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Grants
33
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Total Awarded
$8,929,373
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Years
1980 - 2022
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Categories
Grants
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is an independent, bipartisan, nonprofit policy research organization dedicated to advancing practical ideas to address the world’s greatest challenges. The project is implemented by the CSIS-Wadhwani Chair, a program housed in CSIS, that aims to promote policy partnerships between United States and India, focusing on India’s economic reform and development trajectory. This award enables CSIS to work with key critical stakeholder groups from India’s power sector to study, develop, and test market-based models for electricity distribution for a financially resilient power sector, with enhanced levels of access to steady power supply for consumers.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization that conducts research and analysis, and develops policy proposals that look to the future and anticipate change. This award supports field research in the Republic of Korea and a high-level dialogue in Washington, DC. It aims to generate clarity and understanding on what building enduring peace on the Korean peninsula would mean for the security interests of stakeholders in North East Asia and to think through what consequences, both intended and unintended, could result from the current policy approach toward North Korea.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization that conducts research and analysis, and develops policy proposals that look to the future and anticipate change. This award builds upon a previous MacArthur-supported project to develop and promote policy recommendations to reduce risks posed by fissile material in the military and civilian sectors. By building norms around fissile material security, it works to mitigate risks posed by civilian plutonium stockpiles in Northeast Asia, and lay the groundwork for progress toward an agreement to ban the production of fissile material for weapons.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization headquartered in Washington, D.C. The Center’s scholars conduct research and analysis and develop policy initiatives that look to the future and anticipate change. Through this grant, the principal investigator will build upon the political momentum created by the Nuclear Security Summit of 2016 to broaden the debate on nuclear security to address fundamental fissile material production governance and to create a link between management of the fuel cycle and nuclear security concerns. She will do this through meetings, workshop participation, publishing articles, and pushing recommendations through media outlets.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization headquartered in Washington, DC. This project informs U.S. policy vis-à-vis India in light of various developments that bear on bilateral ties: the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, America’s “rebalance” to Asia and relations with Pakistan, and the administration of Indian Prime Minister Modi. Through research and workshops, the study aims to establish a common basis of understanding between Washington and Delhi of the obstacles and opportunities in bilateral ties and identify concrete steps that could be taken in each capital to advance bilateral ties—especially important given U.S. interests in South and East Asia, and the expanding role India plays in the region.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization that conducts research and analysis and develops policy initiatives. "Nuclear Choices in Japan: Implications for Nonproliferation" will engage U.S. and Japanese experts in identifying various paths forward for Japan’s fuel cycle program in the wake of Fukushima -- continue programs, multinationalize them or shut them down -- and analyzing implications of each of these potential decisions for nuclear security and the nonproliferation regime. It will include a workshop, a report, op-eds, videos and a journal article. Funds will be used for staff salaries, conferences, publications, and media outreach.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization headquartered in Washington, D.C. It has been perhaps the most active U.S. think tank in recent years in drawing attention to Arctic issues. The project will present a detailed picture of the internal politics and dynamics of Russia’s policymaking in the Arctic and its external policy manifestations. It will include analysis of how the rapidly changing environment of the Russian Arctic will increasingly challenge Russian policymakers. Funds will be used for personnel costs, workshops, travel, and publications. This grant supports the Foundation’s Russia’s Global Engagement initiative.
The Center for Strategic and International Studies is a bipartisan, nonprofit organization that conducts research and analysis and develops policy initiatives that look to the future and anticipate change. The proposed project, “Mapping Asian Views of Power, Prosperity, Institutions and Identity,” proposes to update a successful 2008-2009 CSIS study with a new survey of strategic elites in 12 Asian countries/economies plus the United States, examining the drivers for cooperation and conflict in the region and assessing the implications for U.S. foreign policy and regional institution-building. Funds will be used for conducting the survey, staff salaries, travel, and conferences.
To support the Sustainable Nuclear Futures project (over three years).
To involve immigrant leaders in policy dialogue on migration and development in the U.S. and Mexico (over two years).
To support policy research on international cooperation to respond to internal security challenges in Asia.
To support policy research on how the U.S.-centered system of alliances can help to manage international security challenges in Asia in an era of changing power dynamics (over three years).
To support a project on the role of nuclear weapons in the 21st century.
In support of a study of Asia-Pacific views on regional institutions (over two years).
In support of a project to rebuild the international consensus on the prevention of nuclear proliferation (over three years).
In support of the educational briefings of the Congressional Proliferation Prevention Forum (over three years).
In support of the Program on New Approaches to Russian Security (over three years).
In support of the Biological Threat Reduction initiative (over 30 months).
In support of participation by Russian scholars in the Program on New Approaches to Russian Security (over three years).
In support of planning for the Biological Threat Reduction Initiative.
In support of the Congressional Nonproliferation Forum (over two years).
To support the participation of Russian scholars in the Program on New Approaches to Russian Security, a network of younger scholars of post-Soviet security issues.
To support the Program on New Approaches to Russian Security (over three years).
To support a United States-Russian workshop to engage in discussions related to their respective defense planning policies.
To support policy study and related seminars on U.S. policy on global water resources.
To support the project on the future of U.S. space policy in terms of both civilian and military priorities.
To support the Nuclear Risk Reduction Center.
To support the Center for Strategic and International Studies' project on nuclear risk reduction.
To support effective and sustained collaboration among researchers from different fields on problems of international security, and for fellowship programs (over three years).
To support the Future of Business Program, concerning the market economies and role of private enterprise in six nations.
To support the Energy and National Security Program.