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Grants
21
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Total Awarded
$3,889,922
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Years
1985 - 2002
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Categories
Grants
To support a pilot study of ecotourism in Costa Rica to test how lessons from forest certification programs can be applied to the larger tourism industry.
To support the Foreign Policy in Focus project (over three years).
To support a drug policy project that promotes greater resources for treatment as an alternative to incarceration (over two years).
To stimulate public dialogue on social issues.
To support a global affairs agenda for the United States and to mobilize constituencies for its support (over three years).
To support a dialogue on social issues among citizen organizations, scholars, and legislators.
To link public policy scholars around the country (over two years).
To study ways to make trade and investment more socially and environmentally responsible.
To support a program on security policy in the 21st century (over two years).
To support a documentary about the conflict in Chiapas, Mexico.
To support the Paths for the 21st Century project, which brings together scholars and activists to discuss such issues as war and peace, the changing family, economic justice, democracy and civil society, and communications and community.
To support the Public Interest Technology Policy Project.
To support the Paths for the 21st Century project, which brings together scholars and activists to discuss such issues as war and peace, the changing family, economic justice, democracy and civil society, and communications and community.
To support the program A New U.S. Foreign Policy for the 21st Century (over three years).
To distribute the documentary "Miami-Havana."
To support policy studies and public education on world economic integration and post-cold war planning for a new foreign policy (over three years).
To support the U.S.-Soviet Dialogue on Common Security and General Disarmament, which focuses on arms control treaties and other bilateral security measures, and to support the "International Economic Order Project," a policy study on the impact of developing countries' debt on democratic and equitable development (over three years).
To support the research project "A Reexamination of Military-Civil Relations in American Society," by William M. Arkin.
To support the research project "Development, the Environment, and Security: Policy Alternatives for the Phillipines," by Robin Broad and John Cavanagh.
To support three programs: The International Economic Order; Towards a Program for Common Security and General Disarmament: A U.S.-Soviet Exchange; and Alternatives for Real Security (over two years).