenguang
(eds.).
Renmin Daibiao Dahui Zhidu20Nian Fazhan YuGaige (20 Yearsof Development and Reform in theNational People’s Congress).Beijing:Chinese Procuratorial Press,
2001.
Dipankar Banerjee (ed.).
Security Studies in South Asia:Change and Challenges.NewDelhi:Manohar, 2001.
Forbes,Kristin, and Aradhna
Aggarwal.
Share Ownership,CompanyPerformance andVulnerabilityto Crises: Evidence from India.NewDelhi: ICRIER, 2001.
Garafulic,María Paz.
Mujer y Derecho (Women andRights).Santiago,Chile: Puerto Imagen, 2001.
Gilroy, Paul.
OAtlântico Negro:Modernidade eDupla Consciência (Black Atlantic:Modernity and Double Awareness).Rio de Janeiro:Universidade
CândidoMendes,Centro de Estudos
Afro-Asiáticos, 2001.
Gomes, J.B. Barbosa.
Ação Afirmativa& PrincípioConstitucional da Igualdade:O Direito como Instrumento deTransformação Social. A Experiênciados EUA (Affirmative Action andConstitutional Principle of Equality:The Law as an Instrument of SocialTransformation.An Experiencefrom the U.S.A.).Rio de Janeiro: Editora Renovar, 2001.
Goriyainov,K.K.,V.S.Ovchinskii and
L.V. Kondratiuk.
Uluchsheniye vzaimootnosheniigrazhdan imilitsii: (Dostup kpravosudiu i sistema vyiavleniya,registratsii i ucheta prestuplenii)(Improvement of Citizen–PoliceRelationships:Access to Justiceand a System of Crime Identificationand Registration).Moscow: INFA-M,2001.
Guha,Ashok,K.L. Krishna and
Ashok K. Lahiri.
Trade and Industry: Essays byNIPFP—Ford Foundation Fellows.NewDelhi:National Institute of
Public Finance and Policy, 2001.
Hasan,Zoya, E. Sridharan and
R. Sudarshan.
India’s Living Constitution.NewDelhi: Permanent Black, 2001.
Jaising, Indira (ed.).
Law of Domestic Violence:A User’sManual forWomen.NewDelhi:The Lawyers Collective,
Universal Law Publishing Co.
Pvt. Ltd., 2001.
Khan,Abdur Rob (ed.).
Globalization andNon-TraditionalSecurity in South Asia.Dhaka,Bangladesh:Academic Press
and Publishers Limited,May 2001.
Khan,Abdur Rob (ed.).
Globalization andNon-TraditionalSecurity in South Asia.Colombo, Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies,May 2001.
Kletzer, Kenneth and Renu Kohli.
Financial Repression and ExchangeRateManagement in DevelopingCountries:Theory and EmpiricalSupport from India. (Working Paper
No. 71.)
NewDelhi: ICRIER, June 2001.
Lima, Jr. and J.B. (org.).
Execuções Sumárias,Arbitrárias ouExtrajudiciais:Uma Aproximação daRealidade Brasileira (Extrajudicial,Summary or Arbitrary Executions:An Approximation of the Situationin Brazil).Bagaço,Brazil: Recife, 2001.
Pronkin,Victor and Arkadii Gutnikov.
Zhivoye Pravo: Zanimatel’nayaentsiklopediya prakticheskogoprava (Street Law: IllustratedEncyclopedia of Practical Law).St Petersburg: St Petersburg Institute
of Law,Prince P.G.Oldenburgsky,
2000.
Racism&Gender Discriminationin Eastern Africa: Report of theBriefing Seminar on theWorldConference Against Racism,RacialDiscrimination,Xenophobia&Related Intolerance (March 30,
Kampala,Uganda).
London:AkinaMamawa Afrika, 2001.
Raju, Subramanyam.
Third-Generation Indian Perceptionof the Kashmir Issue.Colombo, Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies,May 2001.
RehumanizingTheOther—AReport.NewDelhi:Women in Security
Conflict Management and Peace,
Foundation for Universal
Responsibility, 2001.
Sen,Uttam and Ayesha
Siddiqa-Agha.
Governance in Plural Societies andSecurity:AnOverview.Colombo, Sri Lanka:Regional Centre
for Strategic Studies,May 2001.
Shulong,Chu.
LengzhanHou Zhongmei Guanxide Zouxiang (Trends in Sino-USRelations after the ColdWar).Beijing:China Social Sciences Press,
May 2001.
Publications andOtherMedia—Human Rights and International Cooperation
135
Human Rights and International Cooperation
Suli, Zhu.
Song Fa Xia Xiang—ZhongguoJiceng Falu Zhidu Yanjiu (Sending theLaw to the Countryside—Researchon Grass Roots Legal Institutionsin China).Beijing:Chinese University of Law
and Politics Press, 2000.
Task Force on Panchayati Raj.
A Report on NationalWorkshopon Strengthening the Panchayati RajSystem.NewDelhi: Rajiv Gandhi Foundation,
February 2001.
Task Force on Panchayati Raj.
Directory of Selected Panchayati RajTraining Institutions in India.NewDelhi: Rajiv Gandhi Foundation,
2001.
Various authors.
Estado de derecho y democracia(Rule of law and democracy).Buenos Aires,Argentina: Editores
del Puerto, 2001.
Various authors.
Panorama de derechos humanosy derecho humanitario en Colombia.Informe 2000 (Overview of HumanRights and Humanitarian Rightsin Colombia).Bogotá,Colombia:Opciones Gráficas
Editores, 2000.
Various authors.
La reforma judicial en la regiónAndina (Judicial Reform in theAndean Region).Lima,Perú: F&F Editorial, 2001.
Vilhena,OscarVieira (org.) and
Ilanud.
Direitos Humanos—NormativaInternacional (Human Rights—International Norms).São Paulo,Brazil: EditoraMax
Limonad, 2001.
Weidong,Chen.
Xingshi Susongfa ShishiWentiDiaoyan Baogao (A Research Reporton Problems EncounteredwithImplementation of the CriminalProcedure Law).Beijing:Beida Fangzheng Publishing
House, 2001.
Weimin,Zuo and Zhou Changjun.
Bianqian Yu Gaige—Fayuan ZhiduXiandaihua Yanjiu (Reform andChanges:OnModernization ofCourt Systems).Beijing: Law Press, 2000.
Non-Military Variable of Security:Voices from Pakistan,WorkingPaper III.NewDelhi:Women in Security,
Conflict Management and
Peace, Foundation for Universal
Responsibility, 2001.
Xianzhi,Qiao et. al. (eds.).
Shilun FayuanTiaojie Zhidu Gaige(A Preliminary Account ofMediationReform in the Courts).Shanghai: Shanghai Judges
Association, 2000.
Yang Chengxu&WuMiaofa (ed.).
XinTiaozhan—Guoji GuanxiZhong de“Rendao Zhuyi Ganyu”(New Challenges—“HumanitarianIntervention” in InternationalRelations).Beijing:Youth Press, 2001.
Yunling, Zhang (ed.).
HuobanHaishi Duishou—TiaozhengZhong de ZhongMei Ri Er Guangxi(Partners or Rivals—ChangingRelationships between China,the US, Japan and Russia).Beijing: Social Science and
Documentation Press, January
2001.
Yunling, Zhang and Zhao Jianglin
(eds.).
Zou Fazhan,Hezuo,Kaifangzhi Lu—APEC,Dongya Jingji yuZhongguo Shichang Kaifang(Towards Development,Cooperation andOpening—APEC, Economics in East Asiaand the Opening of theChineseMarket).Beijing: Economics andManagement
Press, July 2000.
case study
Geverola,Ma.Carmel P.
Stopping theGrayHarvest:TheGlobalCement Case in Sibonga.Cebu,Philippines: Environmental
Legal Assistance Center, Inc., 2001.
journals and periodicals
Acesso à Justiça (Access to Justice).
THEMIS.Porto Alegre,Brazil:Themis-
Assessoria Jurídica e Estudos de
Gênero, 2001.
monograph
Asian Institute ofManagement.
TheRoad to Peace andReconciliation:Muslim Perspectives on theMindanao Crisis.Makati, Philippines:Asian Institute
ofManagement, 2001.
selected videos
Fundación Ideas.ConferenceAgainst Racism and Xenophobia,
Intolerance and Discrimination.
Forum of NGOs and Civil Society
Organizations of the Americas,
preparatorymeeting for the
U.N.World Conference Against
Racism in South Africa.
December 3–4, 2000. Santiago,Chile:
Ideas Foundation, 2000.
136
Peace and Social Justice
Governance and Civil SocietyApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Civil society
Academy for the Development
of Philanthropy in Poland
(Poland)
$220,000
For the Dialogue for the Future programto further understanding of Polish-Jewishrelations.
Allavida (England)
$90,000
For the journal, Alliance,which helpsincrease resources to the nonprofit sectorworldwide by serving the informationneeds of philanthropic organizations anddonor agencies.
Alliance for Justice
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For a strategic planning process.
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$35,000
To develop a Regional Balkan StudiesCenter and Archives PreservationProject at the Inter-University Centerin Dubrovnik, Croatia.
American Friends of theMedem
Library, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$50,000
To assist theMedem Library in Paris todevelop its collection on the Bundmove-ment, interwar Polish-Yiddish periodicalsandmemorial books.
Asia Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For the U.S.-Asia Philanthropy Projectto ensure communication, accountabilityand a streamlined giving process for U.S.donors interested in supporting nonprofitactivities in Asia.
Association for Progressive
Communications
(San Francisco,CA)
$250,000
For theworldwide electronic networkfor civil society.
Association for Research on
Nonprofit Organizations and
Voluntary Action
(Indianapolis, IN)
$184,500
For technical assistance, electroniccommunications and research dissemi-nation activities.
Association of Black Foundation
Executives, Inc.
(Indianapolis, IN)
$200,000
For activities to strengthen African-American philanthropy and to implementa strategic plan.
Association of Small Foundations
(Bethesda,MD)
$500,000
For a project to provide new foundationswith information about their legalresponsibilities and exposure to goodpractices.
Bank Information Center
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For information and advocacy programsto strengthen the role of civil societyorganizations in themovement to reformmultilateral development banks.
BBBWise Giving Alliance
(Arlington,VA)
$100,000
To promote philanthropy by increasingdonor confidence in the nonprofitsector.
Bertelsmann Stiftung
(Germany)
$100,000
To establish the International Networkon Strategic Philanthropy to enhancefoundationmanagement, promote bestpractices and create an internationalnetwork of foundation professionals.
Brazilian Association of NGOs
(Brazil)
$20,000
To improve dialogue between Brazilianand international nongovernmentalorganizations.
California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$50,000
For a follow-up survey to a comparativestudy on poverty and ethnicity in Centraland Eastern Europe.
California,University of
(Santa Cruz,CA)
$101,000
To disseminate research findings in theglobal South on civil society organizations’attempts to promote accountabilityof their governments and internationalfinancial institutions.
Carolina Alliance for Fair
Employment (Greenville, SC)
$50,000
To build organizational capacity duringits leadership transition.
Catholic University of America
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For law school faculty to participate injoint activities with faculty and studentsof the Jagiellonian University Law Clinicand plan the visit of clinic students toCatholic University.
Center for ContemplativeMind
in Society, Inc.
(Northampton,MA)
$100,000
Tomap organizations and individualsthat explicitly link spirituality and socialjustice activism.
Center for Environmental Public
Advocacy (Slovakia)
$270,000
For the legal education, judicial reform,strategic litigation and networking activi-ties of its Public Interest Law Program.
Center for National
Independence in Politics
(Phillipsburg,MT)
$300,000
For Project Vote Smart,which providesinformation on local, state and federalcandidates for elected public office.
Center for ThirdWorld Organizing
(Oakland,CA)
$300,000
To organize, train and provide technicalassistance to groups working for racialand social justice in the United States.
Center forWomen Policy Studies,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$500,000
Formultiethnic andmulticultural feministadvocacy.
CivicusWorld Alliance for Citizen
Participation, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the biennial CIVICUSWorld Assembly,which brings together civil society leaders,thinkers and practitioners with represen-tatives of government and business.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$180,000
For the Columbia Law School’s PublicInterest Law Initiative inTransitionalSocieties,whichworks to strengthen thepublic interest law infrastructure inCentral and Eastern Europe.
Community Foundation for
the National Capital Region
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For capacity-building and organizationaldevelopment activities of the DisabilityFunders Network.
Congressional Black Caucus
Foundation, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For a comprehensive strategic planningprocess to determine the C.B.C.F.’s futureoperations and organizational structure.
Consumers Union of United
States, Inc. (Yonkers,NY)
$500,000
To stimulate new philanthropic resourcesand ensure accountability of health careconversion foundations.
Cornell University (Ithaca,NY)
$93,500
For research on global social movements.
Council on Foundations, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For analysis and advocacywork relatingto private foundation issues.
137
Governance and Civil Society
Czechoslovak Jan Hus
Educational Foundation
(Czech Republic)
$150,000
To complete a sustainability projectto expand its endowment and ensureits future independence.
Eureka Communities
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For a fellowship program for leaders ofcommunity service organizations andto strengthen its development andcommunications capacity.
European Roma Rights Center
(Hungary)
$150,000
For East European Roma participationin the U.N.World Conference AgainstRacism.
Federation forWomen and Family
Planning (Poland)
$150,000
For educational programs onwomen’srights and reproductive health.
First Alaskans Foundation
(Anchorage,AK)
$100,000
To create a strategic plan and design newphilanthropic efforts tomeet the needs ofAlaskan natives.
Focus Project (Washington,DC)
$300,000
For the Charity Lobbying in the PublicInterest Project to train nonprofitorganizations about their legal rightsregarding lobbying.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$657,900
For the research, networking and teach-ing activities of the Hausen Center forNonprofit Organizations’ Civil SocietyResearch Fellow Project.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$419,000
For a research project entitled AmericanCivic Leadership:Understanding OurHeritage and Reinventing Our Future.
Helsinki Foundation for Human
Rights (Poland)
$155,000
For a comparative conference onConstitutionalism inTransition:Africaand Eastern Europe.
Highlander Research and
Education Center, Inc.
(NewMarket,TN)
$100,000
To plan a capital campaign.
Horizons Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For technical assistance, philanthropyeducation and national campaigns onthe rights and health of lesbian, gayand transgender communities.
Humanitarian Law Center
(Serbia)
$80,000
Tomonitor human rights in Kosovoand Serbia.
IndependentMedia Institute
(San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
For its Strategic Press InformationNetwork(SPIN) project to train diverse U.S. civilsociety organizations to develop strategicapproaches tomediawork.
Institute for Economic and Social
Reforms (Slovakia)
$150,000
To coordinate the projects of a network ofSlovak research institutes and disseminatetheir findings in order to foster publicdiscussion of economic policy.
Institute of Development Studies
(England)
$118,800
To disseminate the findings of aworldwidecomparative research project on therelationship between civil society andgovernance.
Institute of Philosophy and
Sociology of the Polish Academy
of Sciences (Poland)
$70,000
To create aWeb-accessible database offacts, people and documents relating totheWarsaw Ghetto, 1939–1943, andtheWarsawGhetto Uprising.
Institute of Public Affairs
(Poland)
$500,000
To conduct research on social issues andinitiate public debate.
International Center for
Not-for-Profit Law,USA, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For an online database and quarterlyjournal on the legislative and regulatoryenvironment for nonprofits worldwide.
International Institute for
Environment and Development
(England)
$250,000
For the networking and advocacy activitiesof Shack Dwellers International, an inter-national federation of organizations ofthe urban poor.
Jagiellonian University (Poland)
$340,000
For the university’s Legal Clinic to improvethe quality of legal aid and to participatein a student exchangewith the CatholicUniversity of America Law School.
Jewish Culture Festival Society
(Poland)
$50,000
For the 11th Annual Jewish Culture Festivalin Krakow,Poland,which seeks to promotePolish-Jewish relations.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$1,000,000
For the Comparative Nonprofit SectorProject and to develop the Handbook onNonprofit Institutions in the System ofNational Accounts.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$185,000
For the Johns Hopkins-based InternationalSociety for Third-Sector Research tocover operating and planning costs forits biennial conference.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$82,800
To plan the development of anInternational Network of Civil SocietyResearch Funds.
Judaica Foundation (Poland)
$40,000
For its Center for Jewish Culture to establisha fund-raising and development officeand create aWeb site.
Just Act Youth Action for Global
Justice, Inc. (San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
To strengthen connections betweencommunities of color, student and youthgroups andmovements working onglobalization issues.
Kalligram Foundation
(Slovakia)
$100,000
For the research, analysis and publiceducation activities of the IndependentCenter for Legal Analysis,which seeksto improve the legal situation ofminoritiesin Slovakia.
Kentucky Coalition, Inc.
(London,KY)
$500,000
For the Southern Organizing Cooperative,a regional intermediary that promotesand bolsters community organizingefforts.
KLON/JAWORAssociation
(Poland)
$100,000
For the KnowYour Rights program toproduce and disseminatemanualson legal and procedural issues connectedwith the typical problems of sociallydisadvantaged groups.
KLON/JAWORAssociation
(Poland)
$80,000
For a reserve fund to support its publiceducation activities.
Local Activity Support Centre–
The Cal Association (Poland)
$120,000
To promote citizen participation incommunity life by strengthening existinglocal organizations.
Loyola University (Chicago, IL)
$50,000
For the planning phase of the Case Studiesin Philanthropy Project.
LSE Foundation (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To define the researchmethodology fora study of transnational civil societyalliances.
Massag Foundation
(Hungary)
$50,000
For the Legal Defense Bureau for Nationaland Ethnic Minorities to provide legalservices to victims of human rightsabuse.
MiningWatch Canada
(Canada)
$19,000
For research and to develop a plan to testthe feasibility of creating a global networkof communities affected by large-scalemining.
Ms. Foundation forWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$500,000
For capacity-building activities in prepara-tion for amajor endowment campaign.
Ms. Foundation forWomen, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$130,000
For strategic planning to strengthena grant-making program to promote theleadership of women of color in publicpolicy issues.
National Alliance for Hispanic
Health (Washington,DC)
$144,100
To plan Nuestros Tesoros: EnsuringSustainability in Local Agencies, a newinitiative to diversify local fundingand increase philanthropy amongHispanic leaders.
138
National Alliance for Nonprofit
Management
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To enhance the effectiveness andperformance of nonprofit organizationsnationwide.
National Center for Family
Philanthropy, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To research the extent, nature andpurposes of family philanthropy in theUnited States.
National Center for Nonprofit
Boards (Washington,DC)
$100,000
To provide capacity-building services tothe nonprofit sector.
National Civic League of
Colorado, Inc. (Denver,CO)
$200,000
For the newPolitics Program to conductresearch and public education on localcampaign finance reform.
National Coalition on Black Civic
Participation, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$450,000
To implement a strategic plan to fosterAfrican-American civic participation.
National Committee for
Responsive Philanthropy
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For a national advocacy organization thatencourages philanthropy for social justice.
National Executive Service Corps
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To connect forty autonomous affiliatesof executive service agencies by forminga national network.
National Gay and LesbianTask
Force Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$225,000
For the National Religious LeadershipRoundtable, a network of pro-gayfaith-based organizations and religiousleaders.
National Information Center
onWomen’s Organizations and
Initiatives in Poland
(Poland)
$375,000
For activities to strengthen thewomen’smovement in Poland.
National Interfaith Committee
forWorker Justice (Chicago, IL)
$200,000
To link faith-based groups to labor andeconomic justice groups.
Network of East-WestWomen,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$120,000
For the Legal Fellowship Program toprepare attorneys for work in the fieldof women’s human rights.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a quarterly journal on East Europeanconstitutionalism to train andmaintaincorrespondentswhowill report on changesin constitutional politics and to hold aconference on this topic.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
For the Center for the Study of Philanthropyto conduct research on patterns of givingwithin communities of color and amongwomen in NewYork City.
Northeast Action, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$250,000
For the Democracy Project to encouragecivic participation through a program oftraining and technical assistance tocommunity organizations.
Northern California Grantmakers
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For the activities of grant makersconcerned about immigrants andrefugees.
Open Society Institute–Budapest
(Hungary)
$50,000
For a project on EU Accession:Monitoringthe Political Criteria.
OpenTrust (England)
$75,000
To pilot a new Internet magazine onpolitics and democracy.
Parliamentarians for Global
Action (NewYork,NY)
$90,000
To implement a strategic plan.
Philanthropic Initiative, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$50,000
To prepare and disseminate a researchreport onWhat’s a Donor to Do?The Stateof Donor Resources in America Today.
Puerto Rico Community
Foundation, Inc. (San Juan,PR)
$200,000
For planning, analysis and organizationaldevelopment in preparation for amajornew endowment campaign.
Radio andTelevision News
Directors Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For the Covering Campaign FinanceProject to develop resource materialsand conduct trainingworkshops forelectronic journalists covering issuesofmoney and politics.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$85,000
For the Global Civil Society ResearchProject of the university’sWaltWhitmanCenter for the Culture and Politics ofDemocracy.
Slovak Academic Information
Agency (Slovakia)
$100,000
For the Service Center for theThird Sectorto provide training and technical assistanceto Slovak NGOs.
Southern California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$100,000
To analyze the relationship between spiri-tual practice and social justice advocacywithin six religions in the United States:Judaism, Catholicism, Protestantism,Islam,Buddhism andHinduism.
State of theWorld Forum
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For global civil society stakeholdersto participate in the Commission onGlobalization.
Stichting Forest Peoples
Programme (England)
$80,000
To build the capacity of indigenousforest peoples to participate in policydebates affecting their communitiesand environments and use internationalstandards and instruments to protecttheir rights.
Support Center of Washington
(Washington,DC)
$75,000
To cover a funding shortfall and to imple-ment a fiscal recovery plan.
ThirdWorld Institute
(Uruguay)
$600,000
For SocialWatch, an international citizens’watchdog network thatmonitors imple-mentation of social goals agreed upon ininternational forums.
ThirdWorld Network–Africa
(Ghana)
$350,000
To strengthen the voice of African civilsociety groups in international tradenegotiations.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
For the Philanthropic Ventures Networkto assess donor education programs andraise public awareness of philanthropy.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For Share Our Security, a project tocreate a philanthropicmechanism thatredirects Social Security income ofwealthy Americans to low-incomechildren and seniors.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$50,000
ForWomenVote to hold a one-daymeetingof voter outreach groups to share learn-ings from the last election cycle.
Tides Foundation
(San Francisco,CA)
$500,000
For eGrants.org to distribute fundsfrom online donors to nonprofitsinvolved in social change and socialjustice activities.
Transitions (Czech Republic)
$75,000
To implement a financial sustainabilityplan for an online news journal coveringCentral and Eastern Europe.
Trust for Civil Society in Central
and Eastern Europe (Poland)
$5,000,000
For a fund to support the sustainabledevelopment of civil society andnongovernmental organizations inCentral and Eastern Europe.
United Nations Environment and
Development United Kingdom
Committee (England)
$20,000
To develop a template for multistake-holder participation in intergovernmentalnegotiations.
United States Hispanic
Leadership Institute, Inc.
(Chicago, IL)
$300,000
Support for nonpartisan voter registrationand education activities targeting Latinos.
Peace and Social Justice
139
Urban Institute
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For a study of fund-raising and administra-tive costs for nonprofit organizations.
Warwick,University of
(England)
$93,400
For research on how global civil societyaffects democracy in the governance ofthe global economy.
Women’s FundingNetwork
(San Francisco,CA)
$400,000
For activities to increase funding for issuesof special interest to women, foster thegrowth of women’s funds and advocatefor women’s fundingwithin the philan-thropic community.
Women’s Rights Center
(Poland)
$80,000
For legal aid, counseling and educationprograms for women.
World Learning Inc.
(Brattleboro,VT)
$54,700
For a self-study process and external reviewof the diploma program in NGO leader-ship andmanagement.
ZNAK Christian Culture
Foundation (Poland)
$40,000
To develop aWeb-based forum on Polish-Jewish relations.
Governance
AFL-CIOWorking for America
Institute, Inc. on behalf of
Public Sector LaborManagement
Committee (Washington,DC)
$516,500
For training, research and educationon labor-management cooperation inthe public sector.
African Bar Association
(Nigeria)
$250,000
For continental and internationalnetworking and for a conference onConstitutionalism and the Rule ofLaw in Africa.
African Centre for Democratic
Governance (Nigeria)
$500,000
For a 25-country research project onThe African State: Reinterpretation,Reinvention and Reconstruction.
Alliance for Justice
(Washington,DC)
$512,000
For the Nonprofit Advocacy Project toprovide technical assistance to granteesof the foundation’s Collaborationsthat Count initiative.
American Friends of the
University of Ulster, Inc.
(Charleston,MA)
$40,000
For aworkshop on Researching EthnicConflict in Africa:Methodological andEthical Issues.
American Small Business Alliance
(Arlington,VA)
$100,000
To launch a state chapter inMaine andtest approaches to building a statechapter network to mobilize small-business support for social policiesbenefitingworking people.
Arise Citizens’Policy Project
(Montgomery,AL)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis Initiative.
Brookings Institution
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For the Center for Public Service to buildupon previous research to producetwo books on the relationship betweengovernment reforms and public trustin government.
California Budget Project
(Sacramento,CA)
$150,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis Initiative.
Carolina Alliance for Fair
Employment
(Greenville, SC)
$500,000
For the South Carolina Policy OrganizingProject to build statewide partnershipsbetween community and policyorganizations.
Center for Policy Alternatives
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For a capacity-building initiative to linkcommunity-based organizations withpublic leaders for more effective policyinnovation.
Center for Public Policy Priorities
(Austin,TX)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities (Washington,DC)
$1,200,000
For national and state-based effortsto analyze and encourage discussionof the implementation of the federalTemporary Assistance for NeedyFamilies (TANF) legislation.
Centre for Basic Research
(Uganda)
$100,000
For research and aworkshop on thePerformance of Uganda’s 1995Constitution: Assessing the FirstFive Years (1995–2000).
Centre for Constitutionalism and
Demilitarisation (Nigeria)
$200,000
For a conference on the issues, problemsand prospects for demilitarization inWest Africa, publication of the confer-ence proceedings and post-conferencenetworking.
Centre for Democracy and
Development (England)
$250,000
For a conference onThe Role of RegionalInstitutions in Constitutional Developmentin Africa.
Centre for Democracy and
Development (England)
$119,500
For a postgraduate training program onhuman rights and governance for womenlawyers in East Africa.
Centre forWorkers’Rights
(Nigeria)
$93,500
For research and publications on thelabormovement and democraticstruggles in Nigeria, Sierra Leone,Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Children’s Action Alliance, Inc.
(Phoenix,AZ)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Civil Rights Congress (Nigeria)
$150,000
For a conference on Sharia Law and theNigerian Constitution.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$207,000
For a comparative research projecton Federalism,Multinationalism andGovernance in theModernWorld.
Committee for the Defence of
Human Rights (Nigeria)
$550,000
To advance human rights and strengthencivil society in Nigeria.
Committee for the Defence of
Human Rights (Nigeria)
$56,000
For research and publication of landmarkjudicial rulings on constitutional lawand public interest human rights casesin Nigeria.
Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative (India)
$50,000
For meetings, research, networking andadvocacy to further public awareness ofthe constitution review process in India.
Council for Excellence in
Government (Washington,DC)
$775,000
To administer the Partnership for Trustin Government.
Council for the Development of
Social Science Research in Africa
(Senegal)
$400,000
For activities to promote a better under-standing of politics and society in Africaand South Asia, including a conference onEthnicity, Culture, Identity and Politicsin Africa and South Asia.
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For a research project on partition politicsand conflict resolution.
Creative Communications
(Boise, ID)
$240,000
To assist grantees of the foundation’sCollaborations that Count initiative topresent their activities to the publicthrough radiomessages.
Economic Policy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$225,000
For technical assistance on economic issuesto grantees in the foundation’s StateFiscal Analysis and Collaborations thatCount initiatives.
Fiscal Policy Institute, Inc.
(Latham,NY)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
To convene and evaluate the secondround of the foundation’s Collaborationsthat Count initiative.
Governance and Civil Society
140
Greater BirminghamMinistries,
Inc. (Birmingham,AL)
$500,000
For the Alabama Organizing Projectto build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$50,000,000
To endow the Innovations in AmericanGovernment Awards Program andestablish a new Institute for GovernmentInnovation at the Kennedy School.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$3,000,000
For the Innovations in AmericanGovernment Awards Program duringa period of transition to funding throughan endowment and start-up fundsfor a new Institute for GovernmentInnovation.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$1,502,641
For Honoring Nations, an innovationsawards program to accelerate improve-ment inNative American tribal governanceby recognizing andpublicizing exemplaryprograms.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$150,000
To establish a working group and producea civic education video on constitutionalreformamongAmerican Indian nations.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$40,000
For a conference onTribesMoving Forward:Engaging in the Process of Constitutionaland Governmental Reform.
Ibadan,University of
(Nigeria)
$65,500
For the university’s Program on Ethnic andFederal Studies.
IdahoWomen’s Network
Research and Education Fund Inc.
(Boise, ID)
$500,000
For the Idaho Collaborative to buildstatewide partnerships between commu-nity and policy organizations.
IncorporatedTrustees of the
New Era Foundation (Nigeria)
$50,000
For a comprehensive review of itsprograms and to develop a long-termstrategic plan.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$78,750
For Professor Bereket Selassie to consultwith the Nigerian Presidential Committeeon the Review of the 1999 Constitution.
Institute onTaxation and
Economic Policy
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For the Good Jobs First project to providetechnical assistance to grantees of theState Fiscal Analysis initiative and docu-ment the costs and impact of economicdevelopment incentives.
International Centre for Ethnic
Studies (Sri Lanka)
$150,000
For two conferences on how best to bringwomen into the constitution-makingprocess in Sri Lanka.
Kentucky Coalition, Inc.
(London,KY)
$500,000
For the Kentucky Economic Justice Allianceto build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
Lagos State University
(Nigeria)
$300,000
To establish the Centre for Developmentand Democratic Studies.
League for Human Rights
(Nigeria)
$50,000
For aMiddle-Belt zone conferenceon constitutionalism and governancein Nigeria.
Maine Center for Economic Policy
(Augusta,ME)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Makerere University (Uganda)
$100,000
For panels and researchers on governance,constitutionalism and politics in Africa atthe international conference onChallengesto the Social Sciences in Africa in the21st Century.
Management Assistance Group
(Washington,DC)
$550,000
To provide technical assistance to buildthe institutional capacity of participantsin the foundation’s State Fiscal Analysisinitiative.
Maryland,University of
(College Park,MD)
$550,000
For the university’s Institute for DemocraticReconstruction to help universities playamore substantial role in contributingto democratic renewal.
Michigan League for Human
Services (Lansing,MI)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
National Commission for Civic
Education (Ghana)
$150,000
For a national civic education programand an annual “ConstitutionWeek”in Ghana.
National Forum for Public Policy
and Development, Inc.
(Liberia)
$257,000
For research,networking, advocacy andcivic education on constitutionalismin Liberia.
NewYork, State University of
(Albany,NY)
$214,000
For an international conference onIndigenous Socio-Political Structures andDemocratic Transitions in Africa.
Niger Delta Environment and
Relief Foundation (Nigeria)
$70,000
For a research project on Oil, ReinventedEthnicity and Crisis in Nigeria:A Studyof Social Movements and Social Forcesin the Niger Delta.
North Carolina Council of
Churches (Raleigh,NC)
$500,000
To build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
North Carolina Justice and
Community Development Center
(Raleigh,NC)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Northern Colorado,University of
(Greeley,CO)
$125,000
For research and publications on constitu-tionalism and political restructuring inpost-conflict societies.
Ohio University
(Athens,OH)
$44,000
For a conference on Emerging Constitutionsand Constitutionalism in Africa.
Oregon Center for Public Policy
(Silverton,OR)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Progressive Leadership Alliance
of Nevada (Reno,NV)
$500,000
To build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
ProTex Network for a Progressive
Texas, Inc. (Austin,TX)
$500,000
To build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
ProTex Network for a Progressive
Texas, Inc. (Austin,TX)
$73,961
For Collaborations that Count:Workingfor Democracy in Devolutionary Times,which seeks to build the capacity ofstate-based policy and communityorganizations.
Rural Organizing Project
(Scappoose,OR)
$500,000
For the Oregon Collaboration to buildstatewide partnerships between commu-nity and policy organizations.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$320,000
For the university’s Center for the AmericanWoman and Politics tomanage the GoodHousekeepingWomen in Governmentawards program.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$300,000
For research, publications and workshopson state constitutions in theUnited States.
Save Our CumberlandMountains
Resource Project (Lake City,TN)
$500,000
For the Tennessee Partnership onOrganizing and Public Policy to build state-wide partnerships between communityand policy organizations.
Southern Echo, Inc.
(Jackson,MS)
$500,000
To build statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizations.
Tax Equity Alliance for
Massachusetts Education Fund,
Inc. (Boston,MA)
$100,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Peace and Social Justice
141
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$50,000
For the Leadership Learning Communityand for development of its public accessWeb site.
Transparency International
(England)
$506,000
To enhance its comprehensive databaseon anti-corruption policies and practicesand for technical assistance to implementthe O.E.C.D.Anti-Bribery Convention.
UgandaHuman Rights
Commission (Uganda)
$150,000
For a project on Constitutional Educationfor the Youth in Uganda.
Urban Institute (Washington,DC)
$100,000
Tomodel and report on proposed changesin federal taxes.
Voices for Illinois Children
(Chicago, IL)
$50,000
For budget and tax analysis under theState Fiscal Analysis initiative.
Washington Association of
Churches (Seattle,WA)
$500,000
For the LivingWageMovement tobuild statewide partnerships betweencommunity and policy organizationsinWashington.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$30,000
To fund oversampling of African-American respondents in a study oftrust in government.
Washington,University of
(Seattle,WA)
$71,000
For the Center for Labor Studies to promoteappreciation of and demand for modelsof labor-management public sectorcooperation.
Washington,University of
(Seattle,WA)
$50,000
For the Fiscal Policy Center to analyzeand report on budget and tax policyissues affecting low-income residentsofWashington state.
Western States Center Inc.
(Portland,OR)
$500,000
For an intermediary organization promot-ing civic participation, and for trainingand technical assistance to Collaborationsthat Count initiative grantees in thePacific Northwest.
Women Advocates Research and
Documentation Center (Nigeria)
$70,000
For research,networking, advocacy andmeetings on strategies for the inclusionof women in the constitutional reviewprocess in Nigeria.
YakubuGowon Centre
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For Phase II of research and consultationson civil-military relations under constitu-tional governance in Nigeria.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Civil society
Foundation for Socially
Responsible Enterprises
(Chile)
$242,000
To foster socially responsible philanthropyin the Chilean business sector.
Group for the Analysis of Social
and Institutional Development
(Argentina)
$100,000
For historical research on Argentine civilsociety associations to promote nationalphilanthropy.
Ideas for Peace Foundation
(Colombia)
$273,000
Tomobilize the business community andcivil society in Colombia’s peace processand to develop a post-conflict plan.
International Institute for
Sustainable Development
(Canada)
$80,000
For developing countries’and civilsociety participation in the InternationalOrganization for Standardization’s firstrevision of the ISO 14001 EnvironmentalManagement System Standard.
PROhumana Foundation
(Chile)
$225,000
To promote and encourage a cultureof social responsibility and philanthropyin Chile.
Governance
Chilean Association of
Non-Government Organizations
A.G. (Chile)
$52,000
For institutional support to strengthenthe NGO sector in Chile.
Isis International Foundation
(Chile)
$157,300
To design, implement and developmanagement strategies for a Spanish-language Internet portal to broadenaccess for Latin Americanwomento information on women’s issuesworldwide.
National Foundation for the
Eradication of Poverty (Chile)
$228,500
To establish a Network for Innovation inCitizenshipwithin the Innovations AwardsProgram.
Pontifical Catholic University
of Peru (Peru)
$100,000
For country and regional comparativeresearch on the relationship between civilsociety and democracy over the last20 years.
Brazil
Governance
Advisory Center for Print and
RadioMedia
$145,000
To produce community radio programsto disseminate innovative governmentpractices.
Ashoka (Arlington,VA)
$200,000
For a competition among BrazilianNGOs to reward innovative fund-raisingstrategies and to train entrants infund raising and general managementskills.
Brazilian Association for
Post-Graduate Study in
Collective Health
$88,000
For a study on the causes of work- andhealth-related problems seen to influencepolice violence in Rio de Janeiro.
Brazilian Association of NGOs
$25,000
To organize a seminar for judges andprosecutors on preventing electoralcorruption.
Brazilian Consumer Defense
Institute
$225,000
To study the regulatory implications ofnew international trade agreementsand the privatization of public utilitiesand for activities to protect consumerinterests.
Brazilian Institute for Social and
Economic Analysis
$200,000
For research, advocacy and public educa-tion on local budget processes.
Brazilian Institute for Social and
Economic Analysis
$50,000
For research anddissemination to promotethe concept and practice of social auditingby Brazilian firms.
Campinas, State University of
$100,000
For the Brazil component of a comparativeanalysis of Latin American civil society.
Communication, Education and
Information onGender
$40,000
To establish a new small-projects fund forwomen in Rio de Janeiro.
Center for Studies of
Contemporary Culture
$500,000
For research on corruption control,transparency and egalitarian publicpolicies inmetropolitan São Paulo.
Cidade–Center for Urban
Planning and Study
$200,000
For research on the relationship betweenparticipatory budgeting and women’spolitical participation.
Luiz Freire Cultural Center
$135,000
For research,analysis and public educationon local budget processes in the stateof Pernambuco.
Information Network for the
Third Sector
$150,000
To promote access to and effective useof Internet tools by Brazilian civil societyorganizations.
Institute of Administration
Foundation
$150,000
For a study of the effects of globalizationon the level of corporate social responsi-bility of Brazilian companies.
JoaquimNabuco Foundation
$38,000
For aworkshop on police training in Braziland an international conference on thesocial impact of police training.
Minas Gerais, Federal University
of
$265,000
For the Center for Criminology andPublic Security.
Governance and Civil Society
142
Minas Gerais, Federal University
of
$41,000
For a study on the institutional potentialof replicating the innovative Brazilianexperience of participatory budgeting.
Polis–Institute for Research,
Training and Advisory Services
in Social Policy
$760,000
To purchase its own building and tomonitor public policies and themunicipalbudget of São Paulo.
Rio Grande do Sul, Federal
University of
$108,000
For an evaluative study on innovativepolice policies in the Brazilian stateof Rio Grande do Sul.
Transparency Brasil
$150,000
To help start the Brazilian chapter ofTransparency International.
United Nations Latin-American
Institute-Brazil
$20,000
For research on community policing in themunicipality of São Paulo.
China
Civil society
China Charity Federation
$60,000
For a follow-up conference onMultinational Corporations andPhilanthropy.
China NPONetwork
$51,000
For aworkshop on NPO training andresearch activities in Beijing.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$29,000
For a study of the role of business philan-thropy in China.
Institute of Social Development
$10,600
For aworkshop to promote the recognitionof voluntary service in China.
Population and Environment
Society of China
$42,000
To compile amonograph on population,resources, environment and sustainabledevelopment in China.
RuralWomen Knowing All
$500,000
For its endowment and for outreach andtraining activities for rural women.
WuxiMarket Association
$10,000
For an international workshop onTheMarket Economy and Chambersof Commerce.
Governance
Beijing Civil Affairs Society
$54,700
For research on urban poverty in thetransition period.
California State University, Fresno
(Fresno,CA)
$75,000
To provide training and technical assistanceto build the capacity of the academic,business and government communities inGuizhou Province to support economicand small-business development.
California,University of
(Davis, CA)
$80,500
For research and policy experimentationon community governance and publicgoods provision in rural China.
Carter Center, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$32,700
For a conference on VillagerSelf-Government and Rural SocialDevelopment in China.
Central China Normal University
$60,000
For research and pilot interventions onurban community governance.
China Agricultural University
$10,000
For the 2001 Annual Conference for YoungAgricultural Economists in China.
China Foundation for Poverty
Alleviation
$70,000
For research, publications and an interna-tional conference on the role of NGOsin poverty reduction in China.
China National Committee for
Pacific Economic Cooperation
$8,500
To publish the proceedings of a regionalmeeting on corporate governance.
China Research Center for
Comparative Politics and
Economics
$7,500
For a project to identify and encouragepromising reforms in local governancein China through an awards programmodeled on the Innovations in AmericanGovernment program.
Chinese Academy of
Management Science
$25,000
For an economic policy forum anda conference on theWorld TradeOrganization andwestern regionaldevelopment.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$100,000
For research on regional disparities,resource taxation and interprovincialtransfers.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$40,000
For comparative research on welfarestates in transition and the implicationsfor China’s social security reforms.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$14,600
For activities to promotewomen’s partici-pation in village elections.
Chinese Economists Society
(Washington,DC)
$50,400
For an economics teaching exchangeprogram in China’s western provincesand for an international conferenceon urbanization.
Development Research Centre
of the State Council
$85,000
For research on the changing institu-tional context of township and villagegovernance.
Foundation-administered project
$153,350
For exploratory activities to develop aprogramon local governance and commu-nity participation in urban China.
GuizhouUniversity
$49,300
For research on Quizhou’smigrant basketcarriers.
Handicap International (Belgium)
$34,700
For pilot interventions on the professionalintegration of persons with disabilities.
Institute of Environment and
Development
$39,000
For a training program for small-businessmanagers to enhance environmentalawareness and project planning.
Nanjing University–The Johns
Hopkins University Center for
Chinese and American Studies
$47,500
For research on school-agemigrants fromSouthern Xinjiang.
National People’s Congress,
Research Office of the General
Office of the Standing
Committee
$50,000
For research on public participationin direct elections to local people’scongresses.
Peking University
$29,000
For research on rural women’s politicalparticipation.
Qingdao Bureau of Civil Affairs
$24,500
For research and publications on urbancommunity development and localgovernment reform in Qingdao.
Research Center for Rural
Economy
$54,600
For an international conference of scholarsand policymakers onmigration in China.
Research Center for Rural
Economy
$7,800
For an international conference of scholarsand policymakers onmigration in China.
RuralWomen Knowing All
$143,400
For publishing, training and outreachactivities to serve rural andmigrantwomen in China.
Sectoral andTechnological
Economics Institute
$40,000
For a national conference to producepolicy recommendations for work onpoverty reduction under theTenthFive Year Plan.
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$45,000
For research on the efficiency and equityimplications of land requisition andresettlement policies during the processof urbanization.
Peace and Social Justice
143
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$35,000
For policy research on the access to qualityeducation for children ofmigrant workers.
Shanghai Academy of Social
Sciences
$33,000
For research on neighborhood committeesand the reconstruction of urban commu-nity organizations.
Sichuan Academy of Social
Sciences
$13,000
For research and training related tomigra-tion and urbanization in Chengdu.
Stanford University
(Stanford,CA)
$110,000
For research on the urbanization of ruralareas on the outskirts of established cities(“peri-urbanization”) in China and thechallenges for governance.
Unirule Institute of Economics
$32,200
For a training program on the practice ofvillagers’autonomy.
WuxiMarket Association
$65,000
For research and a policy workshop ontownship governance reforms.
Eastern Africa
Civil society
AfricanMedical and Research
Foundation (Kenya)
$99,000
To strengthen its governance structureand document its internal transformationprocess.
Allavida (England)
$81,000
Formeetings, research and publicationson philanthropy and the nonprofit sectorin East Africa.
Centre for Basic Research
(Uganda)
$94,000
To complete and disseminate research onthe results of the Ugandan component ofthe Johns Hopkins Comparative NonprofitSector Project.
Charities Aid Foundation
(England)
$150,000
To establish the (East Africa) Centre forthe Promotion of Philanthropy and SocialResponsibility.
Dar Es Salaam,University of
(Tanzania)
$80,000
To complete and disseminate research onthe results of theTanzanian component ofthe JohnsHopkins ComparativeNonprofitSector Project.
Development Network of
IndigenousVoluntary
Associations (Uganda)
$240,000
For a project to strengthen local gover-nance through civil society institutions.
Development Policy
Management Forum (Ethiopia)
$96,000
For research on civil society and leadershipand for its fourth annual conference,Democracy and African Conflicts.
Kenya Leadership Institute
(Kenya)
$50,000
For strategic planning and programdevelopment.
K-RepHoldings Limited
(Kenya)
$86,250
For a study exploring tax and other policyreforms to promote a positive environ-ment for philanthropy and charitableactivities in Kenya.
Nairobi,University of
(Kenya)
$74,000
To complete and disseminate research onthe results of the Kenyan component ofthe Johns Hopkins Comparative NonprofitSector Project.
Private Sector Foundation
(Uganda)
$75,000
To exploremeans of attaining financialsustainability, devise strategies for assetdevelopment and improve programdelivery by becoming a grant-makingfoundation.
Governance
Abantu for Development
(England)
$60,000
To build capacity and public awarenesson gender and governance.
Action for Development
(Uganda)
$160,000
To train local-level women legislators,conduct “train the trainer”workshopsand carry out a financial sustainabilitysurvey.
African Association for Public
Administration and
Management (Kenya)
$57,000
For a roundtable conference onmanagingchange in a globalizing economy.
AfricanMedical and Research
Foundation (Kenya)
$20,000
For a conference on Building Capacity forthe Financial Sustainability of Civil SocietyOrganizations.
Centre for Law and Research
International (Kenya)
$100,000
For research and publication of a book onlegal and political transition in Kenya.
Citizen ForumTrust (Kenya)
$98,000
For a project on developing sustainablepartnerships for good governancebetween citizens and the local authorityinMombasa,Kenya.
Council for the Development of
Social Science Research in Africa
(Senegal)
$100,000
For a cross-regional project on globali-zation, themiddle class and citizenshipin Africa.
East African Centre for
Constitutional Development
(Uganda)
$620,000
For activities to strengthen constitution-alism learning activities and institutionaldevelopment.
KisumuTown Residents, Estate
Welfare Association (Kenya)
$50,000
To strengthen the capacity of neighbor-hoodassociations inNyanza Province toprotect citizens’ rights,monitor the qualityof services and promote responsible citizen-ship and poverty alleviation.
Makerere University (Uganda)
$20,000
For aworkshop on the constitution reviewprocess in Uganda.
NewYork, State University of
(Albany,NY)
$180,000
For the SUNY InternationalDevelopment Group to plan theEast African ParliamentaryInstitute.
Tufts University
(Medford,MA)
$265,000
To test a prototype for information-technology assisted courses ininternational relations at Tufts,Makerere University and theUniversity of Dar es Salaam.
WeCanDo It Society
(Kenya)
$70,000
To promote the accountability of localgovernment to residents’associationsin Nairobi.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Civil society
Aga Khan Foundation
(Switzerland)
$15,000
For the pre-publication bulk purchase ofa handbook and accompanying trainermanual on resourcemobilization forself-reliance in South Asia.
Governance
Ahmedabad Study Action Group
(India)
$57,000
To strengthen a network of NGOs, individ-uals and elected members working onpanchayati raj issues in four westernIndian states.
Association of Voluntary
Agencies for Rural Development
(India)
$130,500
To help local panchayat councils andNGOs achieve food security in theirvillages.
Centre de Sciences Humaines
(India)
$18,000
For research on the impact of women’sreservations, or quotas, in four Indianmetropolitan cities.
Centre for Budget and Policy
Studies (India)
$150,000
For research and analysis ofmunicipalbudgets in Karnataka.
Centre for Development Studies
(India)
$80,000
For research on the people’s campaign fordecentralized planning in Kerala.
Centre for Economic and Social
Studies (India)
$73,700
For comparative studies of public policyprocesses in India.
Governance and Civil Society
144
Centre for Policy Alternatives
(Sri Lanka)
$206,000
For research anddissemination on constitu-tionalism and constitutionmaking andto provide translation services for media,academia and NGOsworking on gover-nance issues.
Centre for the Study of
Developing Societies (India)
$1,200,000
For its endowment and for renewal andrevitalization of social science research.
CityManagers’Association,
Gujarat (India)
$87,000
To document and disseminate best prac-tices in urban governance and strengthenlearning networks of citymanagers infour Indian states.
Commonwealth Association
for Public Administration and
Management (Canada)
$33,850
For international resource persons toproduce background papers and facilitatesessions for a government-sponsoredconference on good governance.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For research and networking on localgovernance, responsive and accountablegovernment and peaceful coexistencein India and South Asia.
Indian Institute ofManagement,
Bangalore (India)
$241,000
For research on the process of organization-al change that accompanies governmentimprovements and to catalyze efforts topromote innovation in selected govern-ment departments.
Indian Institute ofManagement,
Bangalore (India)
$44,750
For functional reviews of the work ofselected departments of the governmentof Karnataka to promote accountableand responsive administration.
Institute for Social and Economic
Change (India)
$100,000
For research on participation, represen-tation and the role of civil society inpanchayati raj institutions in Kerala.
Institute for Social and Economic
Change (India)
$20,750
For functional reviews of selected depart-ments of the government of Karnatakato promote accountable and responsiveadministration.
Institute of Social Sciences
(India)
$70,000
To study urban governance and citizenparticipation in fourmetropolitan centersin South Asia.
International Centre for Ethnic
Studies (Sri Lanka)
$120,000
For research andworkshops on electoralprocesses in South Asia.
International Centre for Ethnic
Studies (Sri Lanka)
$40,000
For publication and disseminationof research findings on enhancingwomen’s participation in governancein South Asia.
Jawaharlal Nehru University
(India)
$100,000
For the academic and research activitiesof the university’s Centre for the Study ofLaw and Governance.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$180,000
For the university’s Center for South AsianStudies to establish a network on SouthAsian politics and political economy foryounger scholars at U.S., European andSouth Asian academic institutions.
NIS Sparta Limited (India)
$43,500
For functional reviews of the work ofselected departments of the governmentof Karnataka to promote accountableand responsive administration.
Oxfam (England)
$200,000
For research and advocacy on themitiga-tion and prevention of violence in Indiaand South Asia.
Pennsylvania,University of,
Institute for the Advanced Study
of India (India)
$150,000
For a binational study of democracy andpluralism in India and the United States.
Postal Staff College, India
(India)
$50,000
For the postal service to operationalizecitizens’ charters and create postal forumsin Delhi and Pune.
St. Xavier’s Non-Formal Education
Society (India)
$90,000
To strengthen community-based organi-zations of Dalits in order to enhance theefficacy of panchayati raj in Gujarat.
SEARCH (India)
$216,000
For panchayati raj training and network-ing for elected women representativesand local officials in Karnataka.
Society for Participatory Research
in Asia (India)
$215,000
To strengthen panchayati raj institutionsthroughout India with a combinationof media activities and programs tostrengthen self-governance.
Unnati–Organisation for
Development Education (India)
$90,000
For community-based participatoryrehabilitation efforts and to strengtheninterinstitutional linkages in earthquake-affected areas of Gujarat.
Yashwantrao Chavan Academy of
Development Administration
(India)
$100,000
For workshops, training and researchto promote responsive and accountablegovernment inMaharashtra.
Indonesia
Civil society
Foundation-administered project
$250,000
For a program associate and to promoteresearch, networking and expansionof knowledge about citizen participation,village government reforms and bestpractices in local government.
Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation
$188,000
To train peasant organizations in sixprovinces on human rights and developtheir advocacy skills andmanagerialcapacity.
Jari Indonesia
$166,000
To build capacity and accountabilityfor a network of nongovernmentalorganizationsmonitoring state-initiateddevelopment projects.
Lembaga Pengkajian dan
PemberdayaanMasyarakat
(LP2M)
$54,000
For activities to increase the accountabilityand transparency of civil society organiza-tions inWest Sumatra.
Lembaga Pusat Informasi
Advokasi Rakyat
$231,000
Formonitoring and advocacy on therights of marginalized people in EastNusa Teneggara.
Technology,University of
(Sydney,Australia)
$400,000
For a comparative study of third-sectorgovernance in Asia.
Yayasan Adi Karya Ikapi
$200,000
To revitalize regional publishing throughbook subsidies, reading campaigns andthe promotion of alternative retail anddistribution networks.
Yayasan Bandung Institute of
Governance Studies
$167,000
For research and campaigns on goodgovernance and tomonitor budgets andpublic service delivery in Bandung.
Yayasan Duta Awam
$220,000
For community-based monitoring ofagricultural development projects fundedbymultilateral banks.
Yayasan Peduli Sesama
$26,000
For civic education for village leaders inEast Nusa Tenggara.
Yayasan Pirac
$14,300
To increase knowledge and awarenessabout philanthropic giving and resourcemobilization strategies in Indonesia.
Governance
Akatiga Foundation
$275,000
For research and applied policy analysison land, labor and small-scale enterprisesand to conduct an internal evaluationand assess the prospects for an endow-ment campaign.
Combine Resource Institution
$220,000
To coordinate a community-based informa-tion network for development planningin three Indonesian provinces.
Institut Agama IslamNegeri
Syarif Hidayatullah
$173,000
For research and dissemination of cultur-ally sensitive discourses and practicesof good governance among youngerIslamic leaders.
Institute for Research and
Empowerment
$144,000
For applied research on village governanceand accountability in Central Java.
Lesa-Demarkasi
$114,000
For research on local politics and tomonitor village elections inWest NusaTenggara province.
Peace and Social Justice
145
Perhimpunan Lp3es
$200,000
For amultistakeholder pilot program toencourage citizen participation in theplanning and implementation of ruralinfrastructure development projects.
SekolahTinggi Pembangunan
Masyarakat Desa“APMD”
Yogyakarta
$153,000
For curriculum review, training of lecturersand pilot projects for participatory ruraldevelopment and democratic villagegovernance.
Yayasan Gita Pertiwi
$186,000
For a coalition of civil society organiza-tions in Solo to launch a campaign forimproved public services and establisha citizen forum.
Yayasan Indonesian PoliceWatch
$150,000
For police oversight, dialogues on democ-ratic policing and a study tour.
Yayasan Institut Studi Arus
Informasi
$100,000
To develop the capacity to publisha magazine monitoring media inIndonesia.
Yayasan Kelola
$38,000
To strengthen the organizational skillsand advocacy capacity of coastal peoplein North Sulawesi.
Yayasan Leksip Kalimantan
Timur
$148,000
For policy analysis, networks andother activities to advance workers’rights and promote labor cruisesin East Kalimantan.
Yayasan Lembaga Konsumen
Indonesia
$226,000
To establish transportation serviceconsumers’ groups and for trainingand technical assistance to promotedevelopment of a public transportationsector responsive to consumer rightsand protection.
Yayasan Pattiro
$172,000
For institutional networking and strength-ening of village and subdistrict levelcommunity institutions inWest, Centraland East Java.
Yayasan Pembangunan
Masyarakat KesumaMultiguna
$120,000
To establish and operate local citizenforums and citizen bureaus in fivemetro-politan Jakarta neighborhoods.
Yayasan Pengembangan
Kawasan
$168,000
For a pilot project to encourage betterpublic services and establish citizenadvisory bureaus in seven Indonesianprovinces.
Yayasan Penguatan Dan
PemberdayaanMasyarakat
(Eltayasa)
$150,000
To establish and promote communityforums and citizen charters in four citiesin Sumatra.
Yayasan Persemaian Cinta
Kemanusiaan
$167,000
For research on local politics, civic educationfor underprivilegedmembers of villagecouncils and a clearinghouse on localpolitics and village governance.
Yayasan RiauMandiri
$268,000
For the Indonesian Partnership in LocalGovernment to develop and implementmodels for public participation in govern-ment in Bandung, Solo and Riau.
Yayasan RIDeP
$82,000
To collect, systematize and disseminateimportant documents, including oralhistories, relating to the transition todemocracy in Indonesia, 1997–2000.
Yayasan Smeru
$200,000
For activities to widen public dialogueabout critical social and economicissues.
Mexico and Central America
Civil society
Center for Teaching and Research
in Economics (Mexico)
$180,000
For research, training, policy analysis andaWeb site on budget and tax issues.
Espiral Consultants (Mexico)
$175,000
For a co-investment fund to supportparticipation of civil society organiza-tions in social development projectsin Chiapas,Mexico.
Espiral Consultants (Mexico)
$50,000
To create a clearinghouse for informationon strengthening civil society at the federaland state levels inMexico.
Mexican Association forWomen’s
Rights (Mexico)
$100,000
For an innovativemodel for gender-sensitive philanthropy.
Mexican Civil Society Council
(Mexico)
$80,000
For activities to strengthen the role ofcivil society organizations in theMexicandemocratic transition.
Mexico,College of (Mexico)
$45,000
To convene aMexico-GuatemalaBinational Dialogue onMigrationto analyze migration trends andproposed public policy responses.
Governance
Catholic Relief Services
(Baltimore,MD)
$50,000
For institutional consolidationof Guatemala’s National Forum onMigration (MENAMIG).
Center for Research and
Documentation of theWestern
Border of Guatemala
(Guatemala)
$97,000
To research, disseminate and documentthe challenges facing communities in thewestern department of Huehuetenango.
Center for Research andHigher
Studies in Social Anthropology
(Mexico)
$50,000
For dissemination of research findingson the remunicipalization process in thesouthernMexico state of Chiapas.
Center for Social and Cultural
Studies Antonio deMontesinos
(Mexico)
$21,000
To convene the Fourth National Congressof theMexican Network of Civil SocietyResearchers to develop a research agendarelated to civil society’s role in the politicaltransition period.
Center for Study of Reform of the
State (Mexico)
$47,000
Tomonitor and informmunicipal reformprocesses in the states of Baja California,Campeche, Sinaloa and Colima.
Center for Teaching and Research
in Economics (Mexico)
$1,000,000
For a program to recognize and rewardinnovations in local governance inMexico.
Center for Teaching and Research
in Economics (Mexico)
$150,000
To design the operational and program-matic structure of a program to rewardinnovations in local governance inMexico.
Center for Teaching and Research
in Economics (Mexico)
$107,000
Tomonitor and informmunicipal reformprocesses in the states of Guanajuato,Zacatecas,Tlaxcala and Oaxaca and tomaintain theMunicipal ReformAgendadatabase and update theWeb site.
Foundation-administered project
$32,000
For research andmeetings to completedevelopment of a comparative budgettransparency scorecard for LatinAmerica.
Fundación Grupo Fundemos
(Nicaragua)
$87,000
For capacity-building activities aimed atenhancing civil society participation in thebudget process in Nicaragua.
Fundar Center for Research and
Analysis (Mexico)
$155,000
For research, public information and train-ing for legislators, journalists and civilsociety leaders on issues of budget andpublic spending.
Fundar Center for Research and
Analysis (Mexico)
$40,000
For an international exploratory dialogueon Applied Budget Analysis as aTool forthe Advancement of Economic, Social andCultural Rights.
GuillermoManuel Ungo
Foundation (El Salvador)
$50,000
For a professional training programin local development andmunicipalgovernance for public, private andnongovernmental sectors.
Heriberto Jara Center,A.C.
(Mexico)
$250,000
For institutional development and tofurther its role as a training and infor-mation resource on local governanceformunicipalities and communityleaders.
Heriberto Jara Center,A.C.
(Mexico)
$34,000
Tomonitor and informmunicipal reformprocesses in the states of Queretaro,Chiapas and Veracruz.
Governance and Civil Society
146
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Guatemala)
$115,000
To strengthen collaboration and buildcapacity among nongovernmentalorganizations in Mexico and CentralAmerica around issues ofmigration.
Leadership Institute Simone de
Beauvoir (Mexico)
$180,000
For activities to develop leadership andadvocacy skills amongwomen.
National Autonomous University
of Mexico (Mexico)
$50,000
For research to examine citizen partici-pationmechanisms inMexico City andconveneworkshops with leaders ofneighborhood committees.
National Autonomous University
of Mexico (Mexico)
$35,000
Tomonitor and informmunicipal reformprocesses in the states of ChihuahuaandMexico and publish the results ofcomparative studies in a total ofthirteen states.
Promoters for Self-Help for Social
Development (Mexico)
$60,000
For research,workshops and communica-tionsmaterials to improve communityparticipation in the management of akey poverty alleviation program in thestate of Guerrero.
Promoters of Regional
Alternatives (Mexico)
$40,000
For the Second National Congress ofResearchers in Local Governance ofMexico (IGLOM) and to consolidate andformalize the IGLOMnetwork.
Training and Community
Development Alternatives
(Mexico)
$160,000
To coordinate the Latin America networkof theWomen’s Eyes on theWorld Bankcampaign to educate women about therole of multilateral development banksand assess the gender impact of bankprograms.
Trasparencia (Mexico)
$35,000
To convene a nationalmeeting oforganizations dedicated to improvinglocal governance and participationinMexico.
United Nations International
Drug Control Programme
(Mexico)
$35,000
To develop amaster’s level trainingprogram on drug abuse preventioninMexico.
University of the Autonomous
Regions of the Caribbean Coast
of Nicaragua (Nicaragua)
$75,000
For activities to broaden participationof local populations from the AtlanticCoast of Nicaragua in national dialogueson poverty alleviation and regionaldevelopment.
Middle East and North Africa
Civil society
Al-AhramCenter for Political
and Strategic Studies
(Egypt)
$20,000
For research analysis of the dynamics andconsequences of the year 2000 nationalelections process.
Birzeit University (West Bank)
$72,000
For the university’s department ofphilosophy to organize a conferenceon political culture in the Arabworldto foster intergenerational dialoguebetween scholars.
Cairo University (Egypt)
$61,000
To the university’s faculty of arts for asurvey on newpatterns of behaviorin rural Egypt and a comprehensivedocumentation of Arab sociology.
Centre d’Etudes en Sciences
Humaines et Sociales
(Morocco)
$55,000
For comparative research onwomen’semancipation and integration inthe process of development in threeArab countries.
Institut de Recherche pour le
Developpement (France)
$16,500
For a teamof political scientists to conductamicrostudy on citizens’participation inEgypt through field work and interviewswith community leaders.
Institute of Jerusalem Studies
(East Jerusalem)
$350,000
For research,meetings and publicationson Palestinian history, politics and societywith a special focus on Jerusalem.
JerusalemMedia and
Communication Centre
(West Bank)
$140,000
For public polling on Palestinian attitudes,publication of aweekly cultural magazineand enhancement of media activitiesrelated to the crisis situation.
Miftah: the Palestinian Initiative
for the Promotion of Global
Dialogue and Democracy
(East Jerusalem)
$100,000
To develop an effectivemedia responseand articulate Palestinian views on thecrisis situation, including online pressbriefings and opinion pieces.
Youth Association for Population
and Development (Egypt)
$100,000
To develop and implement a trainingprogram for youth to promote values ofactive citizenship, entrepreneurshipand development.
Governance
A Concept, S.A.R.L.
(Lebanon)
$140,000
To develop andmaintain an Internetdatabase on decisionmakers, governanceand citizens’ rights in the Arabworld.
Al-Quds University
(West Bank)
$73,000
To professionalize its financial accountingsystem and strengthen internal controlpolicies and procedures.
Cairo University (Egypt)
$150,000
For collaborative research and publicdebates on the changing role of thestate in the new erawith a focus on theeconomic, administrative, social andpolitical dimensions.
Cairo University (Egypt)
$60,000
For the development of the faculty’sjournal and enhancement of its qualityand outreach.
Center for Research andTraining
on Development (Lebanon)
$12,500
To produce an Arabic edition of Genderand Citizenship in theMiddle East.
Centre d’Etudes et de
Recherches sur leMoyen-Orient
Contemporain (Lebanon)
$22,000
For a series of workshops to promote thecooperative study of local government inMiddle Eastern countries.
The Philippines
Governance
Agri-Aqua Development
Coalition–Mindanao, Inc.
$118,000
For community organizing, public educa-tion and capability building to fosterbroader citizen participation in localgovernance,particularly in local plan-ning and budgeting.
Asian Institute ofManagement,
Inc.
$196,800
For a fellowship program in developmentmanagement.
Asian Institute ofManagement,
Inc.
$30,000
For research, publications and publiceducation related tomajority-minorityrelations and social unrest in thesouthern Philippines.
Ateneo deManila University
$84,000
For paralegal education, internshipsand the development of legal assistancecenters at provincial universities.
BalayMindanaw Foundation, Inc.
$283,000
To integrate activities related to localgovernance into its traditional focus onagrarian reform and communityorganizing.
Bantay Katarungan Foundation,
Inc.
$100,000
For activities to increase citizen oversightof the courts and quasi-judicial agencies.
CebuUniting for Sustainable
Water Foundation, Inc.
$200,000
To ensure broad sectoral representationin land andwater use planning forMertoCebuwatersheds.
Center forMedia Freedomand
Responsibility
$185,000
Forworkshops to build journalists’capacityto inform the public and contribute tonational debates on important issues andto establish an awards program for excel-lence in reporting on such issues.
Empowering Civic Participation
in Governance, Inc.
$100,000
For community organizing and publiceducation to enhance citizen participationin local governance.
Peace and Social Justice
147
Environmental Legal Assistance
Center, Inc.
$336,000
For training, technical assistance andlegal aid to communities and localgovernments to protect ecosystemsand foster sustainable patterns ofeconomic growth.
Galing Pook Foundation
(Innovations and Excellence
in Local Governance), Inc.
$325,120
For a national recognition program onlocal governance in the Philippines.
Heed Foundation, Inc.
$92,000
For capability-building programs on localgovernance and participatory develop-ment planning in the province of Agusandel Sur.
Institute of Politics and
Governance, Inc.
$300,000
For a program of capability buildingand coordination amongNGOsworkingon local governance.
KaisahanTungo Sa Kaunlaran
Ng Kanayunan at Repormang
Pansakahan, Inc.
$364,000
For training, technical assistance andlegal services to NGOs, local governmentsand community-based organizationswith respect to land reform and localgovernance.
KilusangMaralita Para Sa
Kaunlarang Panlipunan
$270,000
For training,networking and legal assis-tance to build capacity and increaseopportunities for participation in localgovernance among urban poor people’sorganizations inMetroManila.
Lingap Para Sa KalusuganNg
Sambayanan, Inc.
$187,000
For capability-building programs on localgovernance and citizen participation inthe province of Sorsogon.
Philippine Center for Investigative
Journalism, Inc.
$300,000
For investigative reporting, training forjournalists and publication of referencematerials for journalists.
Philippine Center for Policy
Studies, Inc.
$106,000
To develop a draft set of indicators of goodgovernance and pilot test the indicatorsin twelvemunicipalities.
Tanggol Kalikasan, Inc.
$263,275
For policy analysis, legal defense, trainingand publications related to the decentral-izedmanagement of natural resources bylocal communities and governments.
UPECON Foundation, Inc.
$95,000
For a training program in developmenteconomics for appointed and electedgovernment officials and others involvedin local governance.
Russia
Civil society
Agency for Social Information
$16,500
For an important information resourceorganization in Russia’s social sector todevelop a strategic plan for attaininglong-term sustainability.
Association of Young Leaders
$130,000
To institutionalize the youth volunteercenters established by A.Y.L.’s regionalaffiliates and explore the potential ofyouth service as a strategy to reducesocial barriers.
Center for Support of Democratic
Youth Initiatives
$160,000
To develop youth community service andalternative civilian service programsin Perm and promote the establishmentof similar programs in five additionalRussian regions.
Center for Support of Democratic
Youth Initiatives
$23,000
To produce a documentary film to informand influence public opinion regardingalternative service by profiling youngmenparticipating in an experimental alterna-tive service program.
Constructive Approach
Foundation“Sozidaniye”
$258,000
To continue to advance communityservice opportunities for Russian youthand introduce community service intothe educational system.
Eurasia Foundation, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For contracted research, conferences andsubgrants to increase the capacity ofRussian regional NGO resource centers tomobilize community-based sources ofsupport on behalf of local nonprofits.
Foundation for Civic Initiatives
Support “FOCUS”
$48,000
For networking, technical assistance andother activities to develop and profession-alize fund raising in order to cultivatedomestic sources of support for Russia’sindependent sector.
INFO-Plus Center
$50,000
To continue experimentation in the useof the Internet to promote charitablegiving and assist charitable organizationsin Russia.
Institute for Urban Economics
Fund
$231,000
To design and pilot a system of individualsocial accounts in Russia aimed at improv-ing transparency inmunicipal budgetsas well as efficiency in social policy.
Institute on Problems of Civil
Society
$65,500
For a series of publications and publicityevents profiling young volunteers toencourage participation in communityservice activities and to improve publicattitudes towards volunteers.
Intercontact Fund
$20,000
For training and capacity building inyouth service by introducing and develop-ing individualmentorship programs tothree additional Russian cities.
Interregional Public Foundation
“New Perspectives”
$119,000
For amicrogrant program that fundsyouth-initiated community serviceprojects in ten Russian regions.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$20,000
To advance indigenous philanthropy inRussia by funding a Russian fellow in theInternational Fellowship Program at theCenter for the Study of Philanthropy.
Non-Commercial Charitable
Fund“Help”
$20,000
To promote indigenous charitable givingin Russia through the experimental useof online technologies.
Open Society Institute
(NewYork,NY)
$10,000
To contribute to the development ofindigenous philanthropy in Russia bystaffing and giving structure to theRussia Donors’Forum.
Regional Society of the Disabled
“Perspektiva”
$200,000
For community service activities thatintegrate able-bodied and disabled youthand to provide training and technicalsupport formixed-abilitymanagementteams.
Russian Charitable Foundation
“No to Alcoholism andDrug
Addiction”
$25,000
To share emerging best practices inmunic-ipal funding for NGOs and other formsof intersectoral cooperation in the finaltwo of Russia’s seven federal regions.
WashingtonUniversity
(St. Louis,MO)
$18,000
To build knowledge about cross-nationalyouth service programs and policy develop-ment in Russia and Eastern Europe andto initiate a strategic planning process forregional cooperation.
Governance
Municipal Informatics
$56,000
To enhance opportunities for Russiancitizens to accessmunicipal budgetinformation and to participate in budgetprocesses through innovative uses ofinformation technology.
Petrozavodsk State University
$18,500
To develop information infrastructurethat would advance openness andtransparency of regional andmunicipalbudgets.
Volgo-Vyatsky Potential
$23,000
For a series of activities to promote trans-parency and accountability in processesrelated to municipal finances in NizhnyNovgorod and other Russian regions.
Women of the Don
$55,500
To develop local capacity for analyzingand influencingmunicipal budgets asameans to improve social policy for thedisadvantaged of the Rostov regionin southern Russia.
Southern Africa
Civil society
Duke University
(Durham,NC)
$300,000
To establish the United States-South Africa Center for Leadership andPublic Valuesin partnership with the University of CapeTown.
Governance and Civil Society
148
Outlook Publications
(Proprietary) Limited
(South Africa)
$75,000
For New South AfricanOutlook,a quarterlyjournal focusing on values in the publicsphere.
Southern African Grantmakers
Association (South Africa)
$120,700
For general support and for a process ofconsultation and strategic realignmentunder new leadership.
UrbanTrust of Namibia
(Namibia)
$52,000
For the continuation of a school boardtraining project in northern Namibia.
Governance
Community Development Trust
(South Africa)
$15,270
For a seminarwith civil society stakeholdersonways to harness civic participation atthemunicipal ward level.
Foundation-administered project
$150,000
For programassociates at the foundation’sSouthern Africa Office.
Foundation for Contemporary
Research (South Africa)
$150,000
For the participatory democracy anddevelopmental partnership program.
Institute for Democracy
in South Africa
(South Africa)
$100,000
To provide crime prevention training toyouth organizations and local govern-ment officials and extend its local-levelcrime prevention program to threemoremunicipalities.
Institute forMulti-Party
Democracy (South Africa)
$43,750
For itsmonitoring,advocacy and trainingprogram to enhance civil society partici-pation in government decisionmakingand encourage government transparencyand accountability.
Namibia Institute for Democracy
(Namibia)
$50,000
To translate the Namibian constitutioninto seven indigenous languages forthe Ministry of Regional and LocalGovernment and Housing.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$260,000
For a public policy training program formid-career public sectormanagers.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$250,000
For a graduate program in financialeconomics for mid- and upper-levelgovernment officials.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$10,000
For a conference on governance, institu-tional reform and policy outcomes.
Non-Profit Partnership
(South Africa)
$130,000
For the partnership’s Corporate SocialInvestment Initiative to promoteand help companies develop andimplement corporate philanthropyprograms.
Transparency International
(South Africa)
$99,357
To enhance public awareness andmobili-zation of civil society to fight corruptionin South Africa.
Vietnam and Thailand
Governance
Ho ChiMinhNational Political
Academy (Vietnam)
$70,000
For a study of budgetary efficiency andpublic responsiveness of 30 commune-level governments in Vietnam.
Grants to Individuals$147,495
Total,Governance and CivilSociety$131,847,069
Peace and Social Justice
149
Governance and Civil Society
Publications andOtherMedia—Governance and Civil Society
books, articles and reports
Acción Empresarial.
Indicadores de responsabilidadsocial: una herramienta de gestióny evaluación para las empresasinteresadas en desempeñarse deforma socialmente responsable(Social Responsibility Indicators:An EvaluationTool for SociallyResponsible Enterprises).Santiago,Chile:Acción Empresarial
and Pontifical Catholic University
of Chile, 2001.
ACCION—Asociación Chilena de
Organismos NoGubernamentales
A.G.
Directorio de OrganismosNoGubernamentales(Non-Governmental Organizations:A Directory).Santiago,Chile: LOM Ediciones, 2001.
African Public Administration:A reader andGovernment andPolitics in Africa:A reader.Mount Pleasant,Harare, Zimbabwe:
African Association of Political
Scientists, 2001.
Anheir,Helmut,Marlies Glasius and
Mary Kaldor (eds.).
Global Civil Society 2001.London:Oxford University Press,
2001.
Azam,Kousar (ed.).
Ethnicity, Identity and the State inSouth Asia.NewDelhi: South Asia Publishers,
2001.
Balgos,Cecile.
Investigating Local Governments.Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine
Center for Investigative Journalism,
2001.
Baranova, Irina,Nataliya Kigai,
Kseniya Kiseleva andOlga
Zdravomyslova.
Otnosheniye naseleniya kblagotvoritalnosti v Rossii(Citizens’Attitudes to Charityin Russia).Moscow:Charities Aid Foundation,
2001.
Camarotti, Ilka and Peter Spink.
Estratégias Locais para Redução daPobreza:Construindo a Cidadania(Local Strategies to AlleviatePoverty: Constructing Citizenship).São Paulo,Brazil: Escola de
Administração de Empresas de
São Paulo da Fundação Getulio
Vargas, 2000.
Chatto, EdgarM.
The Bohol Legislature.Bohol, Philippines:The DivineWord
College of Tagbilaran, 2001.
Fauzi,Noer et al.
Otonomi Daerah dan SengketaTanah (Regional Autonomy andLand’s Conflict).Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Lapera Pustaka Utama, 2000.
Fauzi,Noer and R.Yando Zakaria.
Men-Siasat-I Otonomi Daerah:Panduan Fasilitasi Pengakuandan Pemulihan Hak-hakRakyat (Strategizing RegionalAutonomy:AManual for People’sEmpowerment).Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Konsorsium Pembaruan Agraria &
INSIST Press, 2000.
Frankel, F.R, Z.Hasan,R. Bhargava and
B.Arora (eds.).
Transforming India: Social andPolitical Dynamics of Democracy.NewDelhi:Oxford University Press,
2000.
Guerrero, Juan Pablo and Fernando
Patron.
Administrative Classification of theFederal Budget inMexico.Mexico City:Center for Teaching and
Research in Economics, 2001.
Ida, Laode.
Otonomi Daerah,DemokrasiLokal & Clean Government(Regional Autonomy,Local Democracy& CleanGovernment).Jakarta: Pusat Studi Pengembangan
Kawasan, 2000.
Jegede, Segun,Ayodele Ale and
Eni Akinsola (eds.).
Path to People’s Constitution.Lagos:Committee for the Defence
of Human Rights, 2000.
Landim, Leilah andMaria Celi Scalon.
Doações e TrabalhoVoluntário noBrasil—uma pesquisa (DonationsandVoluntaryWork in Brazil—research).Rio de Janeiro: 7 Letras, 2000.
Luolin,Wang (ed.).
Teda Hongshui Guohou ZhongguoJingji Fazhan de Sikao—ChangjiangZhongyou Sansheng KaochaBaogao (On China’s EconomicDevelopment in the Aftermathof the Catastrophic Flood—General Report for Investigationin Three Provinces Along theYangzi River).Beijing: Social Science Documents
Press,May 2000.
Morgan,María de la Luz.
Situación de las ONG chilenas alinicio del siglo XXI (Chilean NGOs atthe Beginning of the XXI Century).Santiago,Chile:ACCION-Asociación
Chilena de Organismos No
Gubernamentales A.G., 2001.
Mubyarto et al.
OtonomiMasyarakat Desa:Perspektif“Orang Daerah”dan“Orang Desa”di EnamDesaJawa-Bali (Village Autonomy:Perspectives from the Districtand theVillage in Six Villages inJava and Bali).Jakarta: Forum Pengembangan
PartisipasiMasyarakat, 2000.
Ortega,Manuel and Castillo
Marcelina.
Management in Local Governmentsfrom Citizens’Perspectives:1) Managua, 2) Leon, 3) Nindiri and4) Jilotepec (Series of 4 books).San Salvador, El Salvador:Guillermo
Manuel Ungo Foundation, 2001.
Panandiker, Pai V.A. and S. Kashyap
(eds.).
Political Reforms:Asserting CivicSovereignty.NewDelhi:Konark Publishers, 2001.
Panova,Yelena.
Analiticheskii sbornik“Molodezhv deistvii.”Collected AnalyticalArticles“Youth in Action.”Moscow:URSS, 2001.
Pitanguy, J. and R.Heringer (org.)
Direitos Humanos noMercosul(Human Rights in theMercosul).Cadernos FórumCivil,Year 3,n. 4.Rio de Janeiro:Cepia, 2001.
Programa Ciudadanía y Gestión
Local, Fundación Nacional para
la Superación de la Pobreza.
Los caminos que buscamos: 30innovaciones en el fortalecimientodel espacio público local (PathsTo Innovations: 30 InnovativeExperiences to Strengthen CivilSociety Participation at theLocal Level).Santiago,Chile:Center for Public
Policy Analysis,University of Chile
andNational Foundation for the
Eradication of Poverty, 2000.
Programa Ciudadanía y Gestión
Local, Fundación Nacional para la
Superación de la Pobreza.
Caminos de innovación enciudadanía II (Paths to Innovationsand Citizenship II).Santiago,Chile:Center for Public
Policy Analysis,University of Chile
andNational Foundation for the
Eradication of Poverty, 2001.
Prozrachnost mestnykh finansov imestnye soobshestva—chast’ II(mezhregional’naya nauchno-prakticheskaya conferentsiya)(Local Budgets Transparency andLocal Communities—part II(Interregional Conference)).Nizhny Novgorod,Russia:Volgo-
Vyatsky Potential, 2001.
Rai,M. et al. (eds.).
The State of Panchayats:AParticipatory Perspective.Samskriti,NewDelhi, 2001.
Ribeiro, P.J. and P. Strozenberg.
Balcão de Direitos: Resoluções deConflitos em Favelas do Rio deJaneiro (Citizens’s Counter: ConflictsResolution in Favelas of Rio deJaneiro).Rio de Janeiro:Mauad, 2001.
Riskin,Carl, Zhao Renwei and Li Shi
(eds.).
China’s Retreat from Equality:IncomeDistribution and EconomicTransition.Armonk,NY:M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 2001.
150
Skorzynski, Jan (ed.).
Opozycjaw PRL: Slownickbiograficzny 1956–89 (Oppositionin the People’s Republic of Poland:Biographical Dictionary1956–1989—In Polish).Warsaw:Karta Center Foundation,
2000.
Sparrow,Malcolm K.
The Regulatory Craft: ControllingRisks, Solving Problems,andManaging Compliance.Washington,D.C.: Brookings
Institution Press, 2000.
Teamof Lapera.
Otonomi Versi Negara (AVersion ofState Autonomy).
Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Lapera Pustaka Utama, 2000.
2001 National Directory of LatinoElected Officials.Los Angeles:NALEO Educational
Fund, 2001.
Veloso, Paulina.
La justicia frente a los DerechosHumanos de lasmujeres (Women’sHuman Rights and the Judiciary).Santiago,Chile: Editorial Jurídica,
Conosur Ltda.,December 2000.
Yuguo,Wang and Chen Aimin (eds.).
Zhongguo Laodongli Shichang yuJiuyeWenti (China’s LaborMarketand Problems of Employment).Chengdu,China:Xinan Caijing Daxue
Press, June 2000.
Zhenyao,Wang (ed.).
Zhongguo Cunmin Zizhi Lilun yuShijian Tansuo (China’s RuralGovernance:Theory and Practice ).Beijing:Religion and Culture Press,
March 2000.
Zhenyao,Wang,Bai Gang, and
Wang Zhongtian (eds.).
Zhongguo Cunmin Zizhi Qianyan(In the Forefront of Villagers’Autonomy).Beijing:China Social Sciences Press,
October 2000.
journals and periodicals
ModernizingTradition in India.(Special edition in honor of the late
ProfessorMyronWeiner.)
Asian Survey,Vol. XL,No. 5.
Berkeley,Calif.:University of
California,Berkeley. Institute
of International Studies,
September/October 2000.
selected videos
Dhanraj,Deepa (director).
Taking Office. (Video Documentary
on the experience of women
in local panchayat councils
in Karnataka and Kerala states,
South India.)
Bangalore, India:D&N Productions,
2001.
Peace and Social Justice
Peace and Social Justice
ProgramwideFiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Advocacy Institute
(Washington,DC)
$80,000
For awards to finalists of the Leadershipfor a ChangingWorld program.
Association of Hispanic Arts, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
For the pre-production phase of adocumentary on the life andwork ofDr. Antonia Pantoja.
Center for Economic and Social
Rights, Inc. (Brooklyn,NY)
$679,000
To launch ESCR-Net, an internationalnetwork and learning group for organi-zations and practitioners addressingeconomic, social and cultural rights.
Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$50,000
To assist Nigeria in identifying, processingand packaging relevant policy options thatwould contribute to democratic consoli-dation and economic progress.
Equal JusticeWorks
(Washington,DC)
$410,000
For the National Service Legal Corps andto develop an overall communicationsstrategy.
Foundation-administered project
$1,000,000
For the Learning Enhancement Fund tosupport assessments of selected initiativesand lines of work.
Foundation-administered project
$894,000
For the Learning Enhancement Fund tosupport assessments of selected initiativesand lines of work.
Institute for Democracy in
South Africa (South Africa)
$225,000
For the Africa Budget Project to nurturebudget and fiscal analysis organizationsby building their internal capacities andfacilitating access to budget processes.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$13,734,000
For the global travel and learning fundfor the administration of travel awardsand other program-related learningactivities.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$40,000
For a series of workshops on gatheringinput and voices from civil society.
InterAction:The American Council
for Voluntary International
Action, Inc. (Washington,DC)
$1,000,000
For international efforts including relief,development, refugee assistance andenvironment.
Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights (NewYork,NY)
$400,000
To increase its program and advocacyexpertise, redesign and expand its commu-nications capacity and develop a diversefinancial base.
Legal Aid Society
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To plan and undertake a capital campaign.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$140,000
To plan the organizational structure,funding needs and programmatic prioritiesof the proposed International Center onTransnational Justice.
United Nations Research
Institute for Social Development
(Switzerland)
$250,000
To conceptualize,plan and organize aninternational development economicsnetwork.
Vera Institute of Justice, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$3,700,000
To assist in the start-up and establishmentof the Police Auditors Resource Center.
Overseas ProgramsBrazil
GetulioVargas Foundation
$361,000
To organize and coordinate an InnovationsPrograms Liaison Group.
China
All-ChinaWomen’s Federation
$140,000
To train provincial-level senior federationstaff on international and national lawsand conventions relating to the protectionof the rights of women.
China Academy of Urban
Planning and Design
$70,000For experimentation in participatory urbangovernance through a community-basedenvironmentalmanagement projectin Quanzhou.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Bangladesh Freedom Foundation
(Bangladesh)
$3,000,000
For endowment to ensure institutionalsustainability and a sound financialbase.
NeelanTiruchelvamTrust
(Sri Lanka)
$480,000
For its endowment and for rights, lawand governance work to promotepluralism and national reconciliationin Sri Lanka.
Mexico and Central America
Mexican Academy of Human
Rights (Mexico)
$20,000
For a public information campaign inMexico in preparation for the U.N.WorldConference Against Racism.
Middle East and North Africa
Justice Africa Limited (England)
$83,000
For public dialogue in Rwanda on theOrganization of African Unity’s reporton the 1994 genocide.
Southern Africa
Institute for Public Policy
Research (Namibia)
$100,000
For a new public policy research institute.
Namibia National Farmers Union
(Namibia)
$140,000
For the education, public policy and train-ing activities of the Advocacy Unit.
Vietnam and Thailand
Mahavajiralongkorn Foundation
(Thailand)
$40,000
For the performance of Madana, the firstfull-scale opera ever written by a Thaicomposer.
West Africa
Centre for the Right to Health
(Nigeria)
$100,000
Policy research and advocacy to enforcethe right to health in Nigeria.
Grants to Individuals$14,120
Total, Programwide$27,400,120
151
Peace and Social Justice/Programwide
152
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
Education,Knowledge and ReligionApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Education reform
Academy for Educational
Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$131,000
To produce and disseminate a reporton constituency building for publicschool reform.
Academy for Educational
Development, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$68,000
To assess activities supported through thefoundation’s Constituency Building forPublic School Reform initiative.
Austin Interfaith Sponsoring
Committee Incorporated
(Austin,TX)
$150,000
To plan collaborative educational reformstrategies in Austin.
California Tomorrow
(Oakland,CA)
$150,000
To study the effects of California commu-nity college policies and practices onimmigrant andminority students.
California,University of
(Berkeley,CA)
$56,000
To investigate K-12 educational curriculumincorporating the social justice concernsof historicallymarginalized voices.
California,University of
(Davis, CA)
$73,000
To develop a scholarly research agendaon educational entrepreneurship and itsconsequences for public K-12 education.
Campaign for Fiscal Equity, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$310,000
To examine the linkages amongpublic engagement, school financeand standards-based educationreform.
Center for Applied Linguistics
(Washington,DC)
$25,000
To publish a study entitled ExpandingEducational Opportunity in Linguistically
Diverse Societies.
Center for the Future of Teaching
and Learning (Santa Cruz,CA)
$200,000
For the center’s Teaching and California’sFuture initiative.
Center for Investigative
Reporting, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$20,000
For educational outreach activities for “TheBattle Over School Choice,”a documentaryaired by the Public Broadcasting ServiceinMay 2000.
Center for Law and Education, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
To plan a coordinated campaign on whatparents should expect frompublic schools.
Center for Research andHigher
Studies in Social Anthropology
(Mexico)
$100,000
To build the partnerships and institutionalbases for aNational Institute of IndigenousLanguages inMexico and establish itsmission, aims and scope.
Center on Education Policy
(Washington,DC)
$400,000
Tomonitor and report on the effectsof high school exit exams.
Chicago,University of
(Chicago, IL)
$18,400
For the Chapin Hall Center for Childrento provide technical assistance to thefoundation’s Constituency Building forPublic School Reform initiative.
Communities in School, Inc.
(Alexandria,VA)
$500,000
For technical assistance and trainingto strengthen the counseling and supportservices component of Project GRAD.
Connecticut,University of
(Storrs, CT)
$300,000
For the National Center for AcceleratedSchools to develop and implementlong-term strategies for sustainability inits new home at the university’s NeagSchool of Education.
Constitutional Rights Foundation
(Los Angeles,CA)
$519,000
For school-based community serviceefforts.
Council for Ethics in Economics
(Columbus,OH)
$100,000
To help Ohio bring Project GRAD to urbandistricts in the state.
Cross City Campaign for Urban
School Reform (Chicago, IL)
$300,000
For the Indicators Project to strengthenits national network, conduct researchand develop a communications campaignto promote community organizing’scontributions to school reform.
Cross City Campaign for Urban
School Reform (Chicago, IL)
$50,000
To build a powerful constituencyfor improving teaching quality andimplementing standards in schoolsystems.
Education Commission of the
States (Denver,CO)
$200,000
For activities to revitalize the civic missionof schools.
Education Commission of the
States (Denver,CO)
$200,000
To build knowledge on state policies thatintegrate the academic andwork-forcedevelopment functions of communitycolleges.
Education Resources Institute, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$100,000
To establish the National Alliance forCollege Access and Success.
Foundation-administered project
$296,712
To advance the goals of the ConstituencyBuilding for Public School Reform initiative.
Foundation-administered project
$172,500
For program development and implemen-tation activities for Project GRAD sites.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For program development and implemen-tation activities for Project GRAD sites.
Foundation for the Carolinas
(Charlotte,NC)
$300,000
To implement systemic school reformactivities in Charlotte,North Carolina.
GLSEN, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To strengthen its local and state-levelorganizing and policy advocacy strategiesto address bias in K-12 schools.
Good Schools Pennsylvania
(Philadelphia, PA)
$400,000
For a grassroots campaign to increase thequality of and funding for public schoolsin Pennsylvania.
Grantmakers for Education
(San Diego,CA)
$15,000
To improve educational outcomes forstudents by strengthening philanthropiccapability and effectiveness.
Hague Appeal for Peace, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For a program on peace education.
Hedrick Smith Productions, Inc.
(Bethesda,MD)
$100,000
To conduct research for a proposeddocumentary on successful schools.
Illinois,University of
(Chicago, IL)
$100,000
To examine the potential of schools toenhance children’s social, emotional andethical development.
153
Institute forWisconsin’s Future,
Inc. (Milwaukee,WI)
$15,000
For a convening to build a nationalnetwork of state educational policygroups and community-based organi-zations that seek more equitableeducational finance.
Intercultural Development
Research Association
(San Antonio,TX)
$300,000
To implement systemic school reformactivities in San Antonio, Texas.
Kansas City Chapter of Young
Audiences, Inc.
(Kansas City,MO)
$150,000
For a documentary on the collaborationover the Internet of rural white and raciallydiverse urban high school students tocreate“Counterpoints,”amural depictingtheir identities and cultures.
LaGuardia Education Fund, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$193,000
To plan the Accelerated PerformanceSchool, an integrated high school-community collegemodel to enhancethe progress of low-income andminoritystudents through higher education.
Learning Communities Network,
Inc. (Cleveland,OH)
$300,000
To facilitate the development andinstitutionalization of the Collaboratingfor Educational Reform initiative.
Library of Congress
(Washington,DC)
$28,000
To plan a National Commission on AdultLiteracy.
Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation
(NewYork,NY)
$900,000
To expand the evaluation of Project GRADto all six sites.
Marymount College
(Tarrytown,NY)
$100,000
To develop, test and evaluatematerialson gender equity for incorporation intoteacher-training curricula.
Miller/Rollins
(PutnamValley,NY)
$55,000
To promote inter-site learning amonggrantees in the foundation’s ConstituencyBuilding for Public School Reforminitiative.
NALEO Educational Fund
(Los Angeles,CA)
$200,000
For a leadership development program forLatino school boardmembers.
National Conference of State
Legislatures (Denver,CO)
$353,000
To develop state policies and practices thatsupport high-quality professional develop-ment for educators.
National Council on Community
and Education Partnerships
(Washington,DC)
$792,500
To manage and provide technicalassistance to the Department ofEducation’s Gaining Early Awarenessand Readiness for UndergraduatePrograms (GEAR UP).
National Governors’Association
Center for Best Practices
(Washington,DC)
$530,000
To analyze and disseminate state policiesand practices that promote effectiveteacher recruitment and retention.
Network of Educators on the
Americas (Washington,DC)
$300,000
To implement systemic school reformactivities inWashington,D.C.
NewAmerican Schools
(Arlington,VA)
$100,000
For the planning phase of the establish-ment of the EducationQuality Institute.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$500,000
For the National Center for UrbanPartnerships to disseminate lessonslearned from the foundation’s16-city Urban Partnership Programand for technical assistance to thelocal entities.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$220,000
For research and analysis on the relation-ship between civic engagement and accessand equity in schools worldwide.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$80,000
For a series of urban education dialoguesamong scholars, school system leadersand representatives of civic and indepen-dent sector organizations.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$47,300
For the Center for Puerto Rican Studies’National Latino Education ResearchAgenda Project.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$100,000
For research on how educational leader-ship preparation programs address socialjustice issues.
Parents for Public Schools, Inc.
(Jackson,MS)
$300,000
To implement systemic school reformactivities in Jackson,Mississippi.
Parents for Public Schools, Inc.
(Jackson,MS)
$1,000,000
To build organizational capacity andstrengthen local chapters.
Partnership for Service Learning,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$650,000
For organizational capacity buildingto foster and develop the service-learningmovement in colleges and universitiesaround theworld.
Pennsylvania,University of
(Philadelphia, PA)
$150,000
To develop collaborative educationalreform strategies in Philadelphia.
Prichard Committee for Academic
Excellence (Lexington,KY)
$800,000
For advocacy and constituency building toimprove Kentucky schools and for institu-tional capacity-building activities.
Project GRAD
(Houston,TX)
$1,500,000
Tomanage the national expansion ofthe Project GRADmodel and for schoolreform activities in Houston.
Project GRADAtlanta, Inc.
(Atlanta,GA)
$750,000
For school reform activities in Atlanta.
Project GRAD Los Angeles, Inc.
(North Hollywood,CA)
$1,400,000
For activities to advance school reform.
Project GRAD Los Angeles, Inc.
(North Hollywood,CA)
$100,000
For school reform activities in Los Angeles.
Project GRADNewark Inc.
(Newark,NJ)
$1,000,000
For school reform activities in Newark,New Jersey.
Project GRADNewark Inc.
(Newark,NJ)
$250,000
For activities to advance school reformefforts.
Public Education& Business
Coalition (Denver,CO)
$300,000
For systemic school reform activitiesin Denver, Colorado.
Rand Corporation
(SantaMonica,CA)
$1,500,000
To evaluate the foundation’s Collaboratingfor Educational Reform initiative.
Rand Corporation
(SantaMonica,CA)
$700,000
For research and analysis on bringingeducational reform development anddemonstration programs to scale.
Rural School and Community
Trust (Washington,DC)
$50,000
To plan for improving the equity andadequacy of school finance systems inrural communities.
Rutgers University Foundation
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$400,000
For a teacher training program tointegrate conflict resolution skills intomiddle school and high school historycurricula.
Sacred Heart,University of the
(San Juan, PR)
$25,000
To plan scale-up strategies for theCollaborating for Educational Reforminitiative’s San Juan site.
Santa AnaUnified School District
(Santa Ana,CA)
$300,000
To implement systemic school reformactivities in Santa Ana,California.
StandardsWork, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To plan the implementation of the ResultsCard, a national data standard for collect-ing, monitoring and reporting stateand school district progress in advancingstudent achievement.
Education, Knowledge and Religion
154
Stone Lantern Films, Inc.
(Chevy Chase,MD)
$50,000
For a national education andoutreach campaign for“School:TheStory of American Public Education,”a documentary to be broadcaston public television.
Teachers College
(NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
For the National Commission onTeachingand America’s Future.
Temple University
(Philadelphia, PA)
$35,000
For a pilot training institute on communityorganizing and education reform.
Toronto,University of
(Canada)
$110,000
For amulticountry study of initiatives inthe related fields of citizenship education,education for democracy and humanrights and global education.
Toronto,University of
(Canada)
$8,725
To complete a study on student outcomesin single gender schools.
21st Century School Fund
(Washington,DC)
$60,100
For publications on lessons learnedfrom the Oyster School Public PrivateDevelopment Partnership.
21st Century School Fund
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For a research, communications andcommunity action collaboration toimprove urban public school facilitiesin four areas.
Vanderbilt University
(Nashville,TN)
$360,000
To replicate the Project GRAD systemiceducation reformmodel in Nashville.
Washington,University of
(Seattle,WA)
$276,984
For Strengthening and SustainingTeachers,a collaborative project aimed at improvingthe quality of the teacher work force.
Higher education and scholarship
Albany,University at
(Albany,NY)
$80,000
For an Initiatives forWomen programendowment fund for fellowshipsto women pursuing careers in thephysical sciences.
American Association for Higher
Education (Washington,DC)
$150,000
To develop a comprehensive strategicplan.
American Association of
University Professors
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For activities to increase the participationof faculty and administrators fromhistori-cally black colleges and universities in aconference on shared governance.
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$425,000
To coordinate the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Program inVietnam.
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$312,000
For an international collaborative researchnetwork on the formation of identity inthemodernworld.
American Council on Education
(Washington,DC)
$341,000
ForMapping the Landscape:A Status
Report on the Internationalization of
U.S.Undergraduate Education.
American Historical Association
(Washington,DC)
$113,000
For summer seminars on globalizingregional studies for community collegefaculty.
Association of African
Universities (Ghana)
$294,000
To coordinate the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Program inWest Africa.
Association of American
Colleges andUniversities
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For the Diversity Digest newsletter andrelated activities to identify and commu-nicate new strategies for addressingcampus diversity issues.
Barnard College
(NewYork,NY)
$40,000
For dissemination and curriculardevelopment activities related toBarnard’sMillenniumWomen’sLeadership Summit.
Boston College
(Chestnut Hill,MA)
$190,000
For the Center for International HigherEducation to expand its quarterlynewsletter, International Higher Education,and build a resourceWeb site on privatehigher education.
BrownUniversity
(Providence,RI)
$150,000
To examine higher education policy optionsfor enhancing competition, assuringquality and preserving access in a globalcontext and suggest the implicationsfor the U.S. policy environment.
California,University of
(Berkeley,CA)
$200,000
To strengthen the BerkeleyWorkshopon Environmental Politics and launch aCulture and Environment Forum.
California,University of
(Berkeley,CA)
$106,000
For research on the effects ofmarketforces on higher education.
California,University of
(Berkeley,CA)
$35,000
To develop a strategic plan for the AfricanAmerican Studies Department.
Center for Research andHigher
Studies in Social Anthropology
(Mexico)
$234,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships PrograminMexico.
Center for Research on the
Mesoamerica Region
(Guatemala)
$144,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Program inGuatemala.
Center for Transcultural Studies
(Chicago, IL)
$150,000
For an international consortium ofresearch centers to examine the culturaldimensions of globalization.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$208,000
To the university’s Center for ComparativeLiterature and Society for efforts to linkcomparative literature with area studiesprograms.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$10,000
For a scholarly symposium on Jazz andthe American Experience.
Connecticut,University of
(Storrs, CT)
$502,290
To evaluate the Accelerated SchoolsProject.
Council for Aid to Education, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$375,000
To assess the quality of undergraduateliberal education in the United States.
Council for Higher Education
Accreditation
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To conduct an international seminarand to compile and disseminate informa-tion on quality assurance agreementsin higher educationworldwide.
Council of Graduate Schools
in the United States
(Washington,DC)
$106,000
To conduct a study on the quality andeffectiveness of master’s programs in thesocial sciences.
Feminist Press, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$49,900
For a collection of essays written byChinese women scholars on issuesaffectingwomen.
Forum for the Future of Higher
Education, Inc.
(NewHaven,CT)
$220,000
For the Ford Policy Forum,which bringstogether scholars to discuss emergingeconomic issues and develop a researchagenda in policy studies for highereducation.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
For activities to explore the foundation’sexperience,opportunities, future directionsand collaborations on higher educationin Africa.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
155
Higher Education Policy Institute
(San Jose,CA)
$1,500,000
For research, training and analyses onpublic policy issues in higher education.
Higher Education Policy Institute
(San Jose,CA)
$25,000
For the publication and distribution of thestatement of “Just and Efficient CollegeFinance.”
Institute for Higher Education
Policy (Washington,DC)
$101,000
To explore the impact of state policychanges on the admissions, financial aidand remedial education practices ofpublic and private post-secondary institu-tions in New England.
Institute for Higher Education
Policy (Washington,DC)
$69,000
For the Global Higher Education Exchange,a set of communication strategies toprovide policymakers worldwide accessto information about critical issues inhigher education policy.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$996,000
For coordination, placement and informa-tion services for the Ford Foundation’sInternational Fellowships Program and tocoordinate the competition in Russia.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$364,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Programin China.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$316,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Programin Indonesia.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$300,000
For planning and start-up costs associatedwith the International Fellowships Fund.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$250,000
To develop a global system for collectingand disseminating student mobility dataworldwide.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$174,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships PrograminMexico.
International Association for
Feminist Economics
(Lewisburg, PA)
$80,300
To publish two special issues of the journalFeminist Economics, one on “Gender,Color, Caste and Class”and the secondon“Building on the Contributions ofAmartya Sen.”
International Fellowships Fund,
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$275,526,718
To carry out activities of the InternationalFellowships Program.
Inter-University Council for East
Africa (Uganda)
$399,000
To carry out the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Programin East Africa.
Latin American Faculty of Social
Sciences (Chile)
$303,000
To coordinate the Ford FoundationInternational Fellowships Program inChile and Peru.
Manitoba,University of
(Canada)
$68,000
For a workshop on globalization, regionaltrade liberalization and higher educationand to create a research network focusedon these issues.
Maryland,University of
(College Park,MD)
$50,000
For a conference on the current state andfuture development of doctoral programsin women’s studies and to publish theconference proceedings.
Massachusetts,University of
(Boston,MA)
$200,000
To engage higher education practitionersin informing public policy in highereducation.
Michigan,University of
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$97,500
To build a network in Indonesia andthe United States of Indonesianand Indonesianist scholars of history,anthropology, cultural studies andpost-colonial studies.
National Center for Higher
EducationManagement Systems
(Boulder,CO)
$500,000
To create a National Information Centerto improve the information base onhigher education for policy makingand analysis.
National Center for Higher
EducationManagement Systems
(Boulder,CO)
$50,000
For a national collaboration amonghigher-education policy analysts to plana new curriculum to train students inthe field.
National Council for Research on
Women, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$700,000
To enhance its development capacity andmember services and upgrade its databaseandWeb site.
National Humanities Center
(ResearchTriangle,NC)
$200,000
To endow the John Hope Franklinfellowship program.
New School University
(NewYork,NY)
$50,000
For research and dissemination onAfrican-Americanwomen artists.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$214,800
For research onTransnational Adoptionand the Invention of Identity.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$160,000
For a Remarque Institute forum on socialresponsibility in public life.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$97,000
For experts from the United States toassist a higher education planning effortinMozambique.
NewYork University
(NewYork,NY)
$7,500
For a project on historical memory in aPhilippines/United States context.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$890,000
For the Center for Place, Culture andPolitics to conduct a project, RevitalizingArea Studies:Toward a Synthesis.
North American Congress on
Latin America, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$165,000
For research,writing and disseminationon exclusion and discrimination in theAmericas.
North Carolina,University of
(Chapel Hill,NC)
$374,000
To establish an Institute for Policy onAcademic Quality in higher educationwith a comparative internationalfocus.
Northwestern University
(Evanston, IL)
$306,000
For the Program of African Studies tohost the Crossing Borders: RevitalizingArea StudiesWeb site.
Oxford,University of
(England)
$200,000
For an endowment to the Isaiah BerlinAcademic Fund and to fund editorial workon Isaiah Berlin’s papers.
Rochester,University of
(Rochester,NY)
$250,000
To establish an endowment to fundfellowships forminority women at theDavid T. Kearns Center for Diversityand Leadership in Science andEngineering.
Rutgers University
(NewBrunswick,NJ)
$500,000
For an endowment for the university’sInstitute forWomen’s Leadership.
Salzburg Seminar in American
Studies, Inc. (Middlebury,VT)
$25,000
For a seminar on higher education andpublic policy in emerging economies.
Smith College
(Northampton,MA)
$35,000
ForMeridians, an interdisciplinary journalof scholarship and creative writing by andabout women of color and third-worldwomen, to developmarketing, dissemina-tion and evaluation strategies.
Smithsonian Institution
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
For conferences,workshops and researchto synthesize existingmaterials, identifynew trends and strengthen teachingand coursework in the emergent fieldof Asian Pacific identity, culture andhistory.
Education, Knowledge and Religion
156
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$2,500,000
For international programs sponsoredwith the American Council of LearnedSocieties.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For the first phase of a long-term effortto strengthen research on African highereducation.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$98,400
To help analyze the procedures used in therecruitment and selection of InternationalFellowships Program fellows.
SRI International
(Menlo Park,CA)
$90,000
To produce a report onminority studentretention in higher education.
Stevens Group at Larson Allen
(St. Paul,MN)
$60,000
To conduct an organizational assess-ment and develop a business plan forthe National Council for ResearchonWomen.
UB Foundation Services, Inc.
(Buffalo,NY)
$130,000
For the International ComparativeStudy of Higher Education Financeand Access to expand its activities ineastern and southern Africa.
U.S. Educational Foundation
in India (India)
$425,882
To establish and coordinate theInternational Fellowships Programfor South Asia.
Washington,University of
(Seattle,WA)
$450,000
For the New Scholars Project to researchand develop new curricula on race,gender, ethnicity and nationality forthe university, community collegesand K-12 schools.
Western Interstate Commission
for Higher Education
(Boulder,CO)
$450,000
For a project to engage higher educationpolicy makers with key issues at thestate level.
Women’s Leadership Fund
(NewYork,NY)
$15,000
To hold a YoungWomen’s LeadershipSummit bringing together youngwomenfrom diverse backgrounds to exchangeideas about and experiences of beingagents of changewithin institutions andcommunities.
Yale University
(NewHaven,CT)
$100,000
For a scholarly conference on the life andworks of Langston Hughes.
Religion, society and culture
Boston University
(Boston,MA)
$722,000
For the School of Medicine’s HealingLandscape Project to integrate the studyof the religiously grounded healingsystems of African diaspora communitiesin Boston into its curriculum.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
For a study of Muslimminority commu-nities in NewYork and Europe.
Douglas Gould and Company, Inc.
(Larchmont,NY)
$50,000
To develop a communications strategytomake the work of grantees of thefoundation’s Religion and Culture:Meetingthe Challenge of Pluralism initiativeknown to awider public.
Earth Island Institute
(San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
To promote and distribute“In the Light ofReverence,” a documentary on NativeAmerican struggles to protect landscapesof spiritual significance.
Emory University (Atlanta,GA)
$707,000
To establish a Fellowship Program in IslamandHuman Rights.
Florida,University of
(Gainesville, FL)
$115,900
To plan a collaborative research projecton religion and transnationalism amongGuatemalan,Mexican and Brazilianimmigrants in Florida.
Foundation-administered project
$25,000
For the activities of the Inter-ProgramWorking Group on Religion, Society andCulture.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$120,600
To plan a study of women,gender andsexuality in American Islam.
Interfaith Alliance Foundation,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$75,000
For technical assistance with organiza-tional development and communicationsto guide its strategic planning process.
Northwestern University
(Evanston, IL)
$1,048,000
To establish the Institute for the Study ofIslamic Thought in Africa.
Northwestern University
(Evanston, IL)
$22,000
To plan the establishment of the Institutefor the Study of Islamic Thought in Africa.
Schechter Institute of Jewish
Studies (Israel)
$175,000
For the Center forWomen in Jewish Lawin Jerusalem.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$490,000
For a pilot research project to interna-tionalize scholarship on religion andimmigration.
UnionTheological Seminary
(NewYork,NY)
$79,500
To plan a new project on comparativeapproaches to the study of historicallydominated peoples and sacred texts.
WilliamMarsh Rice University
(Houston,TX)
$1,000,000
For an innovative research and policyproject on themoral implications ofbiotechnology.
World Conference on Religion
and Peace, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$400,000
To prepare members in eight Africannations to participate in the Hopefor African Children Initiative,whichwillbuild capacity in African communities toassist children affected by HIV/AIDS.
Worldwide Indigenous Science
Network (San Francisco,CA)
$300,000
To build a network of the keepers of sacredsites in Hawaii and the Pacific.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Education reform
Antonio Restrepo Barco
Foundation (Colombia)
$100,000
For phase two of the PedagogicalExpedition, a project to identify, docu-ment and classify creative teachingmethods used by educational institu-tions in Colombia.
CayetanoHeredia Peruvian
University (Peru)
$40,000
For Schools that Learn and Develop, thefirst in a periodic series of seminars forresearchers, public officials and educatorsto discuss research to improve nationaland local education systems.
Center of Educational Research
and Development
(Chile)
$60,000
To promote participatory school projectsinmunicipal primary education in Chile.
Educational Forum
(Peru)
$100,000
For training, information production,media dissemination and civil societymonitoring of educational reformgoals and issues in Peru.
Group of Analysis for
Development (Peru)
$81,400
For a regional research project and toadvocate a set of curriculum policyrecommendations in Peru.
Institute of Regional Studies
(Peru)
$60,000
To analyze Peruvian policies on bilingualand intercultural education and holdforums to discuss proposals addressingthe role of indigenous languages andcultures in the national and local schoolsystem.
Tarea-Educational Publications
Association (Peru)
$80,000
For planning to design strategies todemocratize schools, involving teachers,students and a local coalition in a poorcommunity in Lima.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
157
Tarea-Educational Publications
Association (Peru)
$37,500
To evaluate a six-year collaborationamong Peruvian NGOs to improve thequality of primary education in threepublic schools in a poor district in Limaand produce a documentary on theproject.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$100,000
To train education decisionmakers infive Latin American countries to analyzeand use relevant information to improvelearning outcomes in educationsystems.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$75,000
For the first stage of research on educa-tion, reform and equity in the Andes andSouthern Cone region.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$50,000
To promote the teaching of local heritagein Chilean schools through an interactivenetwork for education change.
Higher education and scholarship
Chile,University of
(Chile)
$70,000
To strengthen the social sciences in Chilethrough a research fellowship program foryoung social scientists.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$375,000
For research and training fellowshipson collectivememory of repressionin contemporary processes of democrati-zation in the Southern Cone.
Brazil
Education reform
Bahia, Federal University of
$315,000
For graduate training, research andoutreach in participatory school gover-nance and educational leadership.
Bahia, Federal University of
$127,000
For race-related supplementary educationand curriculum development and publicdebate on affirmative action.
Brazilian Association for
Population Studies (Abep)
$98,000
For activities to consolidate the fieldof educational demography andcontribute to improvements in educa-tional planning.
Carlos Chagas Foundation
$124,000
For research on the relationship betweenmethods of school administration andcurricular reform in secondary schools inthree Brazilian states.
Education Action–
Consultancy,Research and
Information
$130,000
For activities to help educators under-stand the universe of youth groupinterests and to develop proposals tomake school amore important partof youth aspirations.
GetulioVargas Foundation
$136,000
For the final phase of a research projecton private sector investment in publiceducation.
National Association of
PostgraduateTeaching and
Research in Education
$250,000
For a research scholarship competition onquestions of race and education.
National Council of State
Secretaries of Education
$250,000
For research, training,networkingand dissemination on good school-management practices.
Nucleus for Black Studies
$210,000
For programs to combat discriminationand advance the rights of southern Brazil’sAfro-Brazilian population.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$305,000
To develop innovativemethodologiesandmaterials to revitalize the teachingof educational administration in LatinAmerican universities.
Higher education and scholarship
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
To evaluate educational quality enhance-ment programs in four Latin Americancountries.
Rio de Janeiro, State University of
$1,300,000
To select, fund and evaluate projects toimprove access to and success in highereducation formembers of historicallyexcluded populations.
São Paulo,University of
$300,000
For the Center for Research on HigherEducation to conduct applied research,modernize its library and upgradeits electronic communicationscapabilities.
China
Education reform
Beijing Normal University
$79,500
For a comprehensive study of ethnic-minority-language school textbooks inChina.
Beijing Yuda Business College
$20,000
For study and development of adult lifeskills and competencies in a poor countyinwestern China.
Central University for
Nationalities
$59,400
For research and teacher training aimedat reducing the school dropout rate ofLahuminority girls.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$39,600
For a study of the socioculturalconstruction of state education inethnic communities of southeasternChina.
International Research and
Training Center for Rural
Education
$21,800
For an experimental programusingeducation to empower poor people inrural China to improve their ownlivelihoods.
Narisi Primary School of
Dongxiang Autonomous County
$20,000
For an experiment on use of theDongxiang language to reduce schooldiscontinuation.
Peking University
$51,000
For an investigation into the schooltextbookmonopoly and how it affectseducational access and equity in ruralareas.
Peking University
$25,500
For an investigation into howpoor familiesdecide howmuch education is enoughfor their daughters.
Shanghai Academy of
Educational Sciences
$80,000
For community-planned and school-basedteacher training in a poor county ofGuizhou Province.
ShaoxingVocational Education
Center
$100,000
To establish the Shaoxing CommunityCollege.
State Ethnic Affairs Commission
$100,000
To improve the transition rate fromhigh school to university for Tibetanand Yi students.
Tibetan Poverty Alleviation Fund,
Inc. (Cambridge,MA)
$98,800
To transform a vocational training centerinto a community college in Tibet.
U.S.-China Education Foundation,
Ltd. (NewYork,NY)
$406,200
To develop community collegemodelsin China.
YunnanNormal University
$23,900
To promote economic development andcultural preservation through educationin an ethnic community in Yunnan.
Higher education and scholarship
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$40,000
For the convening of the 75th GeneralAssembly of the International Union ofAcademies in Beijing.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$30,000
For an international conference onthe management of social sciencesand humanities.
ChineseWomen’s College
$25,200
To publish four issues of its quarterlynewsletter,Women’s Studies in Chinaand Abroad.
ChineseWomen’s College
$23,100
To produce teaching videomaterials ongender in themedia.
Education, Knowledge and Religion
158
Dalian University
$81,000
For an interdisciplinary center for women’sand gender studies.
Fujian Normal University
$15,000
For research, a workshop and a reporton the relationship between governmentand institutions of higher education inChina.
HuazhongUniversity of Science
andTechnology
$8,500
For an examination of research programson access to higher education for poorstudents.
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$250,000
To develop the Institute for InternationalResearch at the Hopkins-Nanjing Centerfor Chinese and American Studies.
Peking University
$91,400
For translation of ten notedworksbyWestern sinologists about womenin China.
Qinghai Normal University
$19,400
To improve language teaching in a poor,largely Tibetan, county by trainingTibetanstudents inTibetan,Chinese and Englishto prepare them for specialized trainingas English teachers.
Yunnan Reproductive Health
Research Association
$23,900
For establishment of a network forstrengthening gender and women’sstudies in higher education inYunnan.
Eastern Africa
Higher education and scholarship
Hubert KairukiMemorial
University
(Tanzania)
$100,000
To build the university’s capacity forstrategic planning and development.
Inter-University Council
for East Africa
(Uganda)
$100,000
To develop a local area network andassess the information and informationcommunication technology needs ofits member institutions.
Kenyatta University
(Kenya)
$300,000
To enhance female participation andperformance inmathematics, scienceand technology in university educationin Kenya.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Education reform
Biblio Charitable Trust (India)
$68,200
To hire professional staff, publish theBibliomagazine and increasemarketingactivities.
Higher education and scholarship
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$75,000
For regional and country studies onthe state of social science researchin South Asia.
Indonesia
Higher education and scholarship
Indonesian International
Education Foundation
$211,000
To strengthen higher education inIndonesia through in-country gradu-ate scholarships in the humanities andsocial sciences and participation ofacademic administrators in interna-tional forums.
Mexico and Central America
Education reform
Association of the Latin American
Universities Entrusted to the
Society of Jesus (Nicaragua)
$28,000
To identify best practices among teacherson the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua andapply the results to its in-service trainingprogram.
Autonomous University of
Aguasacalientes (Mexico)
$98,500
For a comprehensive review and analysisof the current mechanisms for evaluatingeducational services inMexico.
Center of Habilitation and
Integration for the Blind
(Mexico)
$30,000
To train staff in specialized areas of psycho-pedagogy in order to strengthen anddisseminate a model of education formultiply disabled children and youngpeople.
Citizen’s Educational Observatory
(Mexico)
$70,000
To consolidate an innovative informationand communication service for citizenparticipation in educational debate andpolicy development.
College of the Southern Border
(Mexico)
$300,000
To design, demonstrate and disseminatethrough in-service training capacity-building programs for basic educationteachers in Chiapas.
Education and Change (Mexico)
$71,000
To hold a forumof educational officialsand teachers from throughout Mexicoon educational policy, to improve itsjournal,Cero en Conducta,and to createaWeb site.
Guadalajara,University of
(Mexico)
$20,000
To produce a didactical grammar of theHuichol languagewith the participationof native speakers.
Guatemalan Institute of
Radiophonic Education
(Guatemala)
$52,000
For in-service teacher training throughdistance learning for teachers in ruralGuatemala to improve the qualityof basic schooling.
Higher Technological Studies
Institute (Mexico)
$94,000
To improve the pedagogic skills of indige-nous teachers at a school in the Huicholhighlands of Jalisco and to produce learn-ing materials incorporating Huicholculture into the curriculum.
Higher Technological Studies
Institute (Mexico)
$66,000
To strengthen community participationin rural schools in Jalisco and utilizecommunity resources to upgrade schoolinfrastructure and improve educationalaccess and quality.
Monterrey Institute of
Technology and Advanced
Studies (Mexico)
$300,000
To develop amodel for using new informa-tion technologies to strengthen literacyand adult education in rural areas and anetwork of community education centersfor its application.
Social Development and
Education (Mexico)
$148,000
To improve the quality and relevance ofeducation in the highlands of Puebla,Mexico through action research, teachertraining and school-communitycollaborations.
Universidad Autonoma
Metropolitana (Mexico)
$150,000
To expand basic education professionals’access to Ph.D. training in education andrelated social sciences inMexico.
Universidad Autonoma
Metropolitana (Mexico)
$30,000
For research on educational decentraliza-tion and its impact on the quality andequity of educational provision in fourMexican states.
Higher education and scholarship
Arizona,University of
(Tucson,AZ)
$660,000
To consolidate the programs of theConsortium for North American HigherEducation Collaboration.
Center for Research on the
Mesoamerica Region
(Guatemala)
$100,000
Tomap the resource levels of CentralAmerican universities in order to identifymeasures to increase the access andimprove the performance of studentsfrom socioeconomically disadvantagedgroups.
Ibero-American University
(Mexico)
$150,000
For an interinstitutional,multidisciplinaryprogram of research, training andacademic exchange focused on povertyand family welfare.
Institute of International
Education, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$415,000
To administer the 15th annual fellowshipcompetition for candidates fromMexicoand Central America seeking to pursuegraduate study in the social sciences out-side their home countries.
National Association of
Universities and Institutes of
Higher Education
(Mexico)
$1,100,000
To strengthen academic services forindigenous students in Mexicanuniversities.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
159
University of the Autonomous
Regions of the Caribbean Coast
of Nicaragua (Nicaragua)
$100,000
To expand information technologyresources in order to strengthen highereducation for the indigenous peoples ofthe Caribbean coast of Nicaragua.
Middle East and North Africa
Education reform
Lebanese Association for
Educational Sciences
(Lebanon)
$60,000
For a comparative study on the use ofinformation technology in educationin the Arab world and a regionalconference.
Ministry of Higher Education
(Egypt)
$400,000
To build expertise and define standardsandmechanisms for a quality assuranceand accreditation system for Egyptianuniversities and for a feasibility studyfor a proposed national center foraccreditation.
Religion, society and culture
California,University of
(Davis, CA)
$270,000
To complete the Encyclopedia ofWomen
and Islamic Cultures, a five-volumecollaborationwith contributions fromscholars around theworld.
EasternMichiganUniversity
(Ypsilanti,MI)
$50,000
For a comparative survey of value systemsand forms of religiosity and their impacton social change in Egypt, Jordan and Iran.
The Philippines
Education reform
Cahbriba Alternative School
Foundation, Inc.
$44,000
To develop community schools to institu-tionalize the participation of parents inschool governance.
City of Naga
$130,000
To strengthen the local school board andmake it a vehicle for enhancing localautonomy in the provision of qualityeducation.
Local Superior of the Sons
of Divine Providence
(DonOrione), Inc.
$38,000
To improve the chances of success ofstudents from Payatas through reinforce-ment of their learning experiences.
Manuel T. Sia Development
Foundation, Inc.
$65,000
To institutionalize community participa-tion in the provision of early childhoodeducation and in advocacy for basiceducation reforms.
Marcellin Foundation, Inc.
$60,000
To develop an alternative educationalre-entry (home study) program for out-of-school children and youth.
Municipality of San Fernando,
Pampanga
$185,000
To develop and implement a reading profi-ciency program in English and Filipinofor grades one and two.
Museo Pambata Foundation, Inc.
$52,800
For amobile library to provide access tofacilities and interactive reading activitiesfor children, parents and out-of-schoolyouth.
Museum Foundation of the
Philippines, Inc.
$38,000
To train teachers to usemuseum facilitiesto teach social studies, natural science,arts and crafts in order to developgreater appreciation of Filipino culturalheritage.
Notre Dame of Dadiangas
College, Inc.
$320,000
For the Early Childhood EducationCenter to organize collaborative effortsamong parents, teachers and villageand tribal leaders to provide preschooleducation in indigenous communitiesinMindanao.
Philippine NationalMuseum
Foundation, Inc.
$30,000
To train teachers in the use ofmuseumfacilities to teach social studies, naturalscience, arts and crafts.
Province of Bulacan
$300,000
To develop and implement an Englishandmathematics proficiency program forstudents in grades one and two.
Province of NuevaVizcaya
$300,000
To organize day care centers in uplandvillages, introduce the kindergartencurriculum in pilot schools and enhancereading proficiency among first andsecond grade students.
Public Finance Institute of the
Philippines, Inc.
$100,000
For activities to empower local schoolboards to implement reforms to improvethe provision of basic education.
Public Finance Institute of the
Philippines, Inc.
$65,875
For research and public forums onmajorpolicy issues in education.
St. Scholastica’s College
$35,000
To strengthen the Share-A-Year Program,in which graduates serve as volunteerteachers in village schools, and extendparticipation to other Philippine collegesand universities.
University of Asia and the Pacific
Foundation, Inc.
$90,000
To design and pilot an accreditationprogram for public high schools in thePhilippines.
Russia
Higher education and scholarship
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$130,000
For the Russian component of an interna-tional interdisciplinary research networkon the formation of identity in themodernworld.
Center for Information Research
$100,000
For Information System RUSSIA, an onlinedatabase on the social sciences andhumanities for Russian academics and toestablish an interuniversity informationconsortium in the social sciences.
Editorial Body of the Journal
“Polis”
$200,000
To assist Russian academics in developingmicroresearch communities in the formof virtual workshops on high-prioritytopics on the political science agendain Russia andworldwide.
EuropeanUniversity of
St. Petersburg
$96,000
For the continuing development of agender studies program and partnershipwith state universities in Tver andSamara.
Independent Institute for Social
Policy
$800,000
To assist with the start of activities toadvance the development of independentsocial policy analysis.
Irkutsk State University
$141,000
For collaborative interdisciplinary researchon ethnic and political trends in easternSiberia.
New School University
(NewYork,NY)
$260,000
For the Journal Donation Project toprovide American and British scholarlyand professional journals to Russianuniversities and libraries.
Organization of Social Science
Teachers
$115,000
To develop a training program in sociologyfor faculty and researchers in the Volgaregion.
Russian Academy of Sciences
$447,600
To train regional sociology teachers andresearchers and develop training andresearch facilities at three new Centersfor Advanced Study and Education.
Russian Academy of Sciences
$65,000
To expand Socionet, an Internet-basedsocial science information resourcesnetwork serving the Russian academiccommunity.
Russian Academy of Sciences
$24,500
For awinter school in social policy to beheld inMoscow for regional sociologists,government officials and journalists.
Russian Academy of Sciences
$10,000
For the Center for Sociological Educationof the academy’s Institute of Sociologyto organize a student conference oneconomic issues.
Russian State University for the
Humanities
$16,500
To develop a research network in folklorestudies.
Education, Knowledge and Religion
160
Samara State University
$45,000
For the university’s Gender Studies Centerto incorporate a gender studies perspectiveinto standard curricula and serve as aresource center for the broader academiccommunity of theVolga region.
School of Economics Institute
$25,000
To plan research on trends in economicseducation in Russia.
Tver State University
$40,500
For the university’s Gender StudiesProgram.
Ulyanovsk StateTechnical
University
$33,000
For public education programs to promotepublic awareness in the area of standard-ized testing in education.
Urals State University,Named
After A.M.Gorky
$19,000
For the journal UniversityManagement:Practice and Analysis, a unique Russianpublication devoted to the issues of admin-istration, management and financing inhigher education.
Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod
State University
$25,000
To explore opportunities to improve theprofessional skills andmotivation ofgraduating students planning to teachin rural schools.
Southern Africa
Higher education and scholarship
CapeTown,University of
(South Africa)
$428,250
For an African Gender Institute initiativeto strengthen gender studies in Africathrough networking, training, curriculumdevelopment and publications.
CapeTown,University of
(South Africa)
$100,000
For the university’s transformationprogram.
Centre for Higher Education
TransformationTrust
(South Africa)
$425,000
To assess institutional and system changein higher education.
Centre for Higher Education
TransformationTrust
(South Africa)
$65,853
For a study of higher education institu-tions in the eastern Cape.
Church Community Leadership
Trust (South Africa)
$300,000
To consolidate and strengthen the trust’swomen and youth leadership programsand expand their reach beyond religiousinstitutions.
Committee of Technikon
Principals (South Africa)
$42,875
To determine effective methods forintroducing and utilizing technologyfor education and training in ruralSouth Africa.
Council on Higher Education
(South Africa)
$340,000
To build a higher education qualityassurance system in South Africa.
Council on Higher Education
(South Africa)
$245,000
To develop and implement a nationalhigher educationmonitoring and evalua-tion system in South Africa.
Fort Hare,University of
(South Africa)
$315,700
To establish a cooperative educationprogram integratingwork experiencewith academic course work.
Fort Hare,University of
(South Africa)
$72,000
For a conference addressing the broadhuman resource challenges facing SouthAfrica and the African continent ingeneral.
Human Sciences Research
Council (South Africa)
$133,000
For a qualitative research project on privatehigher education in South Africa.
Katutura Youth Enterprise Centre
Trust (Namibia)
$100,000
Forwork-force skills training to unem-ployed youth in Namibia.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$490,000
To develop the Northern Campus of theUniversity of Namibia.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$40,000
For the materials development andinstructional design unit of the university’sCentre for External Studies.
Namibia,University of
(Namibia)
$28,200
To establish a network for advancedprofessional training and a researchprogram in distance and open learningamong six universities in southernAfrica.
National Institute for Economic
Policy (South Africa)
$50,000
For assisting historically disadvantageduniversities in South Africa through aninternship program.
OngwedivaTeachers Resource
Center (Namibia)
$26,400
For a project designed to promotethe preservation and revitalization oftraditional dance andmusic.
Peninsula Technikon
(South Africa)
$206,300
To develop the capacity of its fund-raisingand public affairs department.
Witwatersrand,University of the
(South Africa)
$96,800
To analyze post-apartheid South Africa’sgovernance capacity and its impact onsocioeconomic transformation.
Religion, society and culture
Steve Biko Foundation
(South Africa)
$60,000
For the planning and hosting of theannual Steve BikoMemorial Lecture tobe held in September 2001.
Vietnam and Thailand
Education reform
AnGiangUniversity
(Vietnam)
$53,000
To develop community college curriculumand outreach programs in theMekongDelta.
Center for Social Sciences and
Humanities of Danang
(Vietnam)
$14,200
For linguistic research and to draftand test a primary school textbook forthe K’tu linguistic minority.
Higher education and scholarship
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$1,100,000
For the Social Science Scholarship Program,which enablesVietnamese social scientiststo undertake postgraduate studies abroadin sociology and anthropology.
American Council of Learned
Societies Devoted to Humanistic
Studies (NewYork,NY)
$30,000
For comparative research on Englishacquisition and an experimental Englishlearning curriculum for disadvantagedstudents.
AnGiangUniversity
(Vietnam)
$80,000
A Pathways grant to increase the admis-sion rate for disadvantaged students,improve their English proficiency andcomputer skills and increase theirgraduation rate.
Cantho University
(Vietnam)
$75,000
A Pathways grant to improve theEnglish language and computer skillsof disadvantaged students, increasetheir graduation rates and prepare themfor the labormarket.
Center for Vietnamese and
Intercultural Studies
(Vietnam)
$40,000
To conserve genealogical records, start amultidisciplinary program to demonstratethe uses of genealogical research anddevelop trainingmodules and guidelinesfor the public.
College of Pharmacy
(Vietnam)
$55,000
For an international workshop onethnobotany andmedicinal plantconservation.
Da Lat,University of
(Vietnam)
$80,000
A Pathways grant to narrow the gapbetween disadvantaged and otherstudents through campus-based supportand skills training and increase accessfor ethnicminorities and students fromremote areas.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
161
DanangUniversity
(Vietnam)
$80,000
A Pathways grant to enhance Englishlanguage and computer skills of disadvan-taged students, improve their academicperformance and prepare them for thejobmarket.
Hanoi Agricultural University
(Vietnam)
$100,000
For technical assistance, networking andconvening activities with respect to theeight Vietnamese universities participatingin the Pathways to Higher Educationprogram.
Hanoi Agricultural University
(Vietnam)
$81,000
A Pathways grant to improve enrollment,retention and performance rates fordisadvantaged students.
HueUniversity
(Vietnam)
$70,000
A Pathways grant to increase the numberof disadvantaged students passing itsundergraduate and graduate entranceexams and improve the performanceof those entering through specialprograms.
National Center for Social
Sciences andHumanities
(Vietnam)
$30,000
For presentation of anthropologicalresearch papers by junior researchersfromVietnam andThailand at amajorinternational conference and forpublications.
National Center for Social
Sciences andHumanities
(Vietnam)
$25,000
For the participation of non-VietnameseAsian scholars in the 14th Biennial GeneralConference of the Association of AsianSocial Science Research Councils.
Thai NguyenUniversity
(Vietnam)
$65,000
A Pathways grant to increase access tohigher education in six northern provinces,increase the university’s intake ofdisadvantaged students and enhancetheir academic performance.
VinhTeachers Training University
(Vietnam)
$55,000
A Pathways grant to increase the univer-sity’s intake of disadvantaged studentsand enhance their English language,computer and social skills.
West Africa
Higher education and scholarship
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For consultants and convenings to explorethe foundation’s experience,opportunities,future directions and collaborations onhigher education in Africa.
Grants to Individuals$223,559
Total, Education, Knowledge andReligion$68,565,223*
* Total does not include $280million for theInternational Fellowships Program.
Education, Knowledge and Religion
162
Publications andOtherMedia—Education,Knowledge and Religion
selected books, articles andreports
A Study Guide:Chinua Achebe’sThings Fall Apart.Hampshire, England:AfricanMedia
Productions, 2000.
Beating the Odds:A City-by-CityAnalysis of Student Performanceand Achievement Gaps on StateAssessments.Washington,D.C.: Council of the
Great City Schools,May 2001.
Braslavsky,Cecilia and Felicitas
Acosta (orgs.).
El estado de la enseñanza de laformación en gestión y políticaeducativa en América latina(The Status of Training andTeaching inManagement andEducational Policies in LatinAmerica).Buenos Aires,Argentina:
UNESCO–IIPE, 2001.
Bruschini, Cristina.
Tempos e Lugares de Gênero(Times and Places for Gender).São Paulo,Brazil: Fundação Carlos
Chagas, 2001.
Cotler, Julio and RomeoGrompone.
El Fujimorismo:Ascenso y caída deun régimen autoritario (Fujimorism:Rise and Fall of an AuthoritarianRegime).Lima,Perú: Institute of Peruvian
Studies, 2000.
Degregori, Carlos Iván.
La década de la antipolítica.Augey huída de Alberto Fujimori yVladimiroMontesinos (The Decadeof Antipolitics. Boom and Escapeof Alberto Fujimori andVladimiroMontesinos).Lima,Perú: IEP, 2000.
Dyatlov,Viktor I.
Sovremennye torgovyemenshinstva:faktor stabilnosti ili konflikta?(ModernTradeMinorities:A Factorof Stability or Conflict?)Moscow:Natalis, 2000 (issued
in 2001).
Eck,Diana.
ANewReligious America:How aChristian Country Has NowBecometheWorld’sMost ReligiouslyDiverse Nation.San Francisco:Harper, June 2001.
Enhancing theTeaching Profession:The Importance ofMobility toRecruitment and Retention.Thepublication is in four parts: SolvingTeacher Shortages through LicenseReciprocity; Improving PensionPortability for K-12 Teachers;Teacher Recruitment: StaffingClassroomswith Quality Teachers;and a Compendium of ResourcesonTeacherMobility.Denver: SHEEO (State Higher
Education Executive Officers),
2001.
Expanding Educational Opportunityin Linguistically Diverse Societies.Washington,D.C.: Center for Applied
Linguistics, 2001.
Goodman,Paul S.
Technology Enhanced Learning.Pittsburgh:CarnegieMellon
University, Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, 2001.
Measuring Up 2000:The State-by-State Report Card for HigherEducation.Washington,D.C.:The National
Center for Public Policy andHigher
Education, 2000.
Muñoz, Fanni.
Las diversiones públicas en Lima.1890–1920: La experiencia de lamodernidad (Public Entertainmentin Lima. 1890–1920:An ExperienceofModernity).Lima,Perú:Network for the
Development of Social Sciences in
Peru, Pontifical Catholic University
of Peru, 2001.
Omelchenko, E. (ed.).
Geroinashegovremeni:Sotsiologicheskie ocherki(Hero-in-our-times:Sociological practices).Ulyanovsk, Russia:Middle-Volga
Scientific Center, 2000 (issued
in 2001).
Rong,Ma.
Ershiyi Shiji:Wenhua Zijue yu KuaWenhua Duihua (Vols I, II) (21stCentury: Cultural Consciousness andCross-Cultural Communication).Peking,China:Peking University
Press,April 2001.
Sindhunata (ed.).
Menggagas Paradigma BaruPendidikan:Demokratisasi,Otonomi,Civil Society,Globalisasi(Conceiving a New Paradigmfor Education:Democratization,Autonomy,Civil Society,Globalization).Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Penerbit Kanisius, 2000.
Sindhunata (ed.).
MembukaMasa Depan Anak-AnakKita:Mencari Kurikulum PendidikanAbad XXI (Opening Our Children’sFuture: In Search of a Curriculumfor Education in the Twenty-FirstCentury).Yogyakarta (Central Java), Indonesia:
Penerbit Kanisius, 2000.
The Building Blocks of State TestingPrograms.Volume 2,Number 4, 2001.
Washington,D.C.:National Board
on Educational Testing and Public
Policy, 2001.
The Ford Foundation, Lagos Office
(ed.).
Pipeline Issues in Higher EducationinWest Africa.Lagos,Nigeria:University of Lagos
Press, 2001.
Venturo, Sandro.
Contrajuventud. Ensayos sobrejuventud y participación política(Obstacles Faced by Young People.Essays on Youth and PoliticalParticipation).Lima,Perú: Institute of Peruvian
Studies, 2001.
Vorotnikova,T. andV.Kraskov.
Opyty vyezdnykh shkol: Sborniklektsiy uchebno-nauchnykhkonferentsiy, 1994–2001. Experienceof Field Schools:A Collection ofLectures fromTeaching and ScientificConferences, 1994–2001.Moscow: IPK Robin, 2001.
Wimbush,Vincent L. (ed.).
African Americans and the Bible:SacredTexts and Social Textures.NewYork:Continuum,2000.
Xin, Teng.
Minzu JiaoyuxueTonglun (A GeneralTheory of Ethnical Education).Beijing: Educational Science Press,
May 2001.
selected journals/periodicals
San Diego,Reynaldo.
Educators Forum,Vol. 1,No. 1,May 2001.Manila, Philippines: Philippine
Normal University, 2001.
San Diego,Reynaldo.
Educators Forum,Vol. 1,No. 2,July 2001.Manila, Philippines: Philippine
Normal University, 2001.
San Diego,Reynaldo.
Educators Forum,Vol. 1,No. 3,September 2001.Manila, Philippines, Philippine
Normal University, 2001.
selected videos/films
Parot, Carmen Luz (dir.)
Estadio Nacional (National Stadium:A Detention Center).Santiago,Chile: 2001
The Center forWomen’s Studies.
The Ignored Gender Prejudice—Gender Image as Reflected in theMassMedia.Beijing:ChinaWomen’s College,
July 2001.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
163
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
Media,Arts and CultureApproved Grants and Projects, Fiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Arts and culture
American Dance Festival, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To complete the three-part public televisionseries,“Free toDance:The African AmericanPresence inModern Dance.”
AmericanMuseumof Natural
History (NewYork,NY)
$500,000
To develop the exhibit,“Vietnam: Journeysof Body,Mind and Spirit,”and for relatedpublications and community outreach.
Americans for the Arts
(Washington,DC)
$1,625,000
To strengthen artistic activities thatstimulate civic dialogue on importantissues.
Archaeological Conservancy
(Santa Fe,NM)
$75,000
For the Protect Our IrreplaceableNational Treasures (POINT) programto preserve archaeological sites ofnational significance.
Arts International, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$185,000
For the participation of key U.S. and Arabarts presenters and contemporary artisticgroups in the Amman InternationalCultural Market.
Arts International, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$126,300
To publish a final report and produce avideo highlighting the foundation’s initia-tive supporting U.S.-based internationalcollaborations.
Asian American Arts Alliance
(NewYork,NY)
$125,000
For amultidisciplinary pan-ethnicmapping of the state of the arts inAsian Pacific America.
Atlatl, Inc.
(Phoenix,AZ)
$500,000
To update a survey of the Native Americanarts field and develop a leadership train-ing program for Native American artsleaders.
BirminghamCivil Rights Institute
(Birmingham,AL)
$100,000
To plan a research project on the effectsof political oppression on the societalrenaissance of underserved communitiesaround theworld.
California,University of
(Berkeley,CA)
$100,000
For a new artistic work and a humanitiesprogram exploring the cultures of theSilk Road.
California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$250,000
For the Center for InterculturalPerformance and project support tostrengthen the center’s ties withinthe university and develop a 10-yearstrategic plan.
CaribbeanNetwork of Art
Presenters (Venezuela)
$150,000
To promote Caribbean arts and for asmall-grants program to support artisticcreativity and cultural exchangeswithin the Caribbean.
CasaViaMagia
(Brazil)
$650,000
For institutional development and to planthe third Latin American Cultural Market.
Community LoanTechnologies
(Minneapolis,MN)
$1,175,000
For round two of a program to strengthenmidsizeminority cultural institutions.
Community LoanTechnologies
(Minneapolis,MN)
$250,000
A recoverable grant to partially capitalizethe loan fund of theWorking Capital FundforMinority Cultural Institutions.
Cornell University
(Ithaca,NY)
$300,000
For the Africana Studies and ResearchCenter to plan amajor exhibition and toensure the participation of pan-Africanartists in the 49thVenice Biennale inJune 2001.
Encuentros Internacionales
deMusica Contemporanea
Foundation (Argentina)
$100,000
To organize a series of workshops for LatinAmerican contemporarymusic composers,ethnomusicologists andmusic teachersto assess the state of music in theSouthern Cone.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
To plan a program to distill and dissemi-nate lessons learned fromHarvardUniversity’s Institute on the Arts andCivic Dialogue.
Foundation-administered project
$64,000
To promote knowledge-building effortsto enhance opportunities for institu-tional capacity building in the culturalsector and increased public participationin cultural life.
Foundation-administered project
$60,500
For activities related to a new line of workon arts and identity.
Fund for Folk Culture
(Santa Fe,NM)
$55,000
To support model projects linking cultureand asset-building goals.
Greater Philadelphia Urban
Affairs Coalition
(Philadelphia, PA)
$175,000
To implement theMural Arts Program’sbusiness plan and organize a nationalconference onmural arts and communitydevelopment.
Groupe de Recherche et
d’EchangesTechnologiques
(France)
$60,000
To enhance its capacity to further AfricanMedia Partner Network activities tostrengthen the debate on policies forassisting the Africanmedia sector.
Haleakala, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$200,000
To plan andorganize an art and technologylearning network.
IMZ (InternationalMusic Centre
Vienna) (Austria)
$325,000
To develop an international programon the promotion of local music heritagein the age of globalization.
International Reading
Association, Inc. (Newark,DE)
$150,000
To strengthen professional networksamong literary educators in Africa andLatin America.
KingsMajestic Corporation
(Brooklyn,NY)
$250,000
To support creative collaborations amongU.S. and African artists.
Latin American and Caribbean
Presenters’Network (Brazil)
$100,000
To reassess its organizational structureandmanagement practices.
Lower East SideTenement
Museum (NewYork,NY)
$110,000
For the International Coalition of HistoricSiteMuseums of Conscience.
MadesaTrust
(South Africa)
$100,000
To promote the interpretation of Africantraditional designs and patterns incontemporary contexts.
Media, Arts and Culture
164
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
Market for African Performing
Arts (Ivory Coast)
$175,000
For its fifth biennial cultural marketand to hold aworkshop for culturalmanagers, develop a strategic plan andpromote linguistic diversity within itssecretariat.
Middle East Center for Culture
and Development, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$110,000
For research on the state of Arab-Americancultural organizations and to strengthendiasporic relations.
Middle East Center for Culture
and Development, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$70,000
For professional convening and develop-ment of a database of Arab-Americancultural organizations.
MuseumofModern Art
(NewYork,NY)
$10,000
To evaluate its workshops for mid-careermuseum professionals from key institu-tions in Central and Eastern Europe, LatinAmerica and East Asia.
National Association of Latino
Arts and Culture
(San Antonio,TX)
$250,000
For pre-production costs of “Visiones,”a public television series on Latino artsand culture.
National Book Foundation, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For the Native AmericanWriter’sSymposium.
New England Foundation for
the Arts (Boston,MA)
$108,700
To produce a final report and organizea conference highlighting the foundation’sinitiative supportingUnited States-basedinternational collaborations.
NewYork,City University of
(NewYork,NY)
$40,000
To help start a programof technicalservices for the online endeavors ofnonprofit arts groups.
NewYork Foundation for the
Arts, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$476,000
To institutionalize the NYFA-sponsoredInstitute for Cultural Enterprise as aninternational network for the develop-ment of cultural enterprisesworldwide.
NewYork Foundation for the
Arts, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$375,000
To reflect upon the activities of the Instituteon theArts andCivic Dialogue,disseminateconcepts and lessons learned and helpestablish the institute as an independentnonprofit organization.
NewYork Foundation for the
Arts, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$125,000
To build the capacity of the NewYorkAfrican Film Festival.
NewYork Foundation for the
Arts, Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$75,000
To plan a comprehensive review of NewYork City’s increasingly diverse nonprofitarts field and its resource needs.
Nonprofit Finance Fund
(NewYork,NY)
$1,000,000
For a three-year support program toassist participants in a special challengegrant initiative for exemplary artsinstitutions.
Nonprofit Finance Fund
(NewYork,NY)
$250,000
For a national program to assist culturalfacilities development bymidsize andcommunity-based arts and culturalgroups.
Paul Robeson Foundation Inc,
(Brooklyn,NY)
$100,000
For the Robeson Audiovisual ArchiveProject.
Piegan Institute, Inc.
(Browning,MT)
$200,000
For a community-based program topreserve and revitalize the Blackfeetlanguage.
PlowsharesTheatre Company
(Detroit,MI)
$20,000
For a regional conference of African-American theater leaders andsupporters.
Pontifical Catholic University
of Peru (Peru)
$100,000
For the Center for AndeanEthnomusicology to promote thedocumentation, preservation andstudy of Andeanmusic in LatinAmerica.
South Africa Partners, Inc.
(Boston,MA)
$100,000
To develop a comprehensive fund-raisingplan for the South African ConstitutionalCourt Architectural Artworks Program.
Southern African Development
Community (Botswana)
$165,000
To organize an Inter-MinisterialConference on the role of culture inregional integration.
Theatre Communications
Group, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$75,000
To videotape oral histories of thepioneers of the American nonprofittheatermovement.
Trinidad andTobago Institute
of theWest Indies
(Trinidad& Tobago)
$100,000
To research and publish the first volume ofa comprehensive, interdisciplinary analysisof Caribbean society and economy andto develop nine additional volumes.
UniversityMusical Society
(Ann Arbor,MI)
$100,000
For a new artistic work and a humanitiesprogram exploring relations amongdiverseMichigan communities.
Urban Institute
(Washington,DC)
$175,000
For a survey of public attitudes towardartists and tomap support for artists inrural areas.
Walker Art Center
(Minneapolis,MN)
$150,000
To plan an Internet portal linking aninternational consortiumof contemporaryarts organizations.
Women’sWorld Organization
for Rights, Literature and
Development Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$150,000
To develop a decentralized organizationalstructure and broaden the funding base.
Worldspace Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To plan the Africa Learning Channel, anoncommercial, digital radio channelproviding continent-wide access tobroadcasts on cultural, social, healthand quality-of-life issues.
Media
Alabama,University of
(Tuscaloosa,AL)
$25,000
For a series ofmeetings intended to fosterongoing contact between scholars andmedia policy advocates.
American Civil Liberties Union
Foundation, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For public representation and constituencybuilding in debates over access to high-speed “broadband” Internet systems.
American Library Association
(Chicago, IL)
$80,000
For public education, advocacy andconstituency building around intellectualproperty policy for digital media.
Aspen Institute, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$370,000
For a series of roundtable discussionsonmedia and diversity issues formediaentrepreneurs, journalists, scholarsand others.
Association of America’s Public
Television Stations
(Washington,DC)
$150,000
To provide planning resources for publictelevision stations preparing for thetransition to digital broadcasting.
ATV Associates, Inc.
(Ridgewood,NJ)
$1,000,000
To produce and promote “MediaMatters,”a PBS television series examining newsmedia issues.
Bay Area Institute
(San Francisco,CA)
$60,000
To produce and distribute a report on thecivic functions of the ethnic newsmedia.
Benton Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
For public interest communications policyadvocacy and information dissemination.
Benton Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$60,000
To explore opportunities for auctioningcertain commercial domain names andplacing the proceeds in a trust fund thatcould fund public services content.
165
BrownUniversity
(Providence,RI)
$400,000
To establish a new research programon war, diplomacy and virtual mediaat the university’sWatson Institutefor International Studies.
Center for Defense Information,
Inc. (Washington,DC)
$85,000
To develop a business plan for theproposed CDIMedia Center.
Center for Democracy and
Technology (Washington,DC)
$100,000
To represent the public in technicalstandards bodies and build bettercommunication between advocatesand technologists.
Center for Investigative
Reporting, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$160,000
To create a team of journalists focused onissues of the misuse of power and secrecyin themedia.
Center forMedia Education, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$200,000
For public interest research, advocacyand public education on keymedia andtechnology policy issues.
Center for Policy Alternatives
(Washington,DC)
$100,000
To educate state policymakers on informa-tion technology policy issues.
Community Renewal Society
(Chicago, IL)
$170,000
For the Chicago Reporter to publish aspecial one-year series of investigativereports on A Changing Chicago.
Connecticut Public Broadcasting,
Inc. (Hartford,CT)
$350,000
For Connecting the Assets, CPB’s digitaltelevision transition project, to developprogramming in collaborationwithkey civic institutions and other publictelevision stations.
Duke University
(Durham,NC)
$100,000
For the Law School to appoint two PublicInterest Law Fellows to teach andworkwith students and public interest advocacygroups and to develop materials oncommunications and cyberlaw.
Education Development Center,
Inc. (Newton,MA)
$200,000
To assess and further develop the AdultLiteracyMedia Alliance project.
Electronic Literature
Organization (Chicago, IL)
$100,000
For a symposium to promote andfacilitate thewriting and reading ofelectronic literature.
Fairness& Accuracy in Reporting
Inc. (NewYork,NY)
$150,000
Tomonitor and analyze the performanceof the newsmedia in the United States.
Foundation-administered project
$170,000
For evaluation, research and communica-tions activities to enhance the effortsof foundation grantees and others tostrengthen the field of newsmediaworldwide.
Hammarskjold Legacy, Inc.
(Fond Du Lac,WI)
$50,000
For development of the televisiondocumentary,“Dag Hammarskjold. . .A Legacy of Peace.”
Idaho Educational Public
Broadcasting Foundation
(Boise, ID)
$400,000
For collaborative activities amongregional public television stations inthe western United States to increaseaccess to public affairs informationand commentary using digital distribu-tion of programming.
Independent Broadcasting
Associates, Inc. (Littleton,MA)
$100,000
To develop educational outreach strategiesfor “Living Islam,” a public radio documen-tary series andmake the broadcast thecenterpiece of efforts to increase under-standing and tolerance of Muslims.
Independent Press
Association
(San Francisco,CA)
$100,000
For the GeorgeWashingtonWilliamsFellowships for Journalists of Color.
Leslie Harris and Associates
(Washington,DC)
$270,000
Tomanage the operations and activitiesof the Digital Media Forum,a forumfor collaboration among and betweenmedia policy organizations, scholarsand constituency groups.
LinkMedia, Inc.
(San Rafael, CA)
$500,000
To promote understanding of internationalcooperation by expanding distributionof its programming on human rights andsustainable development into PBS’semerging digital channel services.
Luna Ray Films
(Beverly Hills, CA)
$100,000
For conferences and outreach using thefilm“AHuey P.Newton Story”as a spring-board for amultidisciplinary discussionof the legacy andmeaning of the BlackPanther Party in American history.
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (Cambridge,MA)
$75,000
For the Race and Digital SpacesConference.
Robert C.Maynard Institute
for Journalism Education
(Oakland,CA)
$1,200,000
For activities to promote diversity in thenews media and help journalists addressthemulticultural reality of the UnitedStates.
Media Access Project
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For public interest legal representationat communications policy-making bodiesand the courts.
Moving Image, Inc. on behalf
of Lumiere Productions Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$100,000
For promotion and educational outreachactivities to accompany the PBS broadcastof the“Local News”documentary series.
National Newspaper Publishers
Association Fund
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
To expand its NorthStar InvestigativeReporting Program,which producesinvestigative reports and trains investi-gative reporters for African-Americannewspapers.
Native American Public
Telecommunications, Inc.
(Lincoln,NE)
$575,000
Core support for the National MinorityConsortia to develop andpilot program-ming by producers of color for distributionthrough the Internet and public television’semerging digital channel services.
NewAmerica Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$300,000
For the CommonWealth program todevelop new approaches to spectrumreform and the use of spectrum feesto fund civicmedia and to study impedi-ments to the free flow of media overthe Internet.
OneWorld International
Foundation (England)
$275,000
For organizational development andto expand its international civic societyInternet portal.
Princeton University
(Princeton,NJ)
$100,000
For an internship program that placescomputer science and engineeringstudents with public interest mediapolicy organizations.
Radio andTelevision News
Directors Foundation
(Washington,DC)
$500,000
For trainingworkshops, public discussions,research and publications to promoteimproved ethical practices by broadcastnews journalists.
River Films
(NewYork,NY)
$70,000
For the completion of the documentaryfilm,“Alan Smith’s Life After Death”.
Salzburg Seminar in American
Studies, Inc.
(Middlebury,VT)
$100,000
For the Travel Support Project,whichenables representatives of public interestorganizations to attend Internet gover-nancemeetings.
San Francisco State University
Foundation, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$450,000
For NewsWatch tomonitor and critiquenews media coverage of racial minoritycommunities and the gay and lesbiancommunity.
San Francisco State University
Foundation, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
For the Public Research Institute to studythe use and role of the newsmedia inamulti-ethnic community.
Media, Arts and Culture
166
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
San Francisco State University
Foundation, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$239,000
For Alambrista 2001, amultimedia projectto promote public understanding anddialogue about the history, identity andstruggles of Mexican immigrant farmworkers and their descendants in theUnited States.
Southern California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$500,000
To promote increased news coverage ofracial and social justice issues.
Southern California,University of
(Los Angeles,CA)
$150,000
To develop themarketing and fund-rais-ing capacity of the“Online JournalismReview.”
Stevens Institute of Technology
(Hoboken,NJ)
$50,000
To explore the creation of a telecommuni-cations trust fund to provide supportfor community-based communicationsneeds.
Telecommunication Policy
Research Conference, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$50,000
For the 29th Annual Research Conferenceon Information, Communications andInternet policy.
Tides Center
(San Francisco,CA)
$200,000
For the research,monitoring, educationand outreach activities of the Civil RightsForum on Communications Policy.
University of East London
Higher Education Corporation
(England)
$40,000
For“Biocolonialism,”a documentary filmon indigenous peoples and the ethics ofhuman genetic research.
Wisconsin,University of
(Madison,WI)
$100,000
To conceptualize and develop amodelfor a noncommercial public space on theInternet.
WNYC Foundation
(NewYork,NY)
$400,000
To produce and promote“On theMedia,”a public radio program examiningjournalism andmedia issues.
Yeshiva University
(NewYork,NY)
$45,000
To foster scholarship and teach advocacyskills in the communications field.
Youth News Service Los Angeles
Bureau (Los Angeles,CA)
$100,000
For LA Youth, the nation’s largest indepen-dent newspaper written by and for teens,to implement its Teens, Crime and theJuvenile Justice project.
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Arts and culture
Chile,University of (Chile)
$100,000
For the university’s alumni association topromote public and private interest inliterary activities through an internationalmeeting of poets inMarch 2001.
Prometeo Art and Poetry
Corporation (Colombia)
$100,000
For the XIth Annual International PoetryFestival inMedellin,Colombia, June 2001.
Woman’s Development
Corporation“LaMorada”
(Chile)
$100,000
For research and production of adocumentary video on the extinctionof the Chuquicamatamining campin northern Chile.
Media
Woman’s Development
Corporation“LaMorada”
(Chile)
$100,000
For a pilot communications project topromotemedia coverage of foundationgrantees’activities and accomplish-ments in Chile.
China
Arts and culture
Central University for
Nationalities
$55,400
To examine the role of culture in theeconomic development of westernChina.
China Folklore Photographic
Association
$71,600
For the third international folklore photog-raphy competition and exhibition.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$12,000
For a workshop on“China’s CulturalHeritage Conservation and the HeritageIndustryMarketing.”
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$10,800
For publication of the report of an ethnog-raphy based on a foundation-supportedNankun railway project.
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$8,700
For a research program on culture andethnic identity in Kangding County,Sichuan Province.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$54,400
For the university’s Center for U.S.-ChinaArts Exchange to enable six representativesfrom theYunnanProvincial Association forCultural Exchange with Foreign Countriesto visit U.S. counterparts.
Nature Conservancy
(Arlington,VA)
$58,500
For the Photovoice project to protectnatural and cultural resources.
Yunnan College of the
Nationalities
$160,000
To strengthen its programs in ethnicmusic, dance and art and for collabora-tive activities to help ethnic minoritycommunities preserve and transmittheir cultures.
Media
Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences
$45,000
For a study of Internetmedia develop-ment in China.
Eastern Africa
Arts and culture
Department of Archives,
Museums and Antiquities
(Tanzania)
$38,000
To digitize the catalogues and historiccollections of the Zanzibar NationalArchives andmake them available onaWeb site.
Gaara Dance Foundation
(Kenya)
$45,000
For a series of training workshops onand performances of contemporary EastAfrican dance.
KaramuTrust (Kenya)
$100,000
For a new theater and to develop andconduct trainingworkshops for youngwriters.
KuonaTrust (Kenya)
$168,000
To establish a new studio complex forEast African visual artists and expandits residency and outreach program forvisual artists from the global South.
MediaeTrust (England)
$25,000
To launch Action for Music, a new civilsociety organization supportingmusicians,their rights and their opportunitiesand produce a CD-ROM formarketingand promotion.
Mkuki na Nyota Publishers Ltd.
(Tanzania)
$35,000
For research and planning activities forthe preparation of the first major bookon East African art.
Nairobi Arts Trust
(Kenya)
$25,000
For a public billboard-based art projectinMombasa to engage the daily audienceof passers-by in a dialogue about art,society and cultural issues.
Phoenix Players Limited
(Kenya)
$75,000
For a new East Africanwriters andperformance series.
RahimtullaMuseumofModern
Art (Kenya)
$80,000
For exhibitions, training and outreachactivities to support Kenya’s visualarts community and develop localaudiences for new art.
167
Rotary Club of Nairobi
(Kenya)
$189,000
To create a unique arts center in Nairobiwith rented studio, performance andadministrative spaces for contemporaryarts organizations and artists.
TanzaniaTheatre Centre
(Tanzania)
$100,000
To hold workshops for participantsat the 2001 Bagamoyo Arts Festival andfor a post-festival reunion of selectedEast African participants to plan futureregional projects.
ThibitishaTrust
(Kenya)
$99,000
To establish and develop a computer-based index of newspaper and journalarticles pertaining to Kenyan culturalaffairs.
Zanzibar International Film
Festival (Tanzania)
$25,000
For a village panorama program onPemba Island during the 2001 ZanzibarFestival of the Dhow Countries.
Media
Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore,MD)
$180,000
To train UgandanTV producers anddevelop a high-quality, domesticallyproduced drama series for broadcastin East Africa.
Journalists Association of
Zanzibar (Tanzania)
$75,000
To conduct media trainingworkshopsfor journalists, sponsor exchange visitsand publish a newsletter.
Vivid Features Limited
(Kenya)
$175,000
To train documentarymakers, developthe first locally produced documentaryseries for East African television andpromote informed thought and debateabout national culture and identity.
India,Nepal and Sri Lanka
Arts and culture
American Institute of Indian
Studies (Chicago, IL)
$100,000
To complete the digitization of libraryholdings and publish an Encyclopediaof IndianTemple Architecture.
Asian Heritage Foundation
(India)
$38,000
To rejuvenate the traditional embroideryforms of nomadic communities.
Calicut,University of (India)
$138,480
For the Center for Folklore Studies toestablish an archive; expand its academicprograms; and continue its documen-tation, preservation and disseminationactivities.
Centre for Communication and
Cultural Action (India)
$98,215
To hold training workshops for folkartists inWest Bengal; create a ResourceCenter for Folk Expression;and continueprograms using theater, dance andmusic to empowerwomen.
Front for Rapid Economic
Advancement (India)
$8,600
To research, develop and produce“FourSeasons,”a one-woman play exploringthe multidimensional images of womanwith a thematic focus onwomen’s rightsand self-determination.
Indian National Trust for Art and
Cultural Heritage (Intach)
(India)
$2,150
To document the lives andwork of veterandance gurus in India.
Ishara Puppet Theater Trust
(India)
$75,000
For festivals,workshops, performances,publications and other activities tostrengthen and promote puppetryin India.
Katha (India)
$150,000
To develop revenue-generatingmecha-nisms to sustain translation, training andoutreach activities using India’s oraland literary traditions.
Katha (India)
$2,150
To develop and stage photoplaysonMahatma Gandhi and SwamiVivekananda.
Khayal Trust (India)
$50,000
For a film on culture and identity basedon the life of a Dalit poet.
Madhyam (India)
$125,000
To organize a network of South Indiancraft groups, develop amarketing strategyfor the network and conductmedia advo-cacy for artists and craftspeople.
Rupayan Sansthan
(India)
$212,760
For an endowment for folklore documen-tation and outreach in Rajasthan.
Rural Entrepreneurship for Art
and Cultural Heritage
(India)
$52,500
For its Himalayan Heritage Center topreserve and revitalize the ecoculturaltraditions and practices of the hillpeoples of northern India.
St. Xavier’s College (India)
$86,025
For endowment for the Folklore Resourcesand Research Center.
Sammanoy Gut Cooperative
Society Ltd. (India)
$150,000
For research, documentation and outreachactivities on tribal culture and folklore.
Shri Prithviraj KapoorMemorial
Trust and Research Foundation
(India)
$57,000
To organize workshops, recordings andpublications for the International PrithviFestival held in November 2000.
South Asian Foundation for
Human Initiatives,Calcutta
(India)
$50,000
To study funding for the arts and culturein India and its impact on the sector.
Surabhi Foundation for Research
and Cultural Exchange (India)
$200,000
To establish aMedia Resource andNetworking Center inMumbai.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$34,000
For Journey to the East, an internationalconference on Asian arts and the preserva-tion of traditional art forms.
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural
Organization (France)
$30,000
For Into the SacredWaters, the secondAsia Pacific Performing Arts Networkconference.
Urasvati Centre of Contemporary
Art (India)
$70,000
For itsMuseum of Folk Lore to preserve,revitalize and disseminate India’s richfolklore traditions,with an emphasis onNorth India.
Media
Institute of Development Studies
(England)
$130,000
For a conference,workshops andprofessional exchanges to disseminatefindings of theMedia South Asia studyand promote debate on the implicationsof the satellite revolution for publicpolicy.
NatyaVriksha (India)
$19,355
For translation and performances of“Her Voice,”a dance-theater performanceonwomen and conflict.
Indonesia
Arts and culture
Arts Council of Jakarta
$138,000
To bring live performances ofmusic,dance and theater into Jakarta highschools and offer extracurricularinstruction in traditional Indonesianarts to students.
Asialink Centre at the University
of Melbourne (Australia)
$192,000
For internships and residencies in Australiafor Indonesian arts managers and artistsand workshops in Indonesia on artsmanagement and practice.
Foundation-administered project
$250,000
For workshops,meetings, learning activi-ties and translations relating to issuesofmedia, arts and culture.
Indonesian Society for
Performing Arts
$110,000
For a leadership transition and for activitiesto promote traditional Indonesian arts.
Kelola Foundation
$493,000
For programs to strengthenmanagementand professionalism in Indonesian artsand culture organizations.
SekolahTinggi Seni Indonesia
$55,000
For a seminar series and graduate courseson the performing arts and to publish theseminar papers.
TheatreWorks Limited
(Singapore)
$225,000
For Arts Network Asia,which promotesartistic exchange and sharing of knowl-edge among Asian artists.
Media, Arts and Culture
168
Wianta Foundation
$10,500
For performance of Gambuh,a classicalBalinese art form combining dance,musicand theater, and to produce a videocompact disk for sale to tourists and asa promotional tool.
Yayasan Asosiasi Tradisi Lisan
$196,000
For activities to strengthen respect forIndonesia’s oral traditions and culturaldiversity, evaluate the present stateof oral traditions and implement revital-ization projects.
Yayasan Asosiasi Tradisi Lisan
$30,000
To plan the redesign of Indonesia’s artseducation curriculum, changing the focusfromWestern to traditional Indonesianarts.
Yayasan Badan Penyelenggara
UniversitasMuhammadiyah
Surakarta
$140,000
For workshops, research and teachingprograms to promote appreciation forand tolerance of traditional cultureinMuslim schools.
Yayasan Cudamani
$37,500
For teaching, research and performancesof traditional Balinese arts and forcollaborative work to develop innova-tive newworks combining traditionalBalinese theater with moderntechniques.
Yayasan Desantara
$140,000
For discussions in Islamic religious schoolson artistic freedom and tolerance ofcultural diversity.
Yayasan Indonesia
$185,000
For literature appreciation programssending Indonesian authors to read theirworks and discuss themwith studentsin schools and universities throughoutJava and Sumatra.
Yayasan Realino
$60,000
For research and seminars on Indonesiancultural and post-colonial studies.
YayasanUtan Kayu
$240,000
For the Religion, Society and Freedomof Expression project to sponsor artsevents and related discussions highlight-ing issues of cultural difference and theneed for tolerance.
Mexico and Central America
Arts and culture
Women’s Study Group“Rosario
Castellanos” (Mexico)
$60,000
For a binational, transcultural colloquiumof Mexican and Chicanawomen artistson gender, ethnic and artistic identity andan associated art exhibit on “BordersandMigration.”
Media
Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum,
Inc. (Tucson,AZ)
$125,000
To consolidate community-based educa-tional and research programs on issuesof cultural and biological diversity in theSonora desert region.
Middle East and North Africa
Arts and culture
Al-Fekr Center for Sudanese
Studies (Sudan)
$15,000
For a symposium onwomen’s creativityin the Sudan.
Al-Quds University
(West Bank)
$17,000
To produce two television programs tohelp the Palestinian public deal withphysical and psychological injuries result-ing from the recent violent outbreak intheWest Bank.
Arab Image Foundation
(Lebanon)
$120,000
For a research program on Arab photog-raphy and a program of photographyexhibitions and publications in the Arabworld.
Bethlehem 2000 Project
Authority (West Bank)
$100,000
To support an international conference onstate-of-the-art knowledge and practicesin the fields of architectural conservationand heritage protection.
Birzeit University
(West Bank)
$20,000
For a series of concerts by Palestinianmusicians in communities affected bythe recent violent clashes in theWestBank.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$150,000
To integrate the arts in environmentalupgrading efforts in Egypt.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$140,000
To provide technical assistance onmanagement, governance and fundingto independent arts groups in Egypt.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$80,000
To support a touring exhibition of youngArab artists, aWeb site of contemporaryart, and a network of artists and galleriesin the Arabworld.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$45,000
For a training and consultancy programon institutional capacity building andgovernance for independent culturalorganizations in Egypt.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$25,000
For an independent arts festival in Cairo.
Cultural Cooperative Association
for Youth inTheatre and Cinema
(Lebanon)
$80,000
For an artistic and technical trainingprogram for young professional andamateur artists in Beirut, Lebanon.
El Hamra (Tunisia)
$250,000
For trainingworkshops, small-scale theaterproductions, networking and communi-cations by and among young African andArab theater professionals.
Foundation-administered project
$500,000
To stimulate, strengthen and expandcultural networks in Africa and theMiddle East.
Ibdaa Cultural Center
(West Bank)
$75,000
For amusic training program for childrenandadance troupe in theDheisheh refugeecamp in theWest Bank.
Inad Center for Theatre and Arts
(West Bank)
$100,000
To hold summer camp programs for artisti-cally talented Egyptian and Palestinianteenagers and create an informal networkamong participants and other talentedyouth in the region.
Inad Center for Theatre and Arts
(West Bank)
$14,000
To repair the damage Inad’s theatersuffered in the recent violent outbreakin Beit Bala in theWest Bank.
Jerusalem“Ashtar” for Theatre
Training and Performing Arts
(West Bank)
$90,000
For a drama teachers’ training programin Palestine.
Khalil Alsakakini Cultural Center
(West Bank)
$85,000
For arts training programs for childrenand teachers and a series of exhibitionsby new and young artists.
Khalil Alsakakini Cultural Center
(West Bank)
$35,000
For a touring art exhibition on the recentviolent confrontations in Palestinianterritories.
Pro Helvetia (Egypt)
$30,000
For a traditionalmusic teaching program.
Riwaq:Centre for Architectural
Conservation (West Bank)
$200,000
For research,publications and public educa-tion to identify and protect traditionalarchitectures and for a new communityoutreach program.
Yabous Productions
(East Jerusalem)
$200,000
For activities to revive cultural life inEast Jerusalem and promote Palestinianmusic locally and internationally andto establish amarketing unit.
Young ArabTheatre Fund
(Belgium)
$160,000
For general support, a small-scale produc-tion program for women directors andawomen artists’exchange program.
Media
Al-Quds University
(West Bank)
$75,000
For the Gender andMedia Departmentto produce 12 episodes of a talk showonwomen’s issues and hold a series ofgender awareness lectures for producersandwriters.
Arab Press FreedomWatch
(England)
$240,000
Tomonitor and advocate for the freedomof the press in the Arabworld.
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
169
Cinema Production Center
(West Bank)
$50,000
For three videos to assist children sufferingfrom psychological problems as a resultof the ongoing violent clashes betweenPalestinians and the Israeli army in thePalestinian territories.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$150,000
For a resource center and production unitfor independent filmmakers in Egypt.
Cultural Association Sweden-
Egypt (Sweden)
$75,000
For a media watch and other activitiesaimed at improving the image of womenin themedia in Egypt.
E.Q.I. Finance Limited (England)
$18,000
For an international conference promot-ing enhancedmedia involvement inenvironmental protection and historicpreservation.
Filmmakers Collaborative Inc.
(Waltham,MA)
$25,000
For the public broadcasting of thedocumentary film,“UmmKalthoum,AVoice Like Egypt.”
Health,Development,
Information and Policy Institute
(West Bank)
$60,000
For an information clearinghouse andmedia outreach program on the social,economic and political effects of thecurrent crisis in the Palestinianterritories.
Russia
Media
Archive Administration of
St. Petersburg and Leningrad
Region
$70,000
For further work on preservation of thearchive’s collections and creation ofaWeb site.
Centre of Contemporary
Architecture
$100,000
For the development of an electronicdatabase and digital archive on Russianarchitecture and for the productionof television programs.
CinemaMuseum
$97,000
For an electronic catalogue of themuseum’s collections and archives anddevelopment of an exhibition projectto represent Eisenstein’s heritage.
Editorial Board of the“Moscow
Art Magazine”
$66,000
For the publication of theMoscowArtMagazine and production of aTVprogram on contemporary art in Russiaand abroad.
MoscowCenter of Amateur
Artistic Activities
$100,000
For a series of international festivalsof contemporary and ethnicmusic,a children’s design studio and children’sdrawing competition.
MoscowGuild of Theater and
Screen Actors
$300,000
To extend Stalker, its human rights filmfestival program, to additional Russianregions and collaborate with localcinema clubs.
Moscow StateTchaikovsky
Conservatoire
$97,500
To create an electronic database of restoredrecordings and to organize ethnographicexpeditions to Russian regions andMoldavia.
National Center for
Contemporary Art
$190,000
For the center’s Nizhny Novgorog branchto establish a visual communicationslaboratory, organize exhibitions andcreate TV programs on contemporaryart issues.
OpenMuseumAssociation
$100,000
For the organization of workshops formuseumworkers in Siberia, lectureson contemporary art and an experi-mental exhibition venue.
St. Petersburg“pro Arte Institute”
Foundation
$250,000
To organize small grants competitions,educational programs and seminars inthe field of contemporary art.
Yuri Kondratyuk Fund
$89,000
For a competition of innovative projects,an extra-short film festival, a tour ofcontemporary art exhibits in Siberia and aseminar on conversion of former indus-trial venues into cultural ones.
Media
Anco“Union ofMedia and
Culture”
$167,000
To develop an information networkof cultural journalists from the Russianregions.
Autonomous Non-Commercial
Organisation Internews
$330,000
For grants competitions on culturalprogramming and to distribute award-winning materials to national andregional television stations.
Center for Applied Ethics:
Century 21
$39,500
For seminars in theTyumen region on theimplementation of amedia ethics codeand publication of a textbook.
Glasnost Defense
Foundation
$171,500
For activities to protect journalists’ rightsand to publish two special issues of theIndex on Censorship.
LomonosovMoscow State
University
$10,000
For a training course entitled PoliticalPluralism and Tolerance in the Fieldof Information in Contemporary Russiafor regional journalists.
Women’s Public Association
“Femina”
$45,200
For the fourth festival of televisionprograms on gender issues and themakingof a film on the women’s movement inRussia.
Southern Africa
Arts and culture
Centre for Advanced Studies of
African Society (South Africa)
$23,200
Conference on standardization andharmonization of southern Africanlanguages.
Grahamstown Foundation
(South Africa)
$30,000
For the development of “DancingThroughDoors,”a production incorporating dance,music and painting to be staged at theNational Arts Festival in Grahamstown,South Africa.
Sankofa, the African Renaissance
Development Institute
(South Africa)
$100,000
For research, training, capacity buildingand community empowerment to turnthe vision of an African renaissanceinto reality.
Southern African Arts Exchange
(South Africa)
$13,750
To organize UrbanVoices, a festival ofinternational poetry and theater, inconjunctionwith the 2001 AwesomeAfricaMusic Festival.
Witwatersrand,University of the
(South Africa)
$36,600
To enroll one facultymember and twosenior students at the NYU/TISCH Schoolof the Arts Summer Program.
Media
Film Resource Unit
(South Africa)
$80,000
For distribution of African film andvideomaterial to rural communitiesof South Africa.
Kwela Productions, Ltd.
(NewYork,NY)
$98,245
For production of “Amandla,”a televisiondocumentary on the role of popularmusic in supporting the political strugglesagainst apartheid in South Africa.
LowTech Film Art (Namibia)
$50,000
For a research project on the Ovahimbapeople of northwestern Namibia.
Victory SonqobaTheatre
Company (South Africa)
$100,000
For amusical play intended to encouragecommunities that were once in conflict towork together to develop their commu-nities in South Africa.
Vision International Development
andOrganization (South Africa)
$90,000
For a television drama series promotinga crime-freemillennium.
Witwatersrand,University of the
(South Africa)
$100,000
For archeological research and develop-ment of materials by the university’sSterkfontein Research Unit.
Media, Arts and Culture
170
Vietnam and Thailand
Arts and culture
Center for Urbanism and
Development Studies (Vietnam)
$40,000
To revive traditional weaving by ethnicChamwomen as a livelihood strategy.
Department of Culture–
Information of ThuaThien
Hue People’s Committee
(Vietnam)
$85,000
To build the organizational capacity ofthe Hue Festival Office and for HueFestival 2002.
Ecole Francaise D’extreme-Orient
(Indonesia)
$10,000
To translate and publish a 19th centurygeography of Vietnam in modernVietnamese and English.
Hue Center for Folk Culture
Studies (Vietnam)
$50,000
To establish a community-basedMuseumof Folk Culture celebrating the ethnicallydiverse cultural heritage of Hue City andthemiddle part of Vietnam.
HueUniversity (Vietnam)
$40,000
For an international sculpture workshopin the world heritage site and festival cityof Hue.
Information, Sports and Cultural
Center, Sapa District (Vietnam)
$100,000
To enhance the voice of localminoritycommunities in the managementof tourism, reduce negative effects andincrease their economic benefits tothe communities.
Pacific University
(Forest Grove,OR)
$20,000
For theater exchanges betweenVietnamandAmerica and formanagement reformsin theVietnamese theater.
StageMovies College of
Ho ChiMinh (Vietnam)
$47,000
To introduce traditional Vietnamese “CaiLuong”opera to high school students.
ThuaThien HueMiddle Level
School of Culture and Arts
(Vietnam)
$80,000
To develop a six-year combined highschool/college program in traditionalHue arts.
Vietnam EthnicMinorities Arts
and Literature Association
(Vietnam)
$20,000
To revitalize traditional performing artsamong ethnicminority communitiesinVietnam’s uplands.
Vietnam,Government of
(Vietnam)
$100,000
To develop coordination and networkingfacilities for an arts administrationcurriculum program and establish asmall research grants fund.
Vietnam,Government of
(Vietnam)
$100,000
For training,workshops and other activitiesto encourage community-based revitali-zation of local singing and puppetrytraditions in Vietnam.
West Africa
Arts and culture
Association of Nigerian Authors
(Nigeria)
$62,000
For an annual conference andworkshopson resuscitating indigenous languageliterature in Nigeria.
Centre for Advanced Studies of
African Society (South Africa)
$250,000
For theWest African component of theHarmonization and Standardizationof African Languages Project.
Ghana,University of (Ghana)
$350,500
To integrate the Chieftaincy,GovernanceandDevelopment Programof the Instituteof African Studies into the university’smainstream academic curriculum and forits research program.
Ghana,University of (Ghana)
$60,000
For a series of national workshops onChieftaincy and Religion in Ghana.
National Association of Nigerian
Theatre Arts Practitioners
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For activities on behalf of Nigerian theaterartists and to establish a theater arts train-ing center and hold FESTINA, an annualnational festival of Nigerian plays.
NationalMuseumofMali
(Mali)
$150,000
For a permanent exhibition, book, videoandworkshop on traditional textiles.
Nigerian Popular Theatre Alliance
(Nigeria)
$150,000
To use theater to sensitize theelectorate and the elected to theircivic responsibilities.
Rakumi Arts International
(Seattle,WA)
$120,000
For a Nigerian arts and culture Internetportal.
School of African Heritage
(Benin)
$180,000
For a conference and exhibition on Afro-Brazilian heritage in the Bight of Beninand to improve the quality of educationon Africanmuseums in primary schools.
West AfricanMuseums
Programme (Senegal)
$100,000
For transitional activities and strategicplanning programs.
Women’s OptimumDevelopment
Foundation (Nigeria)
$55,000
For aTV soap opera on corruption, genderand governance.
Media
AfricanMedia Productions
(Netherlands)
$300,000
For radio plays based on the HeinemannAfricanWriters Series.
Article 19 Research and
Information Centre on
Censorship (England)
$200,000
For a regional freedom of informationmonitoring network and advocacyactivities in Sierra Leone.
Development Information
Network (Nigeria)
$300,000
For capacity building, networking andpublications to fulfill the informationneeds of development organizationsinWest Africa,with an emphasison Nigeria.
Federation of AfricanMedia
Women–Southern African
Development Community
(Zimbabwe)
$289,000
To establish and provide training andtechnical assistance to radio listeningclubs and other community radio-accessprojects in Sierra Leone,Nigeria andGhana.
Institute forMedia and Society
(Nigeria)
$100,000
For regional workshops on communityradio broadcasting in Nigeria and to builda community radioWeb site.
Media Rights Agenda
(Nigeria)
$170,000
To promote and strengthenmedia rightsactivities in Nigeria and for a researchproject on State Repression, FailedTransition andMedia Resistance inNigeria, 1990–1999.
National Film andTelevision
Institute (Ghana)
$580,000
For a technology upgrade and to establishan African film library and documentationcenter.
National Film andTelevision
Institute (Ghana)
$77,206
To help the African Radio DramaAssociation of Ghana research andproduce a new radio soap operaseries on corruption and governancein Ghana.
Grants to Individuals$395,015
Total,Media,Arts and Culture$42,955,351
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
171
Publications andOtherMedia—Media,Arts and Culture
selected books, articlesand reports
Arts, Crafts, Folklife.Chennai, India:National Folklore
Support Centre,April 2001.
Compaine,B. and S.Greenstein.
Communications Policy in Transition:The Internet and Beyond.Cambridge,Mass.:MIT Press, 2001.
Culture Counts: Strategies foraMoreVibrant Cultural Life inNewYork City.NewYork:NewYork Foundation for
the Arts, 2001.
Diaz,Xunka’Lopez.
Mi hermanita Cristina,una niñachamula (My Little Sister Cristina,a Chamula girl).Mexico City:Center for Research
andHigher Studies in Social
Anthropology (CIESAS), 2001.
Folklife. Indian Folklore—AQuarterly Newsletter.Chennai, India:National Folklore
Support Centre, January 2001.
Investing in Capacity:How theWorking Capital Fund PromotesSustainable Change.Minneapolis:Community Loan
Technologies, 2001
Ismail,Taufik (ed.).
Dari Fansuri Ke Handayani: SastraIndonesia Dalam Program SBSB2001 (From Fansuri to Handayani:Indonesian Literature in theSBSB 2001 Program).Jakarta:Yayasan Indonesia, 2001.
Kebijakan Kebudayaan diMasaOrde Baru (Cultural Policy in theNewOrder).Jakarta: Indonesian Institute of
Sciences, 2001.
Majalah Kebudayaan Desantara:Dialog Agama dan Kebudayaan(Desantara CulturalMagazine:Religious Dialogue and Culture).Jakarta:Yayasan Desantara, 2001.
Public Assets, Private Profits:Reclaiming the American Commonsin an Age ofMarket Enclosure.Washington,D.C.:NewAmerica
Foundation, 2001.
Schoenberg,Arnold Pisma.
Letters (first Russian edition).St. Petersburg,Russia:Composer
Publishers, 2001.
The Advent of Asian Century inFolklore.Chennai, India:National Folklore
Support Centre, July 2001.
Tuklas Likha News, July 2001.Makati City, Philippines:Museo
Pambata Foundation, Inc., 2001.
Yu.V,Kazakov.
Na puti k professionalnopravilnomu.Rossiiskii mediaetos kak territoriya poiska(On theWay to the ProfessionallyRight: RussianMedia Ethos—aTerritory to Explore).Moscow:Center for Applied Ethics,
2001.
journals/periodicals
Indian Folklore Research Journal.Inaugural Issue,VolumeOne,
Number One.
Chennai, India:National Folklore
Support Centre,May, 2001.
selected videos/films
Ding, Loni (director).
Chinese in the FrontierWest:AnAmerican Story. Part Two ofthe Ancestors in the Americasvideo series.Berkeley,California:Center for
Educational Telecommunications,
2001.
Ding, Loni (director).
Coolies, Sailors & Settlers:Voyageto the NewWorld. Part One of theAncestors in the Americas videoseries.Berkeley,California:Center for
Educational Telecommunications,
2001.
Harris,Thomas Allen.
EMinha Cara (That’sMy Face).La Jolla, Calif.: Chimpanzee
Productions, 2001.
LaMay,Craig L. (rapporteur).
SustainingMedia Pluralism inDemocratizing Societies:A Reportof the Second Annual InternationalRoundtable on Journalism andFreedomof Expression.Washington,D.C.:The Aspen
Institute, 2000.
Local News. Five video set.NewYork: Lumiere Productions, 2001
Nelson, Stanley.
Marcus Garvey: Look forMe in theWhirlwind.Boston,WGBH,2001.
TCG:40 Years of Passion.NewYork:Theatre Communications
Group, 2001.
TCG:Preserving the Legacy.NewYork:Theatre Communications
Group, 2001.
Media, Arts and Culture
172
Education,Media, Arts and Culture
ProgramwideFiscal Year 2001
United States andWorldwidePrograms
Aha Punana Leo
(Hilo,HI)
$100,000
To share its native language immersionmodel with native groups from acrossthe country and develop a network ofprograms and groups interested inreplicating themodel.
American Anthropological
Association (Arlington,VA)
$1,000,000
For a public education and communica-tions program on race, ethnicity andaffirmative action.
Applied Research Center
(Oakland,CA)
$315,000
To evaluate the foundation’s Fund forCommunity Organizing initiative.
Arizona,University of
(Tucson,AZ)
$175,000
For the American Indian LanguageDevelopment Institute to train nativelanguage teachers in language immersionmethodology, curriculum developmentandmaterials design.
Foundation-administered project
$750,000
For the Learning Enhancement Fund tounderwrite assessments and disseminationof selected EMAC initiatives and linesof work.
Harvard University
(Cambridge,MA)
$120,000
To strengthen the capacity of the univer-sity’s Civil Rights Project to disseminatenew research and to build a networkof researchers, lawyers and advocatepartners on affirmative action.
Indigenous Language Institute
(Santa Fe,NM)
$200,000
To create a pool of teachers and nativespeakers for tribal groups in Oklahomaand Florida, develop a handbook onsuccessful native language programsand hold a symposium on lessonslearned.
Institute of Family and
Environmental Research
(England)
$250,000
To review themovement onWork-PersonalLife Integration: Looking Backwards togo Forward.
Mountain Institute, Inc.
(Harrisonburg,VA)
$150,000
For a pilot project to develop interpretiveand educational materials drawingupon diverse views of the cultural andspiritual significance ofmountainsfor U.S. national parks.
Princeton University
(Princeton,NJ)
$1,880,000
To assess the impact of the terminationof race-sensitive admission policies inTexas’ higher education system.
Resolution, Inc.
(San Francisco,CA)
$650,000
For the development, production,promotion and educational use ofthe documentary series “Race—The Genealogy of an Illusion.”
Seventh Generation Fund for
Indian Development, Inc.
(Arcata,CA)
$100,000
For the language training and networkingactivities of its Advocates for IndigenousCalifornia Language Survival Project.
Stanford University
(Stanford,CA)
$100,000
To study the effects of racial diversity onthe critical thinking skills of undergraduatestudents.
Terralingua
(Washington,DC)
$250,000
For an integrated global biodiversity andlinguistic/cultural diversity mappingproject for presentation at the Rio-Plus-Tenconference and relatedworkshops.
Overseas ProgramsEastern Africa
Foundation-administered project
$250,000
To assist foundation grantees in Africa tobenefit from electronic information accessand connectivity.
Middle East and North Africa
Africa 95 (The Caine Prize for
AfricanWriting)
(England)
$50,000
For twowritingworkshops for youngAfricanwriters.
Khalil Alsakakini Cultural Center
(West Bank)
$12,000
To research and edit the personal diariesof Khalil Sakakini, a pioneer Palestinianeducator and literary figure.
Mubarak Public Library
(Egypt)
$140,000
To develop new information technologycapacities and Internet connections withbranch libraries throughout Egypt.
Grants to Individuals$40,000
Total, Programwide$6,532,000
173
CapeTown,University of
(South Africa)
$7,505
For final editing of themanuscript ofthe biography of Ray Alexander Simons,a leading activist in South Africa.
Civil Liberties Organisation
(Nigeria)
$100,000
Formedia outreach on police reforms andcapacity strengthening.
Columbia University
(NewYork,NY)
$412,600
For research andwriting of a book,Creative Strategy, applying theconcepts and tools of strategy tothe philanthropic sector.
Conference Board, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$20,000
For the Ron Brown Award for CorporateLeadership.
Council of Michigan Foundations,
Inc. (GrandHaven,MI)
$5,850
Contribution toward the annual dues ofa foundation-supported regional associa-tion of grant makers.
Council on Foundations, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$49,600
Contribution toward the annual duesof a foundation-supported associationof grant makers.
European Foundation Centre
(Belgium)
$8,000
Contribution toward the annual duesof a foundation-supported Europeanassociation of grant makers.
FirelightMedia, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$670,000
For the production and disseminationof social issue documentary films, videosand newmedia.
Ford FoundationMatching Gift
Program (Princeton,NJ)
$900,000
To fund thematching contributions forthe Ford Foundation Matching GiftProgram.
Ford FoundationMatching Gift
Program (Princeton,NJ)
$250,000
To fund thematching contributionsfor the Ford FoundationMatching GiftProgram.
Foundation-administered project
$2,750,000
For the fourth cohort of ProgramAssociates.
Foundation-administered project
$1,235,000
For projects that communicate thefoundation’s mission and program,including itsWeb site.
Foundation-administered project
$700,000
To produce video case studies, develop agrant-making toolkit and conduct work-shops on the craft of grant making.
Foundation-administered project
$690,000
To enable Sadako Ogata to serve asscholar-in-residence.
Foundation-administered project
$300,000
To produce and disseminate learningmaterials on the foundation’s workin India.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
To design and pilot an electronic library onthe foundation’sWeb site of foundationpublications currently available onlyin print.
Foundation-administered project
$200,000
For continuation of the foundation’sactivities related to South Africa.
Foundation-administered project
$150,000
To examine and exchange informationon contemporary race relations.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For a pilot communications project topromotemedia coverage of foundationgrantees’activities and accomplish-ments in Chile.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For a ProgramAssociates program at theFord Foundation’sMoscow office.
Foundation-administered project
$100,000
For activities in support of the UnitedNations.
Foundation-administered project
$50,000
For documentation of the foundation’shistory.
Hanoi Agricultural University
(Vietnam)
$41,000
To train the accountants of foundationgrantees in northern and centralVietnam.
Hanoi University of Foreign
Studies (Vietnam)
$194,000
For a residential program of intensiveEnglish language instruction forfoundation grantees in Vietnam.
Independent Sector
(Washington,DC)
$10,250
Contribution toward the annual dues ofa foundation-supported national philan-thropic association.
Institute of International
Education, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$1,808,000
For theTravel and Learning Fund forChinese grantees.
Janvikas (India)
$90,000
Tomonitor earthquake relief efforts inGujarat to ensure social justice and reliefformarginalized populations.
Foundationwide ActionsFiscal Year 2001
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
174
Foundationwide Actions
London,University of
(England)
$359,700
For research to strengthen historicalstudies on the issues of gender andmemory in Latin America.
National Autonomous University
of Mexico (Mexico)
$36,000
For seminars and a conference on thelinkages between universities and ruraldevelopment.
Natal,University of
(South Africa)
$99,148
To test the potential of amass-mobilizationapproach using recreational activitiesto modify the sexual and reproductivebehavior of out-of-school,unemployedyouth.
NewYork Regional Association of
Grantmakers, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$10,000
Contribution toward the annual dues ofa foundation-supported regional associa-tion of grant makers.
NewYork, State University of
(Albany,NY)
$100,000
For a public education andmedia outreachproject using Census 2000 data to analyzeresidential patterns of racial and ethnicgroups,with a focus on residential segre-gation inmetropolitan areas.
Northern California Grantmakers
(San Francisco,CA)
$6,000
Contribution toward the annual duesof a foundation-supported association ofgrant makers.
Public Agenda Foundation, Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$2,000,000
Matching support for a program develop-ment fund to enhance organizationalflexibility and responsiveness to emergingand significant public policy issues.
Rockefeller Family Fund Inc.
(NewYork,NY)
$10,000
For the GrantsManagers Network toprovide a forum for exchange of informa-tion about best practices in grantsmanagement, networking and profes-sional development.
Social Science Research Council
(NewYork,NY)
$500,000
For an international effort to re-envisionMiddle East studies and a pilot project fora collaborative research competition.
South African History Online
(South Africa)
$100,000
To encourage thewriting of history byall the peoples of South Africa, traincommunities and schools to write theirlocal history and complete itsWeb siteon South African history and culture.
Southern California Association
for Philanthropy
(Los Angeles,CA)
$7,250
Contribution toward the annual dues ofa foundation-supported regional associa-tion of grant makers.
UnitedWay of NewYork City
(NewYork,NY)
$29,805
Tomatch foundation employee contribu-tions to the 2001 Campaign of the UnitedWay of NewYork City.
VietnamNational University–
Ho ChiMinh City
(Vietnam)
$233,000
For a residential program of intensiveEnglish language instruction forfoundation grantees in Vietnam.
Women and Philanthropy, Inc.
(Washington,DC)
$6,000
Contribution toward the annual duesof a foundation-supported associationof grant makers.
Total, Foundationwide Actions$14,638,708
175
Good Neighbor GrantsFiscal Year 2001
To help organizations and activitiesthat contribute to the civic spirit andadd to the vitality of neighborhoodsnear its headquarters in NewYorkCity, the Ford Foundationmade21 grants through its Good NeighborCommittee.The Ford Foundation’soverseas offices also made grantsthrough their respective GoodNeighbor Committees.
NewYork Programs
ActionWithout Borders, Inc.
$22,000
For itsWeb site, Idealist.org,whichprovides information about nonprofitservices, volunteer opportunities,resources, events, internships and jobopenings worldwide.
Bread and Roses Cultural Project,
Inc.
$20,000
To hire administrative staff to support therapid expansion of its activities.
Friends of DagHammarskjold
Plaza Inc.
$20,000
Tomaintain and beautify DagHammarskjold Plaza park and foroutreach programs and specialevents.
Solomon R.Guggenheim
Foundation
$20,000
For themuseum’s LearningThroughArt Children’s Program at theMidtownWest public school located inmidtownManhattan.
Hartley House
$20,000
For further development of its HomeOutreach Program for Elders (HOPE)program, its Creative Arts program andits Adult General Equivalency Diploma(GED) classes.
International Arts Relations, Inc.
$20,000
For the Literacy Strategies Program, anin-school program for students at theHigh School of Graphic CommunicationArts that uses theater arts techniquesto increase literacy.
International Center of
Photography
$20,000
To expand the center’s communityprograms initiative to bring photog-raphy to schoolchildren and thedisadvantaged.
Medicare Rights Center, Inc.
$25,000
To expand direct services to the elderlyon a broad range of issues related toMedicare andMedicare HMOs.
MindsMatter
$20,000
For mentoring and tutoring services toprepareNewYork City high school studentsfor college summer programs.
MomentumProject, Inc.
$30,000
To providemeals, counseling and healthservices to low-income,HIV-infectedindividuals inmidtownManhattan.
NationalMinority Business
Council, Inc.
$13,000
For an education and training programfor minority,women-owned and smallbusinesses.
NewDance Group Studio, Inc.
$40,000
To establish a comprehensive archiveof materials from the organization’s75-year history at the forefront ofmodern dance in NewYork.
NewDramatists, Inc.
$20,000
For its NewWorks project of readings andworkshops for new plays andmusicals bymember and affiliate playwrights.
New Professional Theatre, Inc.
$20,000
For the Education Outreach Project toaddress the inadequacy of existing artseducation programs in the NewYorkCity public schools.
NewYork Public Library,Astor,
Lenox andTilden Foundations
$20,000
For the Office of Special Services to offerEnglish Classes for Speakers of OtherLanguages at the Columbus branchlibrary.
Nonprofit Coordinating
Committee of NewYork, Inc.
$20,000
For theWhoDoesWhat project to identifynonprofit technical assistance providersin NewYork City.
NYUHospitals Center
$20,000
For the community outreach programs ofthe Rusk Institute’s Enid A.Haupt GlassGarden,which offers educational, researchand clinical programs to hospital patients,their families and the public.
Rush Philanthropic Arts
Foundation
$20,000
For a visual artsmentorship program forNewYork City youth.
Safe Space NYC, Inc.
$70,000
For relocation costs of its Homeless YouthDrop-In Center.
TownHall Foundation
$20,000
For a nonprofit public theater located inmidtownManhattan to provide innovativeand quality performances to diverseaudiences at an affordable cost.
Women In Need, Inc.
$20,000
To help homeless and disadvantagedwomen and their families increasetheir job readiness and individualachievements.
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
176
Good Neighbor Grants
Overseas ProgramsAndean Region and SouthernCone
Chile,University of
(Chile)
$10,000
For a pilot music therapy rehabilitationproject forwomen in prison in Santiago.
Chilean Corporation of Families
and Friends of the Deaf–EFFETA
(Chile)
$10,000
To expand its services for deaf children andtheir parents inmetropolitan Santiago.
Corporation to Develop Learning
(Chile)
$9,700
For training and learning stimulationworkshops aimed at socially vulnerablechildren and their parents/caregivers inpoor primary schools in Santiago.
FundaciónMarcelo Astoreca
Correa (Chile)
$9,000
To improve the library and expandmusicaland physical education activities at itsschool for needy children in Santiago.
Misión deMaría (Chile)
$10,000
To design amanagement informationsystem andWeb page, plan a fund-raising campaign and improve servicesfor infants and children living in themission’s home for infants at risk.
Brazil
If This StreetWereMine
(Brazil)
$10,000
For socioeducational activities forhomeless children and adolescentsin Rio de Janeiro.
Rio De Janeiro Archiepiscopal
Miter (Brazil)
$26,000
For repairs to a shelter for homelessadolescents and children.
China
Beijing Donation Center of
Project Hope
$20,000
To fund scholarships for primary andsecondary school students from destitutefamilies and to study adolescent psycho-logical adjustment during a period ofeconomic transition.
ChifengMunicipal Committee
of CPPCC
$50,000
For the prevention and treatment oftuberculosis among poor herdsmen inthe Darihanwula Sumu region ofInnerMongolia.
Eastern Africa
African Butterfly Research and
EducationTrust (Kenya)
$50,000
For an environmental education programfor children from disadvantaged commu-nities in Nairobi.
Childlife Trust (Kenya)
$10,000
For an arts exhibition to promote thetalents and innovation of disadvantagedchildren in Kenya.
Holy Cross Dispensary
(Kenya)
$15,000
To improvemedical facilities and services.
Juhudi Children’s Club
(Kenya)
$15,000
For non-academic educational programsfor children.
Nairobi Pentacostal Church
(Kenya)
$15,000
To purchase tools and equipment for amotor vehiclemechanic workshopfor street children at a rehabilitationcenter.
Ngong Road Forest Sanctuary
Trust (Kenya)
$20,000
To hire a fund-raising coordinator and anassistant.
Vietnam and Thailand
SonTay Cultural House for
Children (Vietnam)
$7,190
To train teachers of disabled children in15 communes and wards of Son Tay Towninmusic,dance,painting and pantomimeand purchase equipment for the CulturalClub for Disabled Children.
Total,GoodNeighbor Grants$786,890
177
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
Introduction to Financial Statements
Report of Independent Accountants
Statements of Financial Position
Statements of Activities
Statements of Cash Flows
Notes to Financial Statements
Historical Summary
178
Budget and Investment Policy
The foundation’s budget and investment policies are intended to servethe foundation’s basic charitable and educational purposes. It is anticipatedthat for many years to come, the foundation will play an important rolein addressing societal problems and challenges in the United States andaround the world. This role includes helping to develop, test and supportnew ideas and innovative projects. To enable the foundation to continue toperform this function and to effectively pursue multiyear programs andstrategies, the foundation tries to invest and budget in ways that producerelatively smooth spending patterns over time and avoid sharp drops inspending from year to year, while preserving the real value of theinvestment portfolio.
The foundation budgets on a two-year cycle. The foundation’s budget isbased on two benchmarks. The first is an internally derived formula equalto 5.8 percent of the average value of the investment portfolio over theprevious 36-month period. The second benchmark is the spending levelthat is adequate to satisfy both the federally mandated payout requirementand the special distribution requirement that enables the foundation toconvert excise tax savings into additional grant disbursements. For manyyears, foundation spending has exceeded the federally mandated payoutrequirement (5 percent of average asset value). Occasionally the foundationwill exceed both benchmarks to address a unique program opportunity. Infiscal 2001 the foundation launched the International Fellowships Program(I.F.P.) and made $280 million in grants related to this major initiative.As a result, the foundation’s qualifying distribution exceeded 7.2 percentof its average asset value in fiscal 2001.
The foundation maintains a balanced and diversified portfolio that includesequities and fixed income securities (both U.S. and international), privateequities, venture capital and equity partnerships.
Investments
The foundation’s investment portfolio was valued at $10.7 billion at the endof fiscal 2001 versus $14.5 billion at the close of fiscal 2000. The portfoliorate of return was –20.3 percent for the fiscal year and +10.7 percent annual-ized for the past three years. The returns for the three-, five- and ten-yearperiods are all in excess of our primary investment objective of a 5 percentreal rate of return.
Fiscal 2001 was a poor year for equity markets globally due to the rapiddecline in economic growth and the resulting poor earnings performance.The tragic events of September 11, 2001 also had a negative impact on themarkets because of the increase in economic uncertainty for the interme-
Introduction to Financial Statements
diate term. In the U.S., the S&P 500 lost 26.6 percent and non-U.S. equities,as measured by the MSCI-EAFE Index declined by 28.5 percent. Thefoundation’s U.S. and international equities outperformed these indices.The slowing economy and a reassessment of the prospects for manysegments of the technology industry negatively impacted the valuationof the Private Equity portfolio. Our fixed income portfolio gained 10.4%return as interest rates declined due to lower inflation and sharplylower short-term interest rates.
Portfolio ComponentsAs of September 30
2001 2000
Market value Percent Market value Percent(in millions) of total (in millions) of total
U.S. equities $ 4,186.7 39.3% $ 6,050.3 41.7%Int’l. equities 1,324.1 12.4 1,771.3 12.2
Total public equities 5,510.8 51.7 7,821.6 53.9
Private equities 1,407.7 13.2 2,905.4 20.1
Total equities 6,918.5 64.9 10,727.0 74.0
U.S. fixed income 2,732.3 25.7 2,207.7 15.2
Int’l. fixed income 210.8 2.0 433.2 3.0
Short-term investments 790.5 7.4 1,130.1 7.8
Total fixed income 3,733.6 35.1 3,771.0 26.0
$10,652.1 100.0% $14,498.0 100.0%
Income and Expenditures
Total realized income, including capital gains, amounted to $992 millionin fiscal 2001, compared with $2,432 million in fiscal 2000. Dividendsand interest income totaled $343 million, or $22 million above fiscal 2000.Total program activities (primarily grants to organizations and individuals,direct charitable activities and program support) were $931 million, repre-senting an increase of $216 million over the previous year. Generalmanagement expenditures were $25 million, representing a 4.6 percentincrease over the previous year. Expenses incurred in the productionof income were $29 million.
Program-Related Investments (PRIs)
Each year the foundation invests a portion of its endowment in projectsthat advance philanthropic purposes in various areas of the foundation’sinterest. (See list, page 119.) The Trustees have earmarked up to $180 millionof the corpus for these investments. The investments are in the formof debt or equity financing or loan guarantees. As of September 30, 2001,$134.6million in investments and $115,000 in guarantees were outstandingand $26.2 million in funding commitments were in process.
During the fiscal year, new PRI loan commitments of $16.5 million weremade, and $12.3 million were disbursed. Principal repayments of $12.9
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
179
180
million and investment income of $1.3 million were received. The follow-ing table summarizes the PRI program for fiscal years 2001 and 2000.
Program-Related Investment Summary
2001 2000
(in thousands)Investments and guarantees outstanding,
beginning of fiscal year $136,766 $133,891
Activity during year:—Investments disbursed 12,320 14,275
—Principal repaid and guarantees expired* (12,941) (11,399)
—Investments written off (1,422)
Investments and guarantees* outstanding,end of fiscal year 134,723 136,767
Commitments for investments 26,180 25,733
Total investments, guarantees* and commitmentsoutstanding $160,903 $162,500
Allowance for possible losses $ 23,479 $ 24,917
Program development and support** $ 2,526 $ 2,055
Investment income received $ 1,316 $ 1,325
* Guarantees of $115,000 were outstanding at the end of fiscal 2001 and 2000.
** Includes the cost of providing technical assistance to develop new PRIs and evaluateongoing investments.
Federal Excise Tax and Payout Requirement
The Internal Revenue Code imposes on private foundations an excise taxequal to 2 percent on net investment income (principally interest, dividendsand net realized capital gains, less expenses incurred in the production ofinvestment income). This tax is reduced to 1 percent when the foundationmeets certain distribution requirements. In fiscal 2001 the foundation wasagain able to satisfy the distribution requirement and thus reduce theexcise tax from 2 percent to 1 percent by converting the tax savings intoadditional qualifying distributions (grant payments). For fiscal 2001 thetax is estimated to be $9.7 million, excluding the deferred portion of excisetaxes resulting from unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments.Since fiscal 1971 the foundation has incurred federal excise taxes of$227 million.
The Internal Revenue Code also requires private foundations annually todisburse approximately 5 percent of the market value of investment assets,less the federal excise tax. The payout requirement may be satisfied bypayments for grants, program-related investments, direct conduct ofcharitable activities and certain administrative expenses. The foundationhad qualifying distributions of $939.1 million in fiscal 2001, exceeding thefederally mandated payout requirement by $288.3 million. During the pastfive years the foundation has made $3.3 billion in qualifying distributionsexceeding the federally mandated payout requirement by $548 million.
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
181
Report of Independent Accountants
To the Board of Trustees of the Ford Foundation:
In our opinion, the accompanying statements of financial position and therelated statements of activities and cash flows present fairly, in all materialrespects, the financial position of the Ford Foundation at September 30, 2001and September 30, 2000, and the changes in net assets and its cash flows forthe years then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generallyaccepted in the United States of America. These financial statements arethe responsibility of the Ford Foundation’s management; our responsibilityis to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.We conducted our audits of these statements in accordance with auditingstandards generally accepted in the United States of America, which requirethat we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance aboutwhether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An auditincludes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts anddisclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principlesused and significant estimates made by management, and evaluatingthe overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our auditsprovide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLPNew York, New YorkNovember 26, 2001
182
Statements of Financial Position
September 30
2001 2000
(in thousands)Assets
Investments, at market $10,652,139 $14,497,996
Cashincludes interest-bearing accounts of$112 ($562 at September 30, 2000) 595 1,862
Federal excise tax receivable 2,540 600
Other receivables and assets 6,513 6,890
Program-related investments,net of allowances for possible losses of$23,479 ($24,917 at September 30, 2000) 111,130 111,734
Fixed assets, at cost, net ofaccumulated depreciation of $53,714($46,829 at September 30, 2000) 41,780 40,601
Total Assets $ 10,814,697 $ 14,659,683
Liabilities and unrestricted net assets
Unpaid grants $ 194,497 $ 159,596
Payables and other liabilities 64,872 61,288
Deferred federal excise tax liability 6,853 45,581
Total Liabilities 266,222 266,465
Unrestricted net assetsAppropriated 73,478 45,884
Unappropriated 10,474,997 14,347,334
Total Unrestricted Net Assets 10,548,475 14,393,218
Total Liabilities and Unrestricted Net Assets $ 10,814,697 $ 14,659,683
See Notes to Financial Statements
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
183
Statements of Activities
For the year ended September 30
2001 2000
(in thousands)Income
Dividends $ 108,934 $ 110,697
Interest 234,091 210,300
Realized appreciation on investments, net 648,572 2,111,312
Unrealized (depreciation) appreciation oninvestments, net (3,872,828) 1,084,039
Total income (2,881,231) 3,516,348
Expenditures
Program activities:Grants approved 862,596 653,205
Direct conduct of charitable activities 18,487 15,730
Program support 49,502 45,751
Benefit for possible losses onprogram-related investments (16) (113)
930,569 714,573
General management 24,921 23,832
Expenses incurred in the production of income 28,800 29,582
Provision (benefit) for federal excise taxCurrent 9,660 23,400
Deferred (38,728) 10,840
Depreciation 8,290 7,251
Total expenditures 963,512 809,478
Change in unrestricted net assets (3,844,743) 2,706,870
Unrestricted net assets at beginning of year 14,393,218 11,686,348
Unrestricted net assets at end of year $10,548,475 $14,393,218
See Notes to Financial Statements
184
Statements of Cash Flows
For the year ended September 30
2001 2000
(in thousands)Cash flows from operating activities:Change in unrestricted net assets $ (3,844,743) $ 2,706,870
Adjustments to reconcile change inunrestricted net assets to net cashprovided by operating activities:
Unrealized depreciation (appreciation)on investments 3,872,828 (1,084,039)
Depreciation 8,290 7,251
Benefit for possible losses onprogram-related investments (16) (113)
Deferred (benefit) provision for federalexcise taxes (38,728) 10,840
Increase in current federal excisetax receivable (1,940) (420)
Decrease in other receivables and assets 377 141
Loans disbursed for program-relatedinvestments (12,320) (14,275)
Repayments of program-related investments 12,940 11,398
Grant approvals 862,596 653,205
Grant payments (827,695) (652,091)
Increase in payables and other liabilities 3,584 2,150
Net cash provided by operations 35,173 1,640,917
Cash flows from investing activities:
Proceeds from sale of investments 9,272,035 6,041,036
Purchase of investments (9,299,006) (7,671,779)
Purchase of fixed assets (9,469) (9,066)
Net cash used in investing activities (36,440) (1,639,809)
Net (decrease) increase in cash (1,267) 1,108
Cash at beginning of year 1,862 754
Cash at end of year $ 595 $ 1,862
See Notes to Financial Statements
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
185
Notes to Financial StatementsSeptember 30, 2001
Note 1Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
The financial statements of the Ford Foundation (the foundation) areprepared on the accrual basis. The significant accounting policies followedare set forth below:
Investments Equity and fixed income investments are generally valuedbased upon the final sales price as quoted on major exchanges. However,certain fixed income securities are valued based upon yields or pricesof securities of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well asindications as to values from brokers and dealers. Short-term investmentsgenerally represent securities with maturity of 1 year or less and arevalued at amortized cost. Limited marketability investments, representingamounts in venture capital and equity partnerships, are valued at the quotedmarket price for securities for which market quotations are readily availableor an estimate of value (fair value) as determined in good faith by thegeneral partner. Events affecting the values of these limited marketabilityinvestments that occur between the time their prices are determined andthe close of the foundation’s fiscal year are reflected in the calculation ofthe fair value when the particular event significantly affects such netasset value.
Transactions are recorded on a trade date basis. Investment related receiv-ables and payables are included in the accompanying statements of financialposition as part of investments at fair value. Realized and unrealized gainsor losses on investments are determined by comparison of specific costsof acquisition (identified lot basis) to proceeds at the time of disposal, ormarket values at the last day of the fiscal year, respectively, and include theeffects of currency translation with respect to transactions and holdings offoreign securities. Dividends and interest are recognized when earned.
Cash Consists of cash on hand and operating bank deposits.
Program-Related Investments The foundation invests in projects thatadvance philanthropic purposes. These program-related investments arepresented at net realizable value based on historical experience of thesetypes of loans.
Fixed Assets Land, buildings, furniture, equipment and leasehold improve-ments owned by the foundation are recorded at cost. Depreciation ischarged using the straight-line method based on estimated useful lives ofthe particular assets generally estimated as follows: buildings, principally50 years, and furniture, equipment and leasehold improvements,3 to 15 years.
186
Expenditures and Appropriations Grant expenditures are considered incurredat the time of approval by the President of the foundation. Uncommittedappropriations that have been approved by the Board of Trustees areincluded in appropriated unrestricted net assets.
Taxes The foundation qualifies as a tax-exempt organization underSection 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and, accordingly, is notsubject to federal income taxes. However, the foundation is subjectto a federal excise tax.
The foundation follows the policy of providing for federal excise taxeson net appreciation (both realized and unrealized) on investments. Thedeferred provision for federal excise tax represents taxes provided onnet unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments.
Risks and Uncertainties The foundation uses estimates in preparing thefinancial statements in conformity with generally accepted accountingprinciples which requires management to make estimates and assumptions.Actual results may differ from these estimates. The most significant esti-mates and assumptions relate to valuation of limited marketable securitiesand allowances for possible losses on program-related investments.
Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities During 1998,the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Statement No. 133,“Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities”(“FAS 133”), which requires the foundation to recognize all derivativesas either assets or liabilities in the statement of financial position at fairvalue. In addition, FAS 133 specifies the accounting for changes in the fairvalue of a derivative based on the intended use of the derivative and theresulting designation. The foundation adopted FAS 133 on October 1, 2000.The adoption has not had a significant impact on its statements of finan-cial position and statements of activities.
Note 2Investments
Investments held at September 30, were as follows:
2001 2000
Market Value Cost Market Value Cost(in thousands) (in thousands)
Equities $ 5,510,823 $4,787,258 $ 7,821,675 $4,725,718
Fixed Income 2,943,136 2,928,498 2,640,756 2,739,304
Short-Term Investments 790,468 723,398 1,130,213 1,079,633
Limited Marketability 1,407,712 1,527,705 2,905,352 1,395,235
Total $10,652,139 $9,966,859 $14,497,996 $9,939,890
Included in investments at market are $174.0 million and $373.8 million ofinvestment-related receivables and payables, respectively, in fiscal year 2001and $144.2 million and $133.3 million in fiscal year 2000.
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
187
The foundation purchases and sells forward currency contracts wherebythe foundation agrees to exchange one currency for another on an agreed-upon date at an agreed-upon exchange rate to minimize the exposure ofcertain of its investments to adverse fluctuations in currency markets.In addition, the foundation enters into exchange traded U.S. Treasury andUK Gilt futures contracts whereby the foundation agrees to deliver securitieson an agreed-upon date at an agreed-upon market value for the sole purposeof reducing the interest rate risk. As of September 30, 2001 and 2000, thefoundation had forward currency contracts with notional amounts totaling$60.0 million and $603.5 million, respectively, and U.S. Treasury and UKGilt futures contracts with notional amounts of $0 million and $15.4 million,respectively. Such contracts involve, to varying degrees, risks of loss inexcess of the amount recognized in the statements of financial position,arising either from potential changes in market prices and in the case offorward currency contracts from the possible inability of counterparties tomeet the terms of their contracts. Changes in the value of forward currencycontracts are recognized as unrealized gains or losses until such contractsare closed. Changes in the value of open futures contracts are recognizedas realized gains or losses.
Note 3Fixed Assets
At September 30, fixed assets comprised:
2001 2000
(in thousands)
Land $ 3,736 $ 3,736
Buildings, net of accumulated depreciationof $20,598 in 2001 and $19,450 in 2000 12,791 13,095
Furniture, Equipment and Leasehold Improvements,net of accumulated depreciation of $33,116 in2001 and $27,379 in 2000 25,253 23,770
$41,780 $40,601
Note 4Provision for Federal Excise Tax
The Internal Revenue Code imposes an excise tax on private foundationsequal to 2 percent of net investment income (principally interest, dividendsand net realized capital gains, less expenses incurred in the production ofinvestment income). This tax is reduced to 1 percent for foundations thatmeet certain distribution requirements. In fiscal years 2001 and 2000,the foundation satisfied these requirements and is therefore eligible forthe reduced tax. The provision for federal excise tax (based on a 1 percentrate in fiscal years 2001 and 2000) consists of a current provision on netinvestment income and a deferred provision based on net unrealized appre-ciation on investments. The amount of excise taxes paid was $11.5 millionand $24.0 million in fiscal years 2001 and 2000, respectively.
188
Note 5Retirement Plans
The foundation’s defined benefit pension plan (the Cash BalanceRetirement Plan) and the defined contribution plan (the Ford FoundationRetirement Plan) cover substantially all New York appointed employees(locally appointed staff are covered by other retirement arrangements).Pension benefits generally depend upon age, length of service and salarylevel. The foundation also provides retirees with at least five years ofservice and who are at least age 55 with nonpension postretirement benefitswhich include medical, dental and life insurance. The defined benefitpension plan is funded in accordance with the minimum funding require-ments of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Thenonpension postretirement benefits are not funded by the foundation.
Pension Benefits Other Benefits(in thousands at September 30)
2001 2000 2001 2000
Benefit obligation $5,277 $4,322
Fair value of plan assets 5,392 4,363
Funded status $ 115 $ 41
Prepaid (accrued) benefit costrecognized in the statements offinancial position $ 543 $ 273 $ (29,980) $ (28,286)
Weighted average assumptions:
Discount rate 5.5% 6% 7.25% 7.50%Expected return on plan assets 7% 7%Rate of compensation increase 6% 6%
For measurement purposes, a health care cost trend rate of 6% and 7%,were used to measure the accumulated postretirement benefit obligationat September 30, 2001 and 2000, respectively. The health care cost trendrate is assumed to remain at 6% thereafter.
Pension Benefits Other Benefits(in thousands at September 30)
2001 2000 2001 2000
Net periodic benefitcost recognized $ 757 $ 703 $ 3,155 $ 3,017
Employer contribution 1,026 788
Benefits paid 306 550 1,461 1,305
The expense recorded by the foundation related to contributions to thedefined contribution plan aggregated $4,522,000 and $4,284,000 for the yearsended September 30, 2001 and 2000, respectively.
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
189
Note 6Contingencies,Commitments and Guarantees
The foundation is involved in several legal actions. The foundationbelieves it has defenses for all such claims, believes the claims are substan-tially without merit, and is vigorously defending the actions. In theopinion of management, the final disposition of these matters will nothave a material effect on the foundation’s financial position.
As part of its program-related investment activities, the foundation hasoutstanding loan guarantees of $115,000 and is committed to provide$26,180,000 of loans to not-for-profit organizations once certain conditionsare met. Further, as part of its investment management activity, thefoundation is committed to additional funding of $677,363,000 in privateequity commitments.
190
Historical Summary
Expenditures and Realized Income
$ millions
2600
2400
2200
2000
1800
1600
1400
1200
1000
800
600
400
200
0 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Expenditures Realized Capital GainsDividends and Interest
The chart above compares expenditures with realized income, which consists ofdividends, interest and realized capital gains.
Fifteen Year SummaryFiscal Years 1987–2001 in millions
2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996
Investments
Market value at end of year $10,652.1 $14,498.0 $11,783.2 $9,501.2 $9,432.8 $8,035.3
Cost at end of year 9,966.9 9,939.9 8,309.1 7,161.5 6,652.2 6,140.9
Increase (decrease) in unrealizedappreciation on investments (3,872.8) 1,084.0 1,134.3 (440.9) 886.2 213.8
Realized capital gains 648.6 2,111.3 1,503.7 745.6 748.3 626.5
Unrestricted net assetsat end of year 10,548.5 14,393.2 11,686.3 9,426.2 9,352.0 7,961.0
Income and Expenditures
Dividends and interest income 343.0 321.0 281.5 341.3 256.6 272.3
Program activities 930.6 714.6 577.8 516.9 433.4 366.9
Investment management, generalmanagement, depreciation andprovision for current federalexcise tax 71.7 84.1 70.2 59.5 57.7 53.5
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
1911995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987
$7,372.9 $6,475.5 $6,821.4 $6,367.4 $6,158.2 $5,291.0 $5,671.9 $4,939.5 $5,303.5
5,692.2 5,471.2 5,360.3 4,943.0 4,792.7 4,663.3 4,510.5 4,317.6 4,241.5
676.3 (456.8) 36.8 58.8 737.8 (533.8) 539.5 (440.0) 252.9
339.1 257.1 549.2 208.5 146.7 140.2 163.4 49.7 440.4
7,290.3 6,422.8 6,732.3 6,270.8 6,059.3 5,205.1 5,584.4 4,856.0 5,224.7
247.2 232.1 248.2 284.8 303.4 314.4 306.9 289.1 251.7
339.5 301.1 326.1 299.2 287.3 268.5 245.1 242.1 228.6
48.9 45.3 46.2 40.8 39.1 37.0 33.6 29.9 32.4
Average Investment Portfolio Values and Program Spending
Average Investment Portfolio Values Program Spending$ billions $ millions
20.0 1000
18.0 900
16.0 800
14.0 700
12.0 600
10.0 500
8.0 400
6.0 300
4.0 200
2.0 100
0.0 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
The blue line in the chart above shows the annual average value of the foundation’sinvestment portfolio over the past 15 years plotted on the left scale. The black lineis the level of spending on program activities over the same period and is plottedon the right scale.
192
Investment Portfolio ValuesNominal and Real Dollars$ billions
16.0
14.0
12.0
10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01
Real (2001) DollarsNominal Value
During the past 30 years, the dollar lost 77 percent of its purchasing power as measuredby the Consumer Price Index. During this same period, the foundation disbursed about$9.7 billion for program expenditures and operations.
Ford Foundation Financial Review 2001
Article 19 Research and InformationCentre on Censorship, 170
Arts and culture, 163–164, 166–168,169, 170
Arts Council of Jakarta, 167Arts International, 163Ashoka, 113, 141Asia Foundation, 136Asia-Pacific Forum on Women, Law
and Development, 129Asialink Centre at the University
of Melbourne, 167Asian American Arts Alliance, 163Asian Heritage Foundation, 167Asian Institute of Management, 146Asian Institute of Technology, 98Asian Neighborhood Design, 86Aspen Institute, 84, 87, 92, 120, 123,
164Asset Building and Community
Development, 84–119Program-Related Investments, 119Programwide, 118
Assiut University, 131Association—No to Violence
(ANNA), 131Association des Chercheuses Arabes
en France, 131Association for Applied Social
Research in the Arab Sector, 120Association for Children of New
Jersey, 105Association for Chinese Economic
Studies, 128Association for Defense of Human
Rights, 126Association for Enterprise
Opportunity, 84Association for Human Rights Legal
Aid, 130Association for Progressive
Communications, 136Association for Reproductive and
Family Health, 114Association for Research on
Nonprofit Organizations andVoluntary Action, 136
Association for Social Research andStudy, 89
Association for the Advancement ofthe Social Sciences in Guatemala,99
Association for the Development ofBlack Women of Costa Rica, 130
Association for the Promotion ofTraditional Medicine, 107, 114
Association Minga Peru, 109Association of African Universities,
154Association of African Women for
Research and Development, 111Association of American Colleges
and Universities, 154Association of American Indian
Physicians, 107Association of America’s Public
Television Stations, 164
Association of Black FoundationExecutives, 136
Association of Chinese Professorsof Social Science in the UnitedStates, 128
Association of ForestryCommunities of Peten, 99
Association of Hispanic Arts, 151Association of Nigerian Authors, 170Association of Small Foundations,
136Association of Social
Communications “Calandria,” 126Association of the Bar of the City
of New York Fund, 132Association of the Latin American
Universities Entrusted to theSociety of Jesus, 158
Association of Voluntary Agenciesfor Rural Development, 143
Association of Young Leaders, 147Astraea Foundation, 120Ateneo de Manila University,
101, 146Atlanta Neighborhood Development
Partnership, 92Atlatl, Inc., 163ATV Associates, 164Austin Interfaith Sponsoring
Committee Incorporated, 152Australian National University, 112Autonomous Group for
Environmental Research, 99Autonomous Non-Commercial
Organisation Internews, 169Autonomous Technological Institute
of Mexico, 123Autonomous University of
Aguasacalientes, 158
BBahia, Federal University of,
109, 157Balay Mindanaw Foundation, 146Baltimore Urban League, 92Bangladesh Freedom Foundation, 151Bank Information Center, 136Bantay Katarungan Foundation, 146Barnard College, 154Bay Area Institute, 164BBB Wise Giving Alliance, 136Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration
Corporation, 92Beijing Civil Affairs Society, 142Beijing Donation Center of Project
Hope, 176Beijing Normal University, 157Beijing Sexuality Education and
Research Association, 110Beijing Yuda Business College, 157Bekezela College, 101Benton Foundation, 164Bertelsmann Stiftung, 136Bethlehem 2000 Project Authority,
168Biblio Charitable Trust, 158
Bioresources Development andConservation Programme, 114
Birmingham Civil Rights Initiative,163
Birzeit University, 100, 118, 130,146, 168
Black Leadership Forum, 120Boston College, 154Boston University, 131, 156Boston Women’s Health Book
Collective, 107Bradford, University of, 123Brandeis University, 84Brazil, 96–97, 109–110, 127, 141–142,
151, 157Brazilian Association for Population
Studies (Abep), 157Brazilian Association for
Post-Graduate Study in CollectiveHealth, 141
Brazilian Association of NGOs,136, 141
Brazilian Biodiversity Fund, 96Brazilian Consumer Defense
Institute, 141Brazilian Institute for Social and
Economic Analysis, 141Brazilian Institute of Municipal
Administration, 96Brazilian Interdisciplinary AIDS
Association, 109Brazilian Society for Instruction, 127Bread and Roses Cultural Project,
175British American Security
Information Council, 123Brody & Weiser, 84, 87Brookings Institution, 84, 92, 105, 139Brown University, 154, 165Bruce Onobrakpeya Foundation, 102BSR Education Fund, 84, 120Buenos Aires, Ombudsman’s Office
of the City of, 109Bulacan, Province of, 159Burden Center for the Aging, 92
CCahbriba Alternative School, 159Cairo University, 100, 146Calicut, University of, 167California, University of
Berkeley, 152, 154, 163Davis, 142, 152, 159Fresno, 142Irvine, 110Los Angeles, 120, 136, 163Santa Barbara, 99Santa Cruz, 92, 136
California Black Women’s HealthProject, 107
California Budget Project, 139California Syringe Exchange
Network, 107California Tomorrow, 152California Women’s Law Center, 107California Workforce Association,
87
Calvin College and Seminary, 92Cambridge, University of, 123Campaign for Fiscal Equity, 152Campinas, State University of, 141Canadian Center for Policy
Alternatives on behalf of PolarisInstitute, 124
Canadian Journalists for FreeExpression, 120
Cantho University, 160Cape Town, University of, 113,
160, 173Caribbean Network of Art
Presenters, 163Carlos Chagas Foundation, 157Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, 124Carolina Alliance for Fair
Employment, 136, 139Carter Center, 142Casa Via Magia, 163Catholic Relief Services, 145Catholic University of America, 136Catholics for Free Choice in Latin
America, 109Cayetano Heredia Peruvian
University, 156Ceara Group for the Prevention
of AIDS, 109Cebu Uniting for Sustainable
Water Foundation, 146CEGA, 88Center for Afro Study and Research,
120, 126Center for Applied Ethics:
Century 21, 169Center for Applied Linguistics, 152Center for Biodiversity and
Indigenous Knowledge, 97Center for Contemplative Mind in
Society, 136Center for Cultural and Technical
Interchange Between East andWest, 124
Center for Defense Information, 165Center for Democracy and
Technology, 165Center for Economic and Social
Rights, 151Center for Environmental Public
Advocacy, 136Center for Gender, Environmental
and Sustainable DevelopmentStudies, 102
Center for Gender Equality, 120Center for Higher Studies of Social
Promotion and the Environment,109
Center for Impact Research, 105Center for Information Research, 159Center for International Forestry
Research, 94, 97Center for International Policy, 124Center for Investigative Reporting,
152, 165Center for Justice and
Accountability, 120
Index
194
Center for Justice and InternationalLaw, 120
Center for Law and Education, 152Center for Law and Social Policy,
87, 105Center for Law in the Public
Interest, 94Center for Legal and Social Studies
(CELS), 126Center for Media Education, 165Center for Media Freedom and
Responsibility, 146Center for National Independence
in Politics, 136Center for National Policy, 124Center for Policy Alternatives, 105,
139, 165Center for Popular Legal Assistance,
99Center for Public Policy Priorities,
105, 139Center for Reproductive Law and
Policy, 120Center for Research and
Documentation of the WesternBorder of Guatemala, 145
Center for Research and HigherStudies in Social Anthropology,145, 152, 154
Center for Research and Training onDevelopment, Lebanon, 146
Center for Research on theMesoamerica Region, 124, 154, 158
Center for Resource Economics, 92Center for Rural Strategies, 92Center for Social and Cultural
Studies Antonio de Montesinos,145
Center for Social Sciences andHumanities of Danang, 160
Center for Socio-Economic Studiesof Development, 126
Center for Strategic and BudgetaryAssessments, 124
Center for Strategic InternationalStudies, 124
Center for Studies of ContemporaryCulture, 141
Center for Studies on Relationsand Inequality in the Workplace,127
Center for Study and Research inCollective Health, 109, 110
Center for Study of Reform of theState, 145
Center for Support of DemocraticYouth Initiatives, 147
Center for Teaching and Research inEconomics, 145
Center for the Creation of PopularImages, 127
Center for the Disseminationof Democracy and CommunityDevelopment, 131
Center for the Future of Teachingand Learning, 152
Center for Third World Organizing,136
Center for Transcultural Studies, 154Center for Urbanism and
Development Studies, 170Center for Vietnamese and
Intercultural Studies, 160Center for Watershed and
Community Health, 94Center for Women Policy Studies,
136Center for Workers of Amazonia
on behalf of Integrated Women’sMovement of the Amazon, 96
Center for Workforce Preparationand Quality Education, 87
Center of Assistance to InternationalProtection, 131
Center of Black Culture ofMaranhao, 110
Center of Educational Research andDevelopment, 156
Center of Habilitation andIntegration for the Blind, 158
Center of Peruvian Women“Flora Tristan,” 109
Center on Budget and PolicyPriorities, 105, 139
Center on Education Policy, 152Center on Fathers, Families and
Public Policy, 105Center on Policy Initiatives, 87Central America, 89–90, 99–100, 112,
118, 130, 145–146, 151, 158–159, 168Central American University, 99Central China Normal University,
142Central University for Nationalities,
157, 166Centre de Sciences Humaines, 143Centre d’Etudes en Sciences
Humaines et Sociales, 146Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches
sur le Moyen-OrientContemporain, 146
Centre for Advanced Social Science,133
Centre for Advanced Studies ofAfrican Society, 169, 170
Centre for Advocacy and Research,129
Centre for Applied Social SciencesTrust on behalf of Theatre forAfrica, 101
Centre for Basic Research, 139, 143Centre for Budget and Policy
Studies, 143Centre for Communication and
Cultural Action, 167Centre for Conflict Resolution, 124Centre for Constitutionalism and
Demilitarisation, 139Centre for Democracy and
Development, 139Centre for Development and
Conflict Management Studies,133
Centre for Development Studies, 143Centre for Economic and Social
Studies, 143Centre for Feminist Legal Research,
111Centre for Higher Education
Transformation Trust, 160Centre for International
Environmental Law, 94Centre for Law and Research
International, 143Centre for Law Enforcement
Education, 133Centre for Policy Alternatives, 144Centre for Research in Rural &
Industrial Development, 129Centre for Rural Legal Studies,
101, 132Centre for Science and Environment,
98Centre for Social and Technological
Change, 111Centre for Social Research and
Development (Nepal), 98Centre for Social Science Research
and Development (Nigeria), 114Centre for the Development and
Population Activities, 113Centre for the Right to Health, 151Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies (India), 144Centre for the Study of Violence
and Reconciliation, 132Centre for Workers’ Rights, 139Centre of Contemporary
Architecture, 169Certified Forest Products Council,
94Charitable Foundation for Support
of Civil Society Initiatives“The Fulcrum Foundation,”131
Charities Aid Foundation, 143Chesapeake Bay Foundation, 92Chicago, University of, 105, 152Chifeng Municipal Committee
of CPPCC, 176Childlife Trust, 176Children, youth and families, 105–107,
112, 113Children’s Action Alliance, 105, 139Children’s Defense Fund, 105, 120Chile, University of, 96, 109, 157,
166, 176Chilean Association of
Non-Government Organisms, 141Chilean Corporation for AIDS, 109Chilean Corporation of Families
and Friends of the Deaf—EFFETA,176
Chilean Institute of ReproductiveMedicine, 109
China,88, 97–98, 110–111, 127–128,142–143, 151, 157–158, 166
China, government ofDevelopment Research Centre
of the State Council, 142Legislative Affairs Commission
of the National People’sCongress, 127
Ministry of Health, Foreign LoanOffice, 110
National People’s CongressResearch Office of the GeneralOffice of the StandingCommittee, 128, 142
State Ethnic Affairs Commission,157
State Family PlanningCommission, 110
China Academy of Urban Planningand Design, 151
China Agricultural University,97, 142
China Charity Federation, 142China Family Planning Association,
110China Folklore Photographic
Association, 166China Foundation for Poverty
Alleviation, 142China Health Economics Institute,
110China Institute of Contemporary
International Relations, 128China National Committee for
Pacific Economic Cooperation,142
China National Forestry Economicsand Development ResearchCenter, 97
China NPO Network, 142China Population Information and
Research Center, 110China Poverty Research Association,
97China Programme, Wetlands
International-Asia Pacific, 97China Reform Forum, 128China Research Center for
Comparative Politics andEconomics, 142
China University of Political Scienceand Law, 127
Chinese Academy of AgriculturalSciences, 88
Chinese Academy of Forestry, 97Chinese Academy of Management
Science, 142Chinese Academy of Preventive
Medicine, 110Chinese Academy of Sciences, 97Chinese Academy of Social Sciences,
88, 128, 142, 157, 166Chinese Association for American
Studies, 128Chinese Economists Society, 142Chinese Society for Women’s
Studies, 88Chinese Women’s College, 157
195
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Christ’s House Foundation, 88Chulalongkorn University, 133Church Community Leadership
Trust, 160Cidade—Center for Urban Planning
and Study, 141Cine Qua Non, 120Cinema Museum, 169Cinema Production Center, 169Citizen Forum Trust, 143Citizen Power Foundation, 126Citizen’s Educational Observatory,
158Citizens’ Watch, 131Citizenship, Studies, Research,
Information and Action, 127City Managers’ Association,
Gujarat, 144Civicus World Alliance for Citizen
Participation, 136Civil Liberties Organisation
(Nigeria), 173Civil Rights Congress, 139Civil society, 136–139, 141–148Clarity Educational Productions, 120Clark Atlanta University, 94CLF Services, 92Coalition on Violence Against
Women, 129Coastal Enterprises, 119College, many names beginning with.
See next element of nameCollege of Mexico, 145College of Pharmacy, 160College of the Southern Border,
99, 158Collins Center for Public Policy, 92Colombian Commission of Jurists,
126Colombian Corporation for
Municipal CommunityDevelopment (PROCOMUN),96
Colorado, State of, 105Colorado, University of, 124Colorado Children’s Campaign, 105Columbia University, 84, 88, 92,
105, 111, 120, 136, 139, 154, 156, 166,173
Combine Resource Institution, 144Commission for Solidarity and
Defense of Human Rights, 100Committee for the Defense of
Human Rights, 139Committee of Technikon Principals,
160Commonwealth Association
for Public Administration andManagement, 144
Commonwealth Foundation, 124Commonwealth Human Rights
Initiative, 129, 139Communicating for Change, 102Communication, Education and
Information on Gender, 141Communications Development
Incorporated, 84
Communities in School, 152Community and Resource
Development, Publications andOther Media, 102–103
Community and ResourceDevelopment, 92–104
Community Conservation andDevelopment Initiatives 2000,102
Community development, 92–94,96, 98, 100–101
Community DevelopmentFoundation, 90
Community Development Trust, 148Community Development Venture
Capital Alliance, 84Community Foundation for the
National Capital Region, 136Community Foundation of Greater
Greensboro, 92Community Law and Rural
Development Centre, 132Community Loan Technologies, 163Community Media Production
Group, 105Community Partners, 120Community Renewal Society, 165Conference Board, 173Congress of National Black
Churches, 92Congressional Black Caucus
Foundation, 136Connecticut, University of, 152, 154Connecticut Public Broadcasting,
165Connecticut Voices for Children, 105Conservation Fund, 94Conservation Law Foundation, 92Constituency for Africa, 124Constitutional Rights Foundation,
152Constitutional Rights Project, 133Constructive Approach Foundation
“Sozidaniye,” 147Consultancies for Development, 96Consumer Federation of America
Foundation, 84Consumers Union of United States,
84, 94, 136Cooperative for Assistance and
Relief Everywhere (CARE), 98Cooperative Housing Foundation
on behalf of Housing and HabitatFoundation, 89
Coordinating Body for theIndigenous Peoples’ Organizationof the Amazon Basin, 97
Cordell Hull Institute, 124Cornell University, 124, 136, 163Corporation for Enterprise
Development, 84, 85, 92Corporation for Legal Training
for Citizenship and Democracy,126
Corporation for Supportive Housing,87
Corporation to Develop Learning,176
Council for Adult and ExperientialLearning, 87
Council for Aid to Education, 154Council for Ethics in Economics, 152Council for Excellence in
Government, 139Council for Higher Education
Accreditation, 154Council for the Development of
Social Science Research in Africa,139, 143
Council of Graduate Schools inthe United States, 154
Council of Michigan Foundations,173
Council on Foreign Relations,120, 124, 139, 151
Council on Foundations, 136, 173Council on Higher Education, 160Creative Birmingham Ministries,
140Creative Collective Center, 113Creative Communications, 139Crisis Centre for Women, 131Cross City Campaign for Urban
School Reform, 152Cuban Committee for Democracy,
124Cultural Association Sweden-Egypt,
168, 169Cultural Cooperative Association for
Youth in Theatre and Cinema, 168Culture and Free Thought
Association, 100Cunha-Feminist Collective, 110Czechoslovak Jan Hus, 137
DDa Lat, University of, 160Dade Community Foundation, 120Dalian University, 158Danang University, 161Dar Es Salaam, University of, 129,
143DC Agenda Support Corporation, 92Deakin University, 113Decade of Human Rights, 121Delhi Policy Group, 129Desarrolladora de Emprendedores,
85, 89Development Alternatives and
Resource Centre, 90, 114Development Centre for Alternative
Policies, 98Development finance and economic
security, 84–86, 88–90Development Information Network,
133, 170Development Network of Indigenous
Voluntary Associations, 143Development of Humane Action.
See DHANDevelopment Policy Management
Forum, 143
Development ResearchersCo-operative Society, 114
Development Support Centre, 98Development Support Team, 89Development Training Institute,
92DHAN (Development of Humane
Action) Foundation, 89, 98Diego Portales University, 126Diocese of Muranga Registered
Trustees, 129Disabled Women Network and
Resource Organisation, 111Douglas Gould and Company,
105, 156D2D Fund, 85Duke University, 124, 147, 165
EEarly Childhood Resource Centre,
100Earth Island Institute, 156Earth Times Foundation, 121East African Centre for
Constitutional Development,143
East African Law Society, 129East African Wild Life Society, 98East Bay Community Foundation,
92Eastern Africa,88, 98, 111, 118, 128–129,
143, 158, 166–167, 172Eastern Michigan University, 159Ecole Francaise D’extreme-Orient,
170Ecological Association of
Chalatenango, 100Economic and Social Research
Foundation, 124Economic Cooperation Foundation,
124Economic Development, 84–91
publications and other media, 91Economic Policy Institute, 87, 139Ecotourism Society of Kenya, 98Ecotrust, 94Eduardo Mondlane University, 101Education, Knowledge and Religion,
152–162publications and other media, 162
Education, Media, Arts and Culture,152–172Programwide, 172
Education Action—Consultancy,Research and Information, 157
Education and Change, 158Education and Health Institute, 109Education Commission of the
States, 152Education Development Center, 165Education Fund of Family Planning
Advocates of New York State,107
Education Fund of the AmericanCenter for International LaborSolidarity, 124
Education reform, 152–154, 156–160
Index
196
Education Resources Institute, 152Education to Improve Quality
of Life—EDUK, 109Educational Forum, 156Educational Foundation for Nuclear
Science, 124Egypt
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 130Ministry of Health, National
AIDS Program, 112Ministry of Higher Education, 159
Egyptian Fertility Care Society, 112Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships,
124El Hamra, 168Electronic Literature Organization,
165Emory University, 156Empowering Civic Participation
in Governance, 146Encuentro de la Cultura Cubana,
124Encuentros Internacionales
de Musica ContemporaneaFoundation, 163
Enterprise Corporation of the Delta,85, 119
Enterprise for DevelopmentInternational Limited/GTE, 90
Enterprise Foundation, 85, 92Environment and development, 94–96,
101–102Environment Liaison Centre, 98Environment Nicaragua, 100Environmental and Natural
Resources Law Center, 100Environmental Defense Fund, 94Environmental Justice Fund, 94Environmental Law Alliance
Worldwide, 100Environmental Law Center and
Development Promoters, 100Environmental Law Institute, 94Environmental Legal Assistance
Center, 147Environmental Quality
International, 100Environmental Support Center, 94Epidavros Project, 121E.Q.I. Finance Limited, 169Equal Justice Works, 151Equal Rights Advocates, 121Equality Now, 121Espiral Consultants, 145Essential Information, 107Eurasia Foundation, 147Eureka Communities, 137Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights
Network, 130European Foundation Centre, 173European Roma Rights Center, 137European University of
St. Petersburg, 159Evangelical Lutheran Church,
Chile, 109
Executive Secretariat of Articulationof Brazilian Women for Beijing ’95,127
Executive Secretariat of the NationalFeminist Network for Health andReproductive Rights, 110
Expanding Cultural Horizons andOptions, 100
FFairness & Accuracy in Reporting,
165Faith Center for Community
Development, 93Family Care International, 111Family Planning Private Sector
(Kenya), 111Family Resource Center at Gorham,
93Faraja Trust Fund Registered
Trustees, 111Farmer Managed Irrigation System
Promotion Trust, 98Fatayat Nahdlatul’Ulama, 112Fate Foundation, 90Federal Agrotechnical School
of Manaus, 97Federal Fluminense University, 110Federal University of Acre
Foundation, 97Federation for Women and Family
Planning, 137Federation of African Media
Women—Southern AfricanDevelopment Community,170
Federation of Agencies of Social andEducational Assistance (Brazil), 97
Federation of American ScientistsFund, 124
Feminist Press, 154Feminist Studies and Assistance
Center (Brazil), 127Fern Foundation, 94Film Resource Unit, 169Filmmakers Collaborative, 169Finance Project Toward Improved
Methods of Financing Educationand Other Children’s Services,105
Firelight Media, 121, 173First Alaskans Foundation, 137First Nations Development
Institute, 85, 93, 94, 121Fiscal Policy Institute, 139Flathead Economic Policy Center,
94Florida, University of, 85, 156Florida International University,
100, 124Focus: Hope, 119Focus Project, 137Ford Foundation Matching Gift
Program, 173Fordham University, 93Forest Action Network, 98Forest Stewardship Council, 94
Fort Belknap College, 93Fort Hare, University of, 160Forum-Asia, 121Forum for the Future of Higher
Education, 154Forum of Conscience, 133Forward Africa, 114Foundation-administered projects
for activities in support of theUnited Nations, 173
for the activities of the AffinityGroup on Development Finance,85
for the activities of theInter-Program Working Groupon Religion, Society andCulture, 156
for activities related to a new lineof work on arts and identity,163
for activities to explore thefoundation’s experience,opportunities, future directionsand collaborations on highereducation in Africa, 154
to advance the goals of theConstituency-Buildingfor Public School Reforminitiative, 152
to assist foundation granteesin Africa to benefit fromelectronic information accessand connectivity, 172
for consultants and conveningsto explore the foundation’sexperience, opportunities, futuredirections and collaborationson higher education in Africa,161
for continuation of the foundation’sactivities related to South Africa,173
to convene and evaluate thesecond round of the foundation’sCollaborations that CountInitiative, 139
to design and pilot an electroniclibrary on the foundation’sWeb site of foundation publica-tions currently available onlyin print, 173
for documentation of thefoundation’s history, 173
to enable Sadako Ogata to serve asscholar-in-residence, 173
for evaluation, research andcommunications activities toenhance the efforts offoundation grantees andothers to strengthen thefield of news mediaworldwide, 165
to examine and exchangeinformation on contemporaryrace relations, 173
for exploratory activitiesto develop a program on localgovernance and communityparticipation in urban China,142
to explore and identify effectivegrant-making strategies thatwould contribute to institutionbuilding and leadershipdevelopment of women ofcolor organizations, 107
to explore education as a tool foreconomic and social develop-ment and to identify curriculumdevelopment and staff trainingissues with respect to thecampus diversity initiative,89
to explore strategies to increasetolerance for and appreciationof diversity in the contextof transitional justice processin Indonesia, 130
to explore ways to improve thewell-being and life prospects ofchildren in working-poorfamilies, 105
for the fourth cohort of ProgramAssociates, 173
for information sharing,networking and convening ofNGOs in preparation forWorld Conference AgainstRacism, 121
for the launching of the FSCGlobal Fund, an independentnonprofit organization tosupport Forest StewardshipCouncil certification processesworldwide, 94
for the launching of theGlobalization, Environmentand Local CommunitiesInitiative, 94
for the Learning EnhancementFund to support assessmentsof selected Peace and SocialJustice Initiatives and lines ofwork, 151
for the Learning EnhancementFund to underwrite assessmentsand dissemination of selectedEMAC initiatives and linesof work, 172
networking support and appliedresearch and data analysistraining for new grantees, 110
to organize a workshop on histor-ical memory, human rights andarchival preservation, 127
for a pilot communications projectto promote media coverageof foundation grantees’ activitiesand accomplishments in Chile,173
197
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
to plan a program to distill anddisseminate lessons learned fromHarvard University’s Instituteon the Arts and Civic Dialogue,163
to produce and disseminatelearning materials on thefoundation’s work in India,173
to produce video case studies,develop a grant-making toolkitand conduct workshops on thecraft of grant making, 173
for a program associate and topromote research, networkingand expansion of knowledgeabout citizen participation,village government reformsand best practices in localgovernment, 144
for program associates at thefoundation’s Southern AfricaOffice, 148
for a Program Associates programat the Ford Foundation’sMoscow office, 173
a program associateship in theJakarta office to supportthe Community and ResourceDevelopment portfolio, andprovide exposure to interna-tional philanthropy, 99
for program development andimplementation activities forProject GRAD sites, 152
for projects that communicate thefoundation’s mission andprogram, including its Website, 173
to promote clinical legal educationand strengthen university-based legal-aid centers in China,127
to promote knowledge buildingefforts to enhance opportunitiesfor institutional capacity build-ing in the cultural sector andincreased public participation incultural life, 163
for a regional conference, publica-tions and follow-up activitiesto disseminate the findings ofa survey on social protectionin Asia, 88
for the Reproductive HealthAffinity Group’s activities toadvance sexuality and repro-ductive health programs andpolicies worldwide, 107
for research, dissemination andnetworking on human rightsand social justice issues and todevelop new opportunitiesin the field, 129
for research and meetingsto complete development ofa comparative budgettransparency scorecard forLatin America, 145
for research and networking onlocal governance, responsive andaccountable government andpeaceful coexistence in Indiaand South Asia, 144
to stimulate, strengthen andexpand cultural networks inAfrica and the Middle East,168
for workshops, meetings, learn-ing activities and translationsrelating to issues of media,arts and culture, 167
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio,93
Foundation for Civil InitiativesSupport “FOCUS,” 147
Foundation for ContemporaryResearch, 148
Foundation for Salvadoran Programon Environment and Development(PRISMA), 100
Foundation for Socially ResponsibleEnterprises, 141
Foundation for Studies and Researchon Women, 109
Foundation for the Carolinas, 152Foundation for the Development
of Social Sciences, 94Foundation for Universal
Responsibility of His HolinessThe Dalai Lama, 130
Foundation Points of Encounter forChanges in Daily Life, 112
Foundationwide Actions, 173–174Free State, University of the, 113Freedom From Debt Coalition, 124Friends of Dag Hammarskhold
Plaza, 175Friends of the Earth, 124Friends of WWB, India, 89Friends of WWB/USA, 85, 90Front for Rapid Economic
Advancement, 167Frontier, University of the, 96Fudan University, 128Fujian Normal University, 158Fund for Folk Culture, 163Fund for Peace, 124Fund for the City of New York,
105Fundación Amistad, 124Fundación Grupo Fundemos, 145Fundación Marcelo Astoreca
Correa, 176Fundar Center for Research and
Analysis, 145Future Harvest, 95FutureWorks Company, 87
GGaara Dance Foundation, 166Galilee Society: The Arab National
Society for Health Research andServices, 121
Galing Pook Foundation(Innovations and Excellence inLocal Governance), 147
Gallatin Writers, 95Gameliel Foundation, 93Geledes—Institute of Black
Women, 127Gender Links, 132Gender Sensitive Initiatives, 98George Washington University,
95, 133Georgetown University, 121, 124Georgia Campaign for Adolescent
Pregnancy Prevention, 107Getulio Vargas Foundation, 151, 157Ghana, University of, 170Gill Foundation, 121Glasnost Defense Foundation, 169Global Alliance Against Traffic in
Women, 111Global Evaluation & Applied
Research Solutions, 107Global Health and Awareness
Research Foundation, 114Global Health Council, 107Global Justice Center, 127GLSEN, Inc., 152Good Neighbor Grants, 175Good Schools Pennsylvania, 152Goodwill Industries of Southeastern
Wisconsin, 105Governance, 139–148Governance and Civil Society, 136–150
publications and other media,149–150
Grahamstown Foundation, 169Grantmakers for Education, 152Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs
Coalition, 163Greensboro College, 93Group for the Analysis of Social and
Institutional Development, 141Group of Analysis for Development,
156Group of Social Studies Limited
(GES), 109Groupe de Recherche et d’Echanges
Technologiques, 163Guadalajara, University of, 158Guatemala, Archbishopric of, 112Guatemalan Institute of
Radiophonic Education, 158Guatemalan Network of
Microfinance Institutions, 89Guillermo Manuel Ungo
Foundation, 145Guizhou Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, 97Guizhou Academy of Social
Sciences, 97Guizhou Normal University, 97Guizhou University, 142
HHa Long City Youth Union, 113Hague Appeal for Peace, 152Haleakala, Inc., 163Hammarskjold Legacy, 165Hampshire College, 107, 110Handicap International, 142Handloom Weavers Development
Society, 89Hands Along the Nile Development
Services, 100, 112Hanoi Agricultural University,
102, 161, 173Hanoi School of Public Health, 113Hanoi University of Foreign
Studies, 173Harm Reduction Coalition, 107Hartley House, 175Harvard University, 85, 87, 105, 106,
107, 124, 128, 137, 140, 156, 172Hasanuddin University, 99Hawwa’a Center for Culture and
Arts, 131Health, Development, Information
and Policy Institute, 169Health Action Information
Network, 113Health Center of District 6, 114Health Matters, 114HealthReach NY, 107Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
121Hedrick Smith Productions, 152Heed Foundation, 147Help for Progress, 118Helsinki Foundation for Human
Rights, 131, 137Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation,
107Heriberto Jara Center, 145Hesperian Foundation, 107, 110Higher education and scholarship,
154–161Higher Education Policy Institute,
155Higher Technological Studies
Institute, 158Highlander Research and Education
Center, 137Himalayan Research and Cultural
Foundation, 130Ho Chi Minh City AIDS
Committee, 114Ho Chi Minh National Political
Academy, 133, 148Holy Cross Dispensary, 176Home for Human Rights, 129Hong Kong, Chinese University
of, 128Horizon Market Research & Policy
Analysis, 97Horizons Foundation, 137Housing Assistance Council, 93Howard University, 93Huazhong University of Science and
Technology, 158
Index
198
Hubert Kairuki MemorialUniversity, 158
Hue Center for Folk CultureStudies, 170
Hue Medical College, 114Hue University, 161, 170Hugh Pilkington Charitable Trust,
121Human Development and
Reproductive Health, 105–117publications and other media,
116–117Human rights, 120–123, 126–133Human Rights and International
Cooperation, 120–135publications and other media,
134–135Human Rights Documentation
Center, 129Human Rights Focus, 129Human Rights Institute of South
Africa, 132Human Rights Literature Agency,
131Human Rights National
Coordinator, 127Human Rights Network, Uganda,
129Human Rights Society of Maranhao,
127Human Rights Watch, 121, 130Human Rights Media Centre, 132Human Sciences Research Council,
160Humanitarian Law Center, 137Humanitarian Project, 124
IIbadan, University of, 140Ibdaa Cultural Center, 168Ibero-American Organization for
Youth, 112Ibero-American University, 158Idaho, University of, 93Idaho Educational Public
Broadcasting Foundation, 165Idaho Women’s Network Research
and Education Fund, 140Ideas for Peace Foundation, 141Ideas Foundation, 127If This Street Were Mine, 176Illinois, University of, Chicago, 152Immigration and Refugee Services
of America, 121Impumelelo Innovations Award, 101IMZ (International Music Centre
Vienna), 163Inad Center for Theatre and Arts,
168Incorporated Trustees of the New
Era Foundation, 140Indem Foundation, 131Independent Broadcasting
Associates, 165Independent Council of Legal
Expertise, 131
Independent Institute for SocialPolicy, 159
Independent Media Institute, 137Independent Press Association, 165Independent Sector, 173India, 88–89, 98–99, 111–112, 129–130,
143–144, 151, 158, 167Indian Institute of Management,
Bangalore, 144Indian Institute of Science, 98Indian Law Society, 129Indian National Trust for Art and
Cultural Heritage (Intach), 167Indian Network on Participatory
Irrigation Management, 98Indiana University, 93Indigenous Language Institute, 172Indigenous Peoples Task Force, 108Indonesia, 99, 112, 130, 144–145, 158,
167–168Indonesian International Education
Foundation, 158Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation,
144Indonesian Society for Reforming
Arts, 167INFO-Plus Center, 147Information, Sports and Cultural
Center, Sapa District, 170Information Network for the Third
Sector, 141Initiative for a Competitive Inner
City, 85, 87Institut Agama Islam Negeri, 112Institut Agama Islam Negeri Syarif
Hidayatullah, 144Institut de Recherche pour le
Developpement, 146Institute for Alternative Policies for
the Southern Cone, 97Institute for Caribbean and
International Studies, 124Institute for Democracy in South
Africa, 113, 148, 151Institute for Economic and Social
Reforms, 137Institute for Energy and
Environmental Research, 125Institute for Food and Development
Policy, 100Institute for Global Economics, 125Institute for Higher Education
Policy, 155Institute for International Relations
(Vietnam), 133Institute for Justice and
Reconciliation, 132Institute for Media and Society, 170Institute for Multi-Party
Democracy, 148Institute for Policy Studies, 95, 125Institute for Public Policy Research,
151Institute for Research and
Empowerment, 144Institute for Security Studies,
113, 132
Institute for Social and EconomicChange, 144
Institute for Social andEnvironmental Transition, 98
Institute for Strategic Studies ofthe National Defense University,128
Institute for the Advancementof Equity, 127
Institute for the Protection of theMother and Newborn, 114
Institute for Urban EconomicsFund, 147
Institute for War and PeaceReporting, 125
Institute for Wisconsin’s Future, 153Institute for Women’s Policy
Research, 121Institute of Administration
Foundation, 141Institute of Development Studies
(England), 85, 101, 125, 137, 167Institute of Economic Affairs, 118Institute of Economic Growth, 99Institute of Environment and
Development, 142Institute of Environmental Science
for Social Change, 101Institute of Family and
Environmental Research, 172Institute of International Education,
85, 87, 98, 121, 140, 151, 155, 158, 173Institute of Jerusalem Studies, 146Institute of Law in the Service of
Man Company, 130Institute of Man and Environment
in the Amazon, 97Institute of Peace and Conflict
Studies, 130Institute of Peruvian Studies, 109Institute of Philosophy and
Sociology of the Polish Academyof Sciences, 137
Institute of Politics and Governance,147
Institute of Public Affairs, 137Institute of Regional Studies, 156Institute of Social and Ethical
AccountAbility, 87Institute of Social Development, 142Institute of Social Sciences, 144Institute of Socio-Economic
Development and EnterpriseManagement, 102
Institute on Problems of CivilSociety, 147
Institute on Taxation and EconomicPolicy, 106, 140
Instituto del Bien Comun, 97Integrated Rural Development and
Nature Conservation, 101Integrated Services for Women
Entrepreneurs, 89Inter-African Committee on
Traditional Practices Affectingthe Health of Women andChildren, 114
Inter-American Development Bank,125
Inter-American Dialogue, 121, 125Inter-American Institute of Human
Rights, 127, 130Inter-Regional Public Foundation“Siberian Civic Initiatives SupportCenter,” 131
Inter-University Council for EastAfrica, 155, 158
InterAction: The American Councilfor Voluntary InternationalAction, 151
Intercontact Fund, 147Intercultural Development Research
Association, 153Interdenominational Theological
Center, 93Interdisciplinary Group for
Appropriate Rural Technology,100
Interdisciplinary Group on Women,Work and Poverty, 89
Interfaith Alliance Foundation, 156Interfaith Education Fund, 87International Alert—The Standing
International Forum on EthnicConflict, Genocide and HumanRights, 125
International Arts Relations, 175International Association for
Feminist Economics, 155International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development, 85, 99International Center for Economic
Growth, 125International Center for Not-for-
Profit Law, USA, 137International Center for Research
on Women, 108, 129International Center of
Photography, 175International Centre for Environment
and Development, 100International Centre for Ethnic
Studies, 129, 140, 144International Centre for Gender and
Social Research, 114International Centre for Integrated
Mountain Development, 99International Centre for Research
in Agroforestry, 97International Centre for the Legal
Protection of Human Rights,121, 129
International City ManagementAssociation, 95
International Commission of Jurists,121
International cooperation, 123–126,127, 128, 129–130, 131, 133
International Council on HumanRights Policy, 121
International Council onManagement of PopulationProgrammes, 110
199
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
International Crane Foundation, 97International Development Research
Centre, 96, 99, 101International Ecotourism Society, 95International Family Health, 111International Federation of Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies,121
International Federation of WomenLawyers, 129
International Fellowships Fund, 155International Food Policy Research
Institute, 89, 95, 99International Human Rights Law
Group, 127International Institute for
Environment and Development,137
International Institute for StrategicStudies, 125
International Institute forSustainable Development,95, 141
International Justice Mission, 121International Labor Rights
Education and Research Fund, 125International Labour Organization,
89, 125International League for Human
Rights, 131International Livestock Research
Institute, 95International Music Centre Vienna.
See IMZInternational Network for
Production System ResearchMethodology, 89
International Peace ResearchInstitute, 125
International Planned ParenthoodFederation/Western HemisphereRegion, 108
International PossibilitiesUnlimited, 95
International Potato Center, 88International Projects Assistance
Services, 114International Reading Association,
163International Research and Training
Center for Rural Education, 157International Union for Conservation
of Nature and Natural Resources,98, 101, 102
International Women JudgesFoundation, 121, 129
International Youth Foundation, 106Interregional Public Foundation
“New Perspectives,” 147IPS-Inter Press Service, 113Irkutsk State University, 159ISA-Socio-Environmental Institute,
97Ishara Puppet Theater Trust, 167ISIS—Women’s International
Cross-Cultural Exchange, 111Isis International Foundation, 141
Israel Movement for ProgressiveJudaism, 121
Israel Women’s Network, 121Ittijah-Union of Arab Community
Based Associations, 121IXETO Union of Forestry
Communities, 100
JJagiellonian University, 137Jane Addams Peace Association, 125Janvikas, 129, 173Jari Indonesia, 144Jawaharlal Nehru University, 144Jerusalem “Ashtar” for Theatre
Training and PerformingArts, 168
Jerusalem Media and CommunicationCentre, 146
Jesus People Against Pollution, 95JET Education Services, 90Jewish Culture Festival Society, 137Jewish Fund for Justice, 106Joaquim Nabuco Foundation, 141Jobs for the Future, 87John E. Fetzer Institute, 106Johns Hopkins University, 85, 98,
106, 130, 137, 158, 167Journalists Association of Zanzibar,
167Journalists for the Defense of
Independent Journalism, 127Juan Diego Foundation, 89Judaica Foundation, 137Juhudi Children’s Club, 176Just Act Youth Action for Global
Justice, 137Just Transition Alliance, 95Justice Africa Limited, 151
KKaisahan Tungo Sa Kaunlaran
Ng Kanayunan at RepormangPansakahan, 147
Kalamazoo College, 125Kalligram Foundation, 137Kansas City Chapter of Young
Audiences, 153KaPaL Perempuan, 112Kapisanan Ng Mga Kamag-Anak
Ng Migranteng ManggagawangPilipino, 113
Karamu Trust, 166Katha, 167Katutura Youth Enterprise Centre
Trust, 160Kav La’Oved-Workers’ Hotline for
the Protection of Workers’ Rights,121
Kelola Foundation, 167Kent State University, 125Kentucky, Commonwealth of, 106Kentucky Coalition, 137, 140Kentucky Youth Advocates, 106Kenya Girl Guides Association, 111
Kenya Leadership Institute, 143Kenya Professional Association
of Women in Agriculture andEnvironment, 98
Kenya Voluntary WomenRehabilitation Centre, 111
Kenyatta University, 111, 158Khalil Alsakakini Cultural Center,
168, 172Khanh Hoa Provincial AIDS
Committee, 114Khanya Community Theatre, 113Khayal Trust, 167Kibera Community Self Help
Programme, Kenya, 111Kilusang Maralita para sa
Kaunlarang Panlipunan, 147Kings Majestic Corporation, 163Kisumu Town Residents, Estate
Welfare Association, 143KLON/JAWOR Association, 137Kokua Kalihi Valley Comprehensive
Family Services, 108KPMG Peat Marwick, 98K-Rep Holdings, 143Kuona Trust, 166Kwakhanya Productions, 113Kwela Productions, 169
LLagos, State Ministry of Justice, 133Lagos State University, 140LaGuardia Education Fund, 153Lakota Fund, 85Lambda Legal Defense and
Education Fund, 121Lampung, University of, 99Lang Son Provincial Committee
for AIDS Prevention andDrug and Prostitution Controland Development of CulturalLife, 114
Latin American and CaribbeanCommittee for the Defense ofWomen’s Rights (Peru), 109
Latin American and CaribbeanPresenters’ Network, 163
Latin American and CaribbeanWomen’s Health Network, 109
Latin American Faculty ofSocial SciencesChile, 155Costa Rica, 89Guatemala, 100, 112, 146
Laufer/Green/Isaac, 85, 87LAW-Palestinian Society for the
Protection of Human Rights andthe Environment, 130
Lawig Bubai Association, 113Lawyers Alliance for World
Security, 125Lawyers’ Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law, 95, 121Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights, 121, 151Leaders in Educational Action and
Research Networking, 133
Leadership Education for AsianPacifics, 121
Leadership Institute Simone deBeauvoir, 146
League for Human Rights, 140Learning Communities Network, 153Lebanese Association for
Educational Sciences, 159Lebanese Center for Policy Studies,
131Legal Aid Society, 151Legal and Human Rights Centre, 129Legal Assistance Trust, 132Legal Defense Institute, 127Legal Resources Trust, 132Lembaga Pengkajian dan
Pemberdayaan Masyarakat(LP2M), 144
Lembaga Pusat Informasi AdvokasiRakyat, 144
Lesa-Demarkasi, 144Lesbian and Gay Equality Project,
132Leslie Harris and Associates, 165Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, 98Library of Congress, 153Life Line Durban, 113Life Link Organization, 115Life Vanguards, 115Lingap Para Sa Kalusugan Ng
Sambayanan, 147Link Media, 165Loan Income Housing Fund, 119Local Activity Support Centre—
The Cal Association, 137Local Superior of the Sons of Divine
Providence, 159Lomonosov Moscow State
University, 169London, University of, 174London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, 113Lovett Productions, 108Low Cost Standard Therapeutics,
111Low Income Housing Fund, 85Low Tech Film Art, 169Lower East Side Tenement Museum,
163Loyola University, 137LSE Foundation, 137Luiz Freire Cultural Center, 141Lumiere Productions, Inc., 165Luna Ray Films, 165Lunduyan para sa Pagpapalaganap,
Pagtataguyod, at Pagtatanggolng Karapatang PambataFoundation, 113
MM.A.A.L.A. Business for Social
Responsibility in Israel, 121Madesa Trust, 163Madhyam, 167Madre, Inc., 129Mafisa Planning and Research, 102
Index
200
Mahavajiralongkorn Foundation,151
Mahidol University, 114Mahila Sewa Trust, 89, 99Maine Center for Economic Policy,
140Maji na Ufanisi (Water and
Development), 98Majlis Manch, 129Makerere University, 98, 140, 143Makuleke Communal Property
Association, 102Management Assistance Group,
122, 140Manchester Craftmen’s Guild, 118Manitoba, University of, 155MANPOWER, Inc., 87Manpower Demonstration Research
Corporation, 87, 106, 153Manuel T. Sia Development, 159Manufacturing Institute, 87Maple Women’s Psychological
Counseling Center, 127Maradadi Handicraft Development
Corporation, 101Marcellin Foundation, 159Market for African Performing
Arts, 164Maryland, University of
Adelphi, 125College Park, 122, 140, 155
Marymount College, 153Massachusetts, University of,
Boston, 155Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, 125, 165Massag Foundation, 137Mataram University, 112Maternal Child Health and Family
Planning Development, 114Mathematica Policy Research, 106Max Planck Society for the
Promotion of ScientificStudies, 99
“Maxsoft” Joint-Stock Company, 131Medecins du Monde, 114Media, 164–166, 167, 168–169, 170Media, Arts and Culture, 163–171
publications and other media, 171Media Access Project, 165Media for Development
International, 111Media Foundation for West Africa,
133Media Monitoring Project, 132Media Rights Agenda, 170Mediae Trust, 166Medicare Rights Center, 175MEE Productions, 108Melbourne, University of, 110Memorial Human Rights Center,
131“Memorial” International Historical,
Educational, Charitable and HumanRights Society, 131
Metropolitan Area ResearchCorporation, 93
Mexican Academy of HumanRights, 151
Mexican American Legal Defenseand Educational Fund, 122
Mexican Association forAdvancement and SocialCulture, 89
Mexican Association for Women’sRights, 145
Mexican Civil Society Council, 145Mexican Council for Popular
Savings and Credit (COMACREP),89
Mexican Council for SustainableForestry, 100
Mexican Institute for Youth, 112Mexico, 89–90, 99–100, 112, 118, 130,
145–146, 151, 158–159, 168Michigan, University of, 106, 110,
122, 125, 144, 155Michigan League for Human
Services, 140Micro Enterprise Alliance, 101Micro Finance Regulatory Council,
101Middle East, 90, 100–101, 112, 118,
130–131, 146, 151, 159, 168–169, 172Middle-East Center for Culture and
Development, 164Middle East Nonviolence and
Democracy, 100Miftah: The Palestinian Initiative for
the Promotion of Global Dialogueand Democracy, 146
Migrants Rights International, 122Migration Policy Institute, 122Miller/Rollins, 153Milpas de Oaxaca, 112Minas Gerais, Federal University of,
110, 127, 141, 142Minds Matter, 175Mineral Policy Center, 95Minia, University of, 101Mining Watch Canada, 137Minnesota, University of, 93, 122,
125, 130Minority Business Legal Defense
and Education Fund, 85Misión de María, 176Mkukina Nyota Publishers, 166Moi University, 129Momentum Project, 175Monterrey Institute of Technology
and Advanced Studies, 158Morehouse College, 106Morehouse School of Medicine, 108Mortgage Professor Inc., 85“Moscow Art Magazine,” Editorial
Board of the, 169Moscow Center of Amateur Artistic
Activities, 169Moscow Guild of Theater and
Screen Actors, 169Moscow Helsinki Group, 131Moscow State Tchaikovsky
Conservatoire, 169
Mother and Child Healthcare andFamily Planning Quang NinhProvincial Center, 114
Mother’s Right Fund, 132Mountain Institute, 88, 172Moving Image, 165Mozambican Association of Mutual
Support, 102Ms. Foundation for Women, 85, 108,
122, 137Mubarak Public Library, 172Municipal Informatics, 147Museo Pambata Foundation, 159Museum Foundation of the
Philippines, 159Museum of Modern Art, 164
NNAACP Special Contribution
Fund, 122Naga, City of, 159Nairobi, University of, 143Nairobi Arts Trust, 166Nairobi Pentacostal Church, 176Nalamdana, 111NALEO Educational Fund, 153Namibia, University of, 148, 160Namibia Institute for Democracy,
148Namibia National Farmers Union,
151Namibian Catholic Bishops
Conference, 118Nanjing Agricultural University, 88Nanjing College for Population
Program Management, 110Nanjing University—The Johns
Hopkins University Centerfor Chinese and American Studies,88, 142
Narisi Primary School of DongxiangAutonomous County, 157
Natal, University of, 113, 174Natal Midlands Rural Development
Network, 102National Academy of Sciences,
106, 125National Advocates for Pregnant
Women, 122National AIDS Standing Bureau
(Vietnam), 114National Alliance for Hispanic
Health, 137National Alliance for Nonprofit
Management, 138National American Indian Court
Judges Association, 122National American Indian Housing
Council, 85National Asian Pacific American
Legal Consortium, 122National Association of Latino Arts
and Culture, 164National Association of Nigerian
Theatre Arts Practitioners, 170National Association of People with
AIDS, 108
National Association of PostgraduateTeaching and Research inEducation, 157
National Association of Social SectorCredit Unions, 89
National Association of Universitiesand Institutes of Higher Education,158
National Autonomous Universityof Mexico, 100, 146, 174
National Black United Fund, 93National Book Foundation, 164National Center for Black
Philanthropy, 93National Center for Contemporary
Art, 169National Center for Family
Philanthropy, 138National Center for Higher Education
Management Systems, 155National Center for Human Rights
Education, 108, 122National Center for Nonprofit
Boards, 118, 138National Center for Social Sciences
and Humanities, 114, 133, 161National Center for Strategic
Nonprofit Planning andCommunity Leadership, 106
National Center on Education andthe Economy, 87
National Civic League of Colorado,138
National Coalition for Asian PacificAmerican Community, 93
National Coalition on Black CivicParticipation, 138
National Commission for CivicEducation, 140
National Committee for ResponsivePhilanthropy, 138
National Committee on AmericanForeign Policy, 128
National Committee on UnitedStates-China Relations, 127
National Community CapitalAssociation, 85
National Community InvestmentFund, 85
National Conference of StateLegislatures, 106, 153
National Congress for CommunityEconomic Development, 85, 93
National Council for CommunityDevelopment, 85
National Council for Researchon Women, 155
National Council for Science andthe Environment, 95
National Council of AppliedEconomic Research (India), 89
National Council of La Raza, 122National Council of State Secretaries
of Education, 157National Council on Community
and Education Partnerships, 153
201
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
National Economic Developmentand Law Center, 85, 88
National Economics University, 102National Employment Law Project,
88National Executive Service
Corps, 138National Federation of Community
Development Credit Unions,85, 119
National Film and TelevisionInstitute, 170
National Forum for Public Policyand Development, 140
National Foundation for theEradication of Poverty (Chile),96, 141
National Gay and Lesbian Task ForceFoundation, 122, 138
National Governors’ AssociationCenter for Best Practices, 88,106, 153
National Health Law Program, 108National Housing Institute, 86, 93National Humanities Center, 155National Immigrant Legal Support
Center, 122National Immigration Forum, 122National Information Center
on Women’s Organizations andInitiatives in Poland, 138
National Institute for EconomicPolicy, 160
National Interfaith Committee forWorker Justice, 138
National Judges College, 127National Korean American Service
and Education Consortium, 122National Labour and Economic
Development Institute, 125National Land Committee, 102National Latina Health Organization,
108National Minority Business
Council, 175National Museum of Mali, 170National Neighborhood Coalition,
93National Network for Immigrant and
Refugee Rights, 122National Network for Youth, 106National Network of Education,
Sexual Health and Developmentfor Youth (REDESS), 109
National Network of ForestPractioners, 95
National Newspaper PublishersAssociation Fund, 165
National Partnership for Womenand Families, 106
National Policy Association, 125National Practitioners Network for
Fathers and Families, 106National Priorities Project, 125National Research Institute for
Family Planning, 110
National Security Archive Fund,125, 127
National Society for Promotionof Development AdministrationResearch & Training, 130
National Youth EmploymentCoalition, 106
Native American CommunityBoard, 108
Native American PublicTelecommunications, 165
Native American Rights Fund, 122Native Lands Institute Research
and Policy Analysis, 95Nature Conservancy, 166Natya Vriksha, 167Nawa Institute, 97Naz Foundation Trust, 111NCAI Fund, 122Near East Foundation, 88, 100Neelan Tiruchelvam Trust, 151Nehru Foundation for Development,
99Neighborhood Funders Group, 93Neighborhood Reinvestment
Corporation, 86Nepal, 88–89, 98–99, 111–112, 129–130,
143–144, 151, 158, 167Netherlands Organization for
International DevelopmentCooperation, 101, 130
Network of East-West Women, 138Network of Educators on the
Americas, 153Network of Entrepreneurship
& Economic Development(NEED), 89
New American Foundation, 165New American Schools, 153New Columbia Capital Advisors, 86New Dance Group Studio, 175New Dramatists, 175New England Forestry Foundation,
95New England Foundation for the
Arts, 164New Hampshire, University of, 118New Hampshire Community Loan
Fund, 93New Israel Fund, 122New Professional Theatre, 175New School University, 86, 125, 155,
159New York, City University of, 93,
126, 138, 147, 153, 155, 157, 164New York, State University of,
Albany, 140, 143, 154, 174New York Academy of Medicine,
108New York Conservation Education
Fund, 95New York Public Library, Astor,
Lenox and Tilden Foundations,175
New York Regional Associationof Grantmakers, 174
New York University, 108, 122, 125,138, 155
NGO Consortium for the Promotionof Small and Micro Enterprises, 88
Ngong Road Forest Santuary Trust,176
Nicaraguan Association ofMicrofinance Institutions, 89
Niger Delta Environment and ReliefFoundation, 140
Nigeria AIDS Alliance, 115Nigerian Institute of Medical
Research, 115Nigerian Popular Theatre Alliance,
1709 to 5, Working Women Education
Fund, 106NIS Sparta Limited, 144Nkuzi Development Association, 132Non-Commercial Charitable Fund
“Help,” 147Non-Governmental Human Rights
Committee, 132Non-Profit Partnership (South
Africa), 148Nonprofit Coordinating Committee
of New York, 175Nonprofit Finance Fund, 164North Africa, 90, 100–101, 112, 118,
130–131, 146, 151, 159, 168–169, 172North American Commission for
Environmental Cooperation, 95North American Congress on Latin
America, 155North Carolina, University of,
Chapel Hill, 86, 153, 155North Carolina Council of
Churches, 140North Carolina Justice and
Community DevelopmentCenter, 140
North Carolina Minority SupportCenter, 86
North Caucasus Social Institute, 132North East Network, 111North Qwa-Qwa, the University of,
106Northcote Parkinson Fund on behalf
of Manifold Productions, 93Northeast Action, 138Northeastern University, 126Northern California Grantmakers,
122, 138, 174Northern Colorado, University of,
140Northern Legal Resource Centre, 129Northwestern University, 155, 156Norwegian People’s Aid, 126Notre Dame, University of, 122Notre Dame of Dadiangas College,
159NOW Legal Defense and Education
Fund, 122Ntanira Na Mugambo Tharaka
Women Welfare Project, 111Nucleus for Black Studies, 127, 157Nuestras Raices, 95
Nueva Vizcaya, Province of, 159NYU Hospitals Center, 175N’zinga-Group of Black Women,
110
OObstetrics and Gynecology Hospital
of Ho Chi Minh City, 114Office for the Defense of the Rights
of Women, 109Office of Economic Development
of Poor Areas in Sichuan, 88Ogiek Welfare Council, 129Ogoni Youth Development Project,
115Ohio University, 140Olive (Organisation Development
and Training), 101One Economy Corporation, 86One World International
Foundation, 165Ongwediva Teachers Resource
Center, 160Open Museum Association, 169Open Society Institute (New York),
147Open Society Institute—Budapest,
138OpenTrust, 138Oregon Center for Public Policy, 140Organization of Social Science
Teachers, 159Outlook Publications (Proprietary)
Limited, 148Overseas Programs, 88–90, 96–102,
109–115, 118, 126–133, 141–148, 151,156–161, 166–170, 172
Oxfam, 144Oxford, University of, 155Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies,
130, 131
PPacific Council on International
Policy, 126Pacific Institute for Women’s
Health, 108, 112Pacific Society of China, 128Pacific University, 170Palestine Economic Policy Research
Institute, 90Palestinian Agricultural Relief
Committees, 101Palestinian Center for Microprojects
Development, 130, 131Palestinian Center for Policy Survey
Research, 131Palestinian Centre for Human
Rights, 130Palestinian Counseling Center, 101Palestinian Diaspora and Refugee
Center (Shaml), 130Palestinian Economic Council for
Development and Reconstruction,131
Index
202
Palestinian Working Women’sSociety for Development, 130
Palestinian Youth Union, 101Pamoja Trust, 129Panos Institute, 99, 118Papa Ola Lokahi, 108Parents for Public Schools, 153Parliamentarians for Global Action,
138Partners in Population and
Development, 112Partnership for Service Learning,
153Pathfinder International, 114, 115Paul Robeson Foundation, 164Peace and Social Justice, 120–151
Programwide, 151Peace Development Fund, 95Peking University, 110, 142, 157, 158
School of Law, 128Penal Reform International, 122, 132Peninsula Community Foundation,
86Peninsula Technikon, 160Penn Center, 95Pennsylvania, University of, 153
Institute for the Advanced Studyof India, 144
Pennsylvania State University, 93, 95People for the American Way
Foundation, 93People’s Rights Research Publishing
and Distribution, 130People’s University of China,
110, 128Perhimpunan Lp3es, 145Perm Civic Chamber, 132Pernambuco, Federal University of,
110Pesticide Action Network North
America Regional Center, 99Petrozavodsk State University, 147Philanthropic Initiative, 138Philippine Center for Investigative
Journalism, 147Philippine Center for Policy
Studies, 147Philippine National Museum
Foundation, 159Philippine NGO Council on
Population, Health and Welfare,113
Philippines, 101, 113, 146–147, 159Philippines, University of the, 113Phoenix Color Corporation, 86Phoenix Players Limited, 166Physicians for Human Rights, 122Physicians for Social Responsibility,
126Piegan Institute, 164Pilipina Legal Resources Center, 113Pinchot Institute for Conservation,
95Pittsburgh Theological Seminary of
the United Presbyterian Church,93
Planned Parenthood Federationof America, 108
Ploughshares Fund, 126Plowshares Theatre Company, 164Policylink, 106“Polis,” Editorial Body of the
Journal, 159Polis—Institute for Research
Training and Advisory Servicesin Social Policy, 142
Pontifical Catholic Universityof Peru, 141, 164
Population and Environment Societyof China, 142
Population Communication AfricaTrust, 108
Population Council, 108, 111, 112Population Reference Bureau, 112Population Resource Center, 93Portland State University, 93Positive Action Foundation
Philippines, 113Positive Futures Network, 93Postal Staff College, India, 144Pretoria, University of, 113, 132Prichard Committee for Academic
Excellence, 153Princeton University, 165, 172Prison Communities International,
93Private Sector Foundation, 143Pro Helvetia, 168Probe Productions, 113ProDevelopment Finance and
Microfinance, 90Program for Appropriate Technology
in Health, 108Program in Labor Economics, 88Progressive Leadership Alliance
of Nevada, 140PROhumana Foundation, 141Project Azuka, 108Project GRAD, 153
Atlanta, 153Los Angeles, 153Newark, 153
Prometeo Art and PoetryCorporation, 166
Promoters for Self-Help for SocialDevelopment, 146
Promoters of Regional Alternatives,146
ProTex Network for a ProgressiveTexas, 140
Public Agenda Foundation, 174Public Education & Business
Coalition, 153Public Finance Institute of the
Philippines, 159Public Health Institute (Berkeley,
CA), 106Public Interest Projects, 122Public Media Center, 110Public Policy Associates, 88Public Sector Labor Management
Committee, 139
Public/Private Ventures, 94, 106Puerto Rican Legal Defense and
Education Fund, 95, 122Puerto Rico Community
Foundation, 138Puerto Rico Strategies, 86
QQingdao Bureau of Civil Affairs,
142Qingdao University, Affiliated
Hospital of Medical College,110
Qinghai Normal University, 158Queen Elizabeth House, 130
RRadio & Television News Directors
Foundation, 138, 165Rahimtulla Museum of Modern
Art, 166Rainforest Alliance, 95Rajiv Gandhi Foundation, 130Rakumi Arts International, 170Rand Corporation, 153Redwood Community Action, 95Refugee Consortium of Kenya, 122Refugee Women’s Network, 122Regional Centre for Strategic Studies
(Sri Lanka), 130Regional Community Forestry
Training Center for Asia and thePacific, 97, 99
Regional Society of the Disabled“Perspektiva,” 147
Regional Technology Strategies, 86Reinvestment Fund, 86Release Political Prisoners, 129Religion, society and culture, 156,
159, 160Remedios Aids Foundation, 113Rencontre Africaine pour la Défense
des Droits de l’Homme, 133Reproductive Health Alliance
Europe, 108Reproductive Health Technologies
Project, 108Research, Action & Information
Network for the Bodily Integrityof Women, 111
Research and Information Centre“Memorial” (RIC Memorial), 132
Research and Popular EducationCenter (CINEP), 96
Research and Training Centre forCommunity Development, 114
Research Center for Rural Economy(China), 142
Research Center on Juvenile LegalAid, 128
Research Foundation for MentalHygiene, 108
Research Support Fund, 95Resolution, Inc., 172Resource Center of the Americas,
122Retail Initiative, 86
Rhode Island Kids Count, 106Rio de Janeiro Archiepiscopal
Miter, 176Rio de Janeiro, Federal University
of, 97Rio de Janeiro, State University of,
157Rio Grande do Sul, Federal
University of, 110, 142River Films, 165Riwaq: Centre for Architectural
Conservation, 168Robert C. Maynard Institute for
Journalism Education, 165Robert F. Kennedy Memorial, 122Rochester, University of, 155Rockefeller Family Fund, 174Rotary Club of Nairobi, 167Royal Institute of International
Affairs, 126Rupayan Sansthan, 167Rural Economic Development
Center, 94Rural Entrepreneurship for Art and
Cultural Heritage, 167Rural Legal Trust, 132Rural Organizing Project, 140Rural-Peoples’ Institute for Social
Empowerment in Namibia, 101Rural School and Community
Trust, 153Rural Women Knowing All, 142Rush Philanthropic Arts
Foundation, 175Russia, 90, 131–132, 147, 159–160, 169Russian Academy of Sciences,
132, 159Russian Charitable Foundation“No to Alcoholism and DrugAddiction,” 147
Russian Lawyers Committee inDefense of Human Rights,132
Russian State University for theHumanities, 159
Rutgers University, 88, 106, 122, 123,138, 140, 155Foundation, 153
SSa-Dhan Association, 89Sacred Heart, University of the,
153Sadbhavana Trust, 111Safe Space NYC, 175Saferworld, 126St. James Infirmary, 108St. Petersburg Institute of
Law named after Prince P. G.Oldenburgsky, 132
St. Petersburg “pro Arte Institute,”169
St. Petersburg State University ofEconomics and Finance, 132
St. Scholastica’s College, 159St. Xavier’s College, 167
203
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
St. Xavier’s Non-Formal EducationSociety, 144
Sakshi, 129Salzburg Seminar in American
Studies, 155, 165SAMA-Resource Group for Women
and Health, 111Samara State University, 160Sammanoy Gut Cooperative Society,
167San Carlos, University of, 113San Fernando, Pampanga,
Municipality of, 159San Francisco State University
Foundation, 165, 166Sanchetana Community Health and
Research Centre, 111Sankofa, the African Renaissance
Development Institute, 169Santa Ana (CA) Unified School
District, 153São Paulo, University of, 157Savanna Conservation Nigeria, 102Save Our Cumberland Mountains
Resource Project, 140Save the Children Federation, 101Save the Children Fund, 110, 128Schechter Institute of Jewish
Studies, 156School of African Heritage, 170School of Economics Institute, 160SEARCH, 144Sectoral and Technological
Economics Institute, 142Sekola Tinggi Pembangunan
Masyarakat Desa “APMD”Yogyakarta, 145
Sekola Tinggi Seni Indonesia, 167Seventh Generation Fund for Indian
Development, 172Sexuality and reproductive health,
107–115Sexuality Information and Education
Council of the United States,108, 111
Shanghai Academy of EducationalSciences, 157
Shanghai Academy of SocialSciences, 110, 128, 142, 143
Shanghai Institute of PlannedParenthood Research, 110
Shanghai Judges’ Association, 128Shanghai Society of International
Relations, 128Shaoxing Vocational Education
Center, 157Shelter Rights Initiative, 133Shorebank Advisory Services, 86Shri Prithviraj Kapoor Memorial
Trust and Research Foundation,167
Sichuan Academy of Social Sciences,97, 143
Sichuan Family Planning ResearchInstitute, 110
Sichuan Provincial ForestryDepartment, 97
Sichuan University, 128Sierra Leone, University of, 133Silicon Valley Community
Ventures, 86Simmons College, 118Simon De Cirene Corporation, 96Sin Fronteras, I.A.P., 130Singamma Sreenivasan Foundation,
129Slovak Academic Information
Agency, 138Small Enterprise Education and
Promotion Network, 86Smith College, 155Smithsonian Institution, 155Social Accountability International,
126Social Alert, 133Social and Economic Rights Action
Center, 133Social Development and Education,
158Social Education and
Self Management Team(EDAPROSPO), 88
Social Science Research Council,86, 108, 156, 157, 158, 174
Society for Black Studies andCitizenship in the Stateof Sergipe, 127
Society for Free Representationof the Rights and Legal Interestsof Socially DisadvantagedPeople, 132
Society for Helping AwakeningRural Poor Through Education,89
Society for InternationalDevelopment, 118
Society for Participatory Researchin Asia, 98, 144
Society for Women and AIDS inAfrica, 115
Society of American Foresters, 96S.O.F.T. Company Limited, 90Sokoine University of Agriculture,
98Solidarity Foundation Work for
a Brother, 88Solomon R. Guggenheim
Foundation, 175Songmasters, 123Son Tay Cultural House for
Children, 176SOS Corpo Gender and Citizenship,
110South Africa Partners, 164South African Council of Churches,
94South African History Online, 174South African Human Rights
Commission, 132South African National NGO
Coalition, 132South African National Parks, 102
South Asia Watch on Trade,Economics and Environment,99
South Asian Foundation for HumanInitiatives, Calcutta, 167
South Asians for Human Rights, 129South Central University of
Economics and Law, 128South India AIDS Action Program,
112Southampton, University of, 126Southern Africa, 90, 101–102, 113, 118,
132–133, 147–148, 151, 160, 169Southern Africa Political Economy
Series Trust Fund, 102Southern African Arts Exchange,
169Southern African Development
Community, 164Southern African Grantmakers
Association, 148Southern Alliance for Indigenous
Resources, 102Southern California, University of,
138, 166Southern California Association for
Philanthropy, 174Southern Coalition for Educational
Equity, 123Southern Cone, 88, 96, 109, 126–127,
141, 156–157, 166Southern Echo, 140Southern Education Foundation, 123Southern Maine, University of, 106Southern New Hampshire
University, 94Southern University and A. & M.
College, 123Southwest Forestry College, 97Spangenberg Group, 128Spectrum Publishers, 108Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for
Medical Science and Technology,112
SRI International, 156Sri Lanka, 88–89, 98–99, 111–112,
129–130, 143–144, 151, 158, 167Stage Movies College of Ho Chi
Minh, 170Standards Work, 153Stanford University, 143, 173State of the World Forum, 108, 138State Pedagogical Institute of
Nizhny Tagil, 132Steve Biko Foundation, 160Stevens Group at Larson Allen, 156Stevens Institute of Technology, 166Stichting Africa Legal Aid, 123Stichting Centre on Housing Rights
and Evictions, 123Stichting Forest Peoples Programme,
138Stichting Global Network of People
Living with HIV/AIDS, 108Stone Lantern Films, 154Sudanese Development Initiative,
101
Support Center of Washington, 138Surabhi Foundation for Research
and Cultural Exchange, 167Surface Transportation Policy
Project, 94Surplus People Project, Western
Cape, 102Sustainable Development Policy
Institute, 126Synergos Institute, 94Syracuse University, 94
TTalent Consortium Tee Vee, 102Tamer Institute for Community
Education, 101Tanggol Kalikasan, 147Tanzania, Department of Archives,
Museums and Antiquities, 166Tanzania Gatsby Registered
Trustees, 88Tanzania Theatre Centre, 167Tarea-Educational Publications
Association, 156, 157Tax Equity Alliance for
Massachusetts EducationFund, 140
Teacher Creativity Center, 131Teachers College, 154Technical Assistance in Alternative
Agriculture (AS-PTA), 97Technology, University of, 144Tel Aviv University, 123Telecommunication Policy Research
Conference, 166Temple University, 154Terralingua, 172Texas, University of, 96Texas Center for Policy Studies, 100Texas Southern University, 96Thai Nguyen University, 161Thai Nguyen University of
Agriculture and Forestry, 102Thailand, 102, 113–114, 118, 133, 148, 151,
160, 170Thailand Business Coalition on
AIDS, 114Theatre Communications Group, 164TheatreWorks Limited, 167Thibitisha Trust, 167Third World Institute, 138Third World Network-Africa, 138Thua Thien Hue Middle Level
School of Culture and Arts, 170Thua Thien Hue People’s
Committee, Department ofCulture-Informationof, 170
Tibetan Poverty Alleviation Fund,110, 157
Tides Center, 101, 106, 126, 138, 141,151, 166
Tides Foundation, 94, 108, 123, 129,138
Index
204
Tomsk Regional Historical,Educational, Human Rightsand Charitable Society“Memorial,” 132
Torcuato di Tella UniversityFoundation, 126
Toronto, University of, 154Tougaloo College, 123Town Hall Foundation, 175Toxic Comedy Pictures, 96Training and Community
Development Alternatives, 146Training Resources Group, 96Transfair USA, 96Transitions, 138Transparency Brazil, 142Transparency International, 141, 148Trasparencia, 146TRF Urban Growth Partners, 119Tribhuvan University, 99Trinidad and Tobago Institute of the
West Indies, 164Trust for Civil Society in Central
and Eastern Europe, 138Trust for Health Systems Planning
and Development, 113Trust Fund for Biodiversity, 100Tsinghua University, 128Tufts University, 94, 123, 143Tver Fund of Legal Training Support
“Lawyer,” 132Tver State University, 160Twelfth International Conference on
AIDS and STDs in Africa, 10921st Century School Fund, 154
UUB Foundation Services, 156Uganda Human Rights Commission,
141Uganda Microfinance Union, 88Ukhta-Pechora Public Organization
“Memorial,” 132Ulyanovsk State Technical
University, 160Uncompaghre/Com, 96Union for Rural Efforts, 90Union of Palestinian Medical Relief
Committees, 112, 118Union Theological Seminary, 156Unirule Institute of Economics, 143United Nations Association of the
United States of America, 123United Nations Development
Programme, 110, 126, 131United Nations Economic
Commission for Latin Americaand the Caribbean, 96, 126
United Nations Educational,Scientific and CulturalOrganization, 98, 157, 167
United Nations Environment andDevelopment United KingdomCommittee, 138
United Nations International DrugControl Programme, 146
United Nations Latin AmericanInstitute—Brazil, 142
United Nations Research Institutefor Social Development, 151
United Nations University, 96United Nations Youth Fund, 106United States, 84, 92–96, 105–109, 118,
119, 120–126, 136–141, 151, 152–156,163–166, 172
United States Hispanic LeadershipInstitute, 138
United States Naval MedicalResearch Unit Number Three,112
United Way of New York City, 174Unity Fellowship of Christ Church
New York City, 94Universidad Alberto Hurtado, 127Universidad Autonoma
Metropolitana, 158University, many names beginning
with. See next element of nameUniversity Musical Society, 164University of Arts and Social
Sciences, 96University of Asia and the Pacific
Foundation, 159University of East London Higher
Education Corporation, 166University of the Autonomous
Regions of the Caribbean Coastof Nicaragua, 146, 159
Unnati—Organisation forDevelopment Education, 144
UPECON Foundation, 147Urals State University Named After
A. M. Gorky, 160Urasvati Centre of Contemporary
Art, 167Urban Institute, 106, 139, 141, 164Urban Justice Center, 123Urban Trust of Namibia, 101, 148U.S.-China Education Foundation,
157U.S. Educational Foundation in
India, 156U.S. Women Connect, 123Usha Multipurpose Co-Operative
Society Ltd., 112Utah State University, 128Utthan: Centre for Sustainable
Development and PovertyAlleviation, 99
Uzima Foundation, 111
VVacha Charitable Trust, 112Vallecitos Mountain Refuge, 96Vanderbilt University, 86, 154Vassar College, 123Vera Institute of Justice, 151Verification Research Training &
Information Centre, 126Victoria, University of, 126Victory Sonqoba Theatre Company,
169Videoteca del Sur, 126
Vietnam, 102, 113–114, 118, 133, 148, 151,160–161, 170
Vietnam, government of, 133, 170Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development, 102Vietnam Chamber of Commerce
and Industry, 114Vietnam Ethnic Minorities Arts and
Literature Association, 170Vietnam Forestry Science-
Technology Association, 102Vietnam National University—
Ho Chi Minh City, 118, 174Vikalp Women’s Group, 112Village Foundation, 107Vinh Teachers Training University,
161Vision International Development
and Organization, 169Visser and Associates, 88Visual Arts Research and Resource
Center Relating to the Caribbean,126
Vitae Civilis—Institute forDevelopment, Environmentand Peace, 97
Vitoria Amazonica Foundation, 97Vivid Features Limited, 167Vivo Positivo, 109Vocational Training Council of
Rosario and Its Region, 96Voices for Alabama’s Children, 107Voices for Illinois Children, 141Volgo-Vyatsky Potential, 147Voluntary Service Overseas, 129
WWalker Art Center, 164Wallowa Resources, 96Warwick, University of, 139Washington, University of, 141,
154, 156Washington Alliance of Technology
Workers, 88Washington Association of
Churches, 141Washington Office on Latin
America, 96Washington University, 86, 107,
141, 147Wayne State University, 86We Can Do It Society, 143Weber Shandwick Worldwide, 86Welfare Association, 101Wellesley College, 109, 123, 126West Africa, 90, 102, 114–115, 133, 151,
161, 170West Africa Rural Foundation, 102West African Museums Programme,
170Western Cape, University of the,
102, 133Western Interstate Commission for
Higher Education, 156Western States Center, 141White Earth Land Recovery Project,
96
Wianta Foundation, 168Wider Opportunities for Women,
107William Davidson Institute at the
University of Michigan School ofBusiness Administration, 126
William J. Brennan Jr. Center forJustice, 107, 123
William Marsh Rice University, 156Winrock International India, 99Winrock International Institute for
Agricultural Development, 99Wisconsin, State of, 107Wisconsin, University of, 86, 89,
109, 166Wisconsin Council on Children and
Families, 107Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms
Control, 126Wise Women Gathering Place, 109Witwatersrand, University of the,
133, 160, 169WNYC Foundation, 166Woman’s Development Corporation
“La Morada,” 127, 166Women, Law and Development
International, 123Women Advocates Research and
Documentation Center, 141Women and Philanthropy, 174Women in Law and Development
in Africa, 133Women in Need, 175Women Legal Aid Centre, 129Women Living Under Muslim
Laws, 123Women of Color Resource Center,
123Women of the Don, 147Women’s Affairs Technical
Committee, 101Women’s Crisis Center
Incorporated, 113Women’s Development Bank Trust,
90Women’s Dignity Project, 111Women’s Environment and
Development Organization(WEDO), 123
Women’s Foreign Policy Group, 126Women’s Funding Network, 139Women’s Health and Action
Research Centre, 115Women’s House of Arica-Cedemu
Ltd., 109Women’s House of Learning
Empowerment, 109Women’s Initiative for Peace in
South Asia Charitable Trust,130
Women’s Institute for LeadershipDevelopment for Human Rights,123
Women’s Leadership Fund, 156Women’s Learning Partnership for
Rights, Development and Peace,123
205
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Women’s Legal Centre Trust, 133Women’s Microfinance Network, 90Women’s Optimum Development
Foundation, 170Women’s Public Association
“Femina,” 169Women’s Research and Education
Institute, 123Women’s Rights Awareness
Programme, 129Women’s Rights Center, 139Women’s Study Group “Rosario
Castellanos,” 168Women’s World Organization
for Rights, Literature andDevelopment, 164
Woodrow Wilson InternationalCenter for Scholars, 126
Woodstock Institute, 86Work-force development, 86–88, 90Workforce Strategy Center, 88Working Partnerships USA, 88World Conference on Religion and
Peace, 156World Education, 101World Federalist Movement Institute
for Global Policy, 123World Free Press Institute, 129World Health Organization, 109, 112World Learning, 139World Library Partnership, 102World Media Foundation, 96World Wide Fund for Nature—
Eastern Africa Regional ProgramOffice, 98
World Women’s Vision, 110Worldspace Foundation, 164Worldwide Indigenous Science
Network, 156Worldwide Programs, 84, 92–96,
105–109, 118, 119, 120–126, 136–141,151, 152–156, 163–166, 172
Wuxi Market Association, 142, 143
XXavier University, 96Xi’an Jiaotong University, 111
YYabous Productions, 168Yakubu Gowon Centre, 141Yale University, 96, 156Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State
University, 160Yashwantrao Chavan Academy
of Development Administration,144
Yayasan Adi Karya Ikapi, 144Yayasan Asosiasi Tradisi Lisan, 168Yayasan Badan Penyelenggara
Universitas MuhammadiyahSurakarta, 168
Yayasan Bandung Institute ofGovernance Studies, 144
Yayasan Cudamani, 168Yayasan Damar, 99Yayasan Desantara, 168Yayasan Duta Awam, 144Yayasan Gita Pertiwi, 145Yayasan Hotline Surabaya, 112Yayasan Indonesia, 168Yayasan Indonesian Police Watch,
145Yayasan Institut Studi Arus
Informasi, 145Yayasan Kalyanamitra, 112Yayasan Kelola, 145Yayasan Kesehatan Perempuan, 112Yayasan Leksip Kalimantan Timur,
145Yayasan Lembaga Ekolabel, 99Yayasan Lembaga Konsumen
Indonesia, 112, 145Yayasan Pattiro, 145Yayasan Peduli Sesama, 144Yayasan Pembangunan Masyarakat
Kesuma Multiguna, 145Yayasan Pengembangan Kawasan,
145Yayasan Penguatan Dan
Pemberdayaan Masyarakat(Eltayasa), 145
Yayasan Persemaian CintaKemanusiaan, 145
Yayasan Pirac, 144Yayasan Realino, 168Yayasan Riau Mandiri, 145Yayasan RIDeP, 145Yayasan Smeru, 145Yayasan Utan Kayu, 168Yedid—The Center for Mutual
Support and the Advancementof Social and CommunityActivities, 123
Yeshiva University, 166Yogya Institute of Research,
Education and Publication, 112Young Arab Theatre Fund, 168Young Women’s Christian
Association of Jerusalem, 112Youth Association for Population
and Development, 146Youth Law Center, 107Youth News Service Los Angeles
Bureau, 166YouthBuild USA, 86Yunnan College of the Nationalities,
166Yunnan Development Institute, 98Yunnan Institute of Forestry
Exploration and Designing, 98Yunnan Normal University, 157Yunnan Provincial Association for
the Treatment and Developmentof Karst Areas, 98
Yunnan Reproductive HealthResearch Association, 111, 158
Yunnan XishuangbannaPrefecture Women and ChildrenPsychological and LegalConsultation Service Center, 128
Yuri Kondratyuk Fund, 169
ZZanzibar International Film Festival,
167Zhejiang Academy of Social
Sciences, 111Zimbabwe, University of, 99ZNAK Christian Culture
Foundation, 139
Index
206
207
Ford Foundation Annual Report 2001
Photographs
Cover: Sun, Sea and Sand, 1995,Yinka Shonibare. CourtesyStephen Friedman Gallery;Collection: Scottish NationalGallery of Modern Art
p. 2, Paul Smith/Panos Pictures
p. 5, John Rae
p. 9, Stella Johnson
p. 11, Nicholas Pitt
p. 13, Eli Reichman
p. 15, Wendy Stone/Getty Images/Corbis
p. 17, Paul Smith/Panos Pictures
p. 24, Hazel Hankin
p. 25, Jon Funabiki
p. 29, 30, Adam Hinton/PanosPictures
p. 33, Karen Robinson/PanosPictures
p. 34, (top) Slim Akeh; (bottom)Rick Reinhard
p. 35, Tom Roster
p. 36, (3) Rhodri Jones/PanosPictures
p. 37, (top) Tran Thi Hoa; (bottom)Randa Shaath
p. 38, (2) Janine Bentivegna
p. 39, Piers Benatar/Panos Pictures
pp. 40–41, Li Yuebo
p. 42, Spencer Tirey/Getty Images
p. 43, (top) Brad Doherty; (bottom)Courtesy CAEL/JET, DianaBamford-Rees
p. 44, (top) Piers Benatar/PanosPictures; (bottom) Tony Figueira
p. 45, Li Yuebo
p. 46, Cary Herz/Getty Images
p. 47, (top) Kevin Horan; (bottom)Randa Shaath
p. 48, Andrew Geiger
p. 51, Reuters NewMedia Inc./Corbis
p. 52, Sovfoto/Tass
p. 55, Courtesy Firelight Media/Jessica Warner
p. 56, (top) Adam Hinton/PanosPictures; (bottom) Rhodri Jones/Panos Pictures
p. 57, Piers Benatar/Panos Pictures
p. 58, Tran Thi Hoa
p. 59, Slim Akeh
p. 60, (3) Adam Hinton/PanosPictures
p. 61, (top) Tatan Syuflana;(bottom) Pete Winkel
p. 62, Karen Robinson/PanosPictures
p. 63, (top) Steven Rubin; (bottom)Igor Zakharov
p. 64, Andrew Lichtenstein
p. 67, Courtesy LumiereProductions/Ali Pomeroy
p. 68, Wendy Stone/Getty Images/Corbis
p. 71, Alex Baluyut
p. 72, (top) Rick Reinhard;(bottom) Rhodri Jones/PanosPictures
p. 73, Adam Hinton/PanosPictures
p. 74, Tony Figueira
p. 75, (top) Katherine Lambert;(bottom) Brad Doherty
p. 76, (top) Dennis Milbauer;(bottom) Courtesy John Hunwick
p. 77, Courtesy Boston HealingLandscape Project/Gene Adams
p. 78, (3) Piers Benatar/PanosPictures
p. 79, (top) Slim Akeh; (bottom)Adam Hinton/Panos Pictures
p. 80, Li Yuebo
p. 81, (top) Courtesy PerseveranceTheatre/Eric Torgerson; (bottom)Tatan Syuflana
p. 82, (top) Robert Yager; (center)Roger Mastroianni; (bottom) CraigSchwartz
Design
Design per se, New York
Credits
Guidelines for Grant Seekers
Grants and Program-Related Investmentsto Organizations
Before a request is made for a grant or program-related investment, a brief letter of inquiry isadvisable to determine whether the foundation’spresent interests and funds permit considerationof the request.
The letter should include:� The purpose of the project for which fundsare being requested� Problems and issues the proposed projectwill address� Information about the organization conductingthe project� Estimated overall budget for the project� Period of time for which funds are requested� Qualifications of those who will be engagedin the project
After receiving the letter, foundation staffmembers may ask the grant seeker to submit aformal proposal. There is no grant applicationform. The proposal should include:� The organization’s current budget� A description of the proposed work and howit will be conducted� The names and curricula vitae of those engagedin the project� A detailed project budget� Present means of support and status ofapplications to other funding sources� Legal and tax status
In some instances, the foundation requires thegrantee organization to match the foundation’sgrant with funds from other sources.
The foundation supports pluralism and equalopportunity in its grant making and in its internalpolicies. The opportunities that prospective granteeorganizations provide for minorities and womenare considered in evaluating proposals.
Applications are considered throughout the year.Normally applicants may expect to receive withinsix weeks an indication of whether their proposalsare within the foundation’s program interestsand budget limitations. Activities supportedby grants and program-related investments mustbe charitable, educational or scientific, as definedunder the appropriate provisions of the U.S.Internal Revenue Code and Treasury Regulations.
The foundation monitors grants through regularfinancial and narrative reports submitted bythe grantee.
The foundation’s funds are limited in relation tothe great number of worthwhile proposals received.For example, in 2001 the foundation receivedabout 40,000 grant requests and made 2,550 grants.Of that number, 22 percent were first-time grantrecipients. The foundation directs its support toactivities that are within its current interests andare likely to have wide effect. Support is notnormally given for routine operating costs of insti-tutions or for religious activities. Except in rarecases, funding is not available for the constructionor maintenance of buildings.
Requests in the United States should be sent to:SecretaryThe Ford Foundation320 East 43rd StreetNew York, N.Y. 10017or e-mailed to: [email protected].
Requests in foreign countries should be directedto the nearest foundation office. See inside frontcover for locations of overseas offices. Requestsfor support of projects in Eastern and CentralEurope should be sent to the foundation’s NewYork headquarters.
Grants to Individuals
Most of the foundation’s grant funds are givento organizations. Although it also makes grants toindividuals, they are few in number relative todemand and are limited to research, training andother activities related to its program interests.
The foundation does not award undergraduatescholarships or make grants for purely personalneeds. Support for graduate fellowships isgenerally provided through grants to universitiesand other organizations, which are responsible forthe selection of recipients. Most foundationgrants to individuals are awarded either throughpublicly announced competitions or on the basis ofnominations from universities and other nonprofitinstitutions. In all cases, recipients are selectedon the merits of their proposals and on their poten-tial contribution to advancing the foundation’sprogram objectives.
Cover: “Sun, Sea and Sand,”amixed-media installation by YinkaShonibare,a London-basedNigerianartist. Thework is featured in“Authentic/Ex-Centric:Conceptualism in ContemporaryArt,” by SalahM.Hassan and OluOguibe, the companion publicationfor an exhibit of works by Africanartists appearing at the 49thVenice Biennale in 2001.
The book and exhibit, co-curated byHassan andOguibe,were developedby the Forum for African Arts,a Ford Foundation grantee basedat Cornell University. “Authentic/Ex-Centric”was the first pan-Africanexhibit ever to appear at thebiennale,one of themost prestigiousart events in theworld.
In pursuit of its mission around the world, theFord Foundation’s grant-making activity generatesideas as well as social change. The list is long—an examination of the U.S. military’s successfulapproach to child care; a Russian human rightsgroup’s efforts to capture the country’s troubled20th century history by encouraging teenagersto write essays based on interviews with theirgrandparents; the promotion of puppetry as aserious art form for adults; international attemptsto stem trafficking in small arms. The Officeof Communications’ central goal is to make surethe best of these ideas are widely shared.
In this regard, the office publishes a quarterlymagazine, the Ford Foundation Report, which takesa journalistic approach to issues and events relatedto the foundation and its grantees. The office alsoproduces the foundation’s award-winning annualreport and works with the program staff to producea variety of publications related to individualprograms and areas of grant making.
All this is available on the foundation’s rapidlygrowing Web site at www.fordfound.org, alongwith highlights of major foundation programinitiatives, news announcements, guidelines forgrant seekers, information on the foundation’soverseas offices and listings of recent grants.
In the past few years, the office has expanded itsstrategic communications role, serving as a resourcefor program officers seeking broader public aware-ness of major foundation-funded programs andthe issues they address as well as the results oftheir work. To this end, the office helps developcommunications plans, organizes news mediaevents and maintains relationships with interestedreporters and editors.
To request publications or be placed on the Officeof Communications’ mailing list, visit the Web siteor write to:
Ford FoundationOffice of CommunicationsDept. A320 East 43rd StreetNew York, N.Y. 10017 U.S.A.
Communications
Ford Foundation320 East 43rd StreetNew York, New York10017 USA
212-573-5000www.fordfound.org