. - Institute for Policy Studies
Transcription
. - Institute for Policy Studies
I NSTITUTE F O R POL IC Y STUDIES I DEA S INTO AC T I O N 2 015 A NN UAL REPORT FROM OUR DIRECTOR & BOARD CHAIR IDEAS INTO ACTION Founded in 1963, the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) is the nation’s first progressive multi-issue think tank. We are a community of scholars and activists who provide vision and essential resources to vital social movements working to advance equity, sustainability, and justice. For over 50 years, we have served as a policy and research resource for visionary social justice movements - from the anti-war and civil rights movements in the 1960s to the peace and global justice movements of the last decade. We are committed to putting bold ideas into action to promote true democracy and challenge concentrated wealth, corporate influence, and military power. The cornerstone of our work is public scholarship, a term we use to describe the connection between our policy research and analysis (ideas) and grassroots advocacy and organizing (action). 2015 was a year of historical significance. We saw progress on the issue of marriage equality, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that marriage is a fundamental right guaranteed to same-sex couples. This ruling came about as the result of a massive movement of millions of people around the world calling for equality. In May, Pope Francis’s encyclical, Laudato Si, sent a powerful message calling for intersectional solutions - urging us to tackle poverty and restore dignity to the excluded while protecting Earth, our common home. We saw the power of movements when we celebrated the ratification of the Iran nuclear deal. When opponents of the deal attempted to undermine it, IPS worked with many of our allies across the country and around the world to defend it. The success of this deal showed us that diplomacy is a viable alternative to military aggression. And in July, some of us were present at the opening of the new Cuban embassy in Washington, D.C., - a historic victory shared among hundreds of activists who have worked in solidarity with Cuba, to end the blockade and to normalize relations with the island for more years than they could remember. We saw the movement for black lives continue to gain momentum across the country. In response, we focused much of our inequality work on examining the relationship between inequality and racial justice with the launch of two new areas of work: the Criminalization of Poverty project and the Black Worker Initiative (you can read more about this work on pages 7-8). Also in 2015, IPS began a long-term planning process in which we revisited our vision of the world we want to see and planned initiatives for the coming years that will help bring about needed change. And finally, we spent the latter half of the year preparing to move from our offices on 16th Street near the White House to a new and improved space in the Dupont Circle neighborhood. The move will bring us closer to other think tanks and to some of our core allies. At our 2015 Holiday Party, an occasion we used to bid farewell to the treasured conference room mural by IPS board member Andy Shallal, we were reflective. In that room, we talked about the world - the one we dreamed about and the one we wanted to change. As we looked forward to a new office, we recognized that it is also an opportunity to renew our efforts to improve our economic conditions, our environment, and our protection of human rights. Indeed, as we celebrate the progress we made this year, we are look forward to a new year and a new chapter in our Institute’s history. Onward, John Cavanagh, Director E. Ethelbert Miller, Board Chair JOHN CAVANAGH, DIRECTOR Page 2 Page 3 E. ETHELBERT MILLER, BOARD CHAIR 39 TH LETELIER-MOFFITT ANNUAL HUMAN RIGHTS AWARDS 2015 For 39 years, IPS has hosted an annual human rights awards ceremony It’s not just enough to get folks out of cages. We need deep, long-term investment in the communities we’ve been waging war on for the last 40 years to make those folks whole. We owe them something. ... However you get involved, it’s time for you to get involved. Because there’s a generation depending on you to make sure that they don’t see a cage, and there’s another generation depending on you that they’re restored once they come out.” [IPS and other] civil society organizations are born from a spirit of solidarity between people rooted in...a human desire to make things better and change things that are not working. …CJA’s work embraces a profound responsibility to pursue justice, peace and dignity. …All of us at CJA believe that creatively we can make the world a better place, with the help of friends.” — daryl atkinson, letelier-moffitt human rights award winner — almudena bernabeu, letelier-moffitt human rights award winner to honor the memory of Orlando Letelier and Ronni Karpen Moffitt by celebrating brave changemakers who are making a positive impact on their local communities while championing human rights in the United States and across Latin America and the Caribbean. domestic award : international award : daryl atkinson and the southern coalition for social justice almudena bernabeu and the center for justice and accountability In 1996, Atkinson pled guilty to a first-time, nonviolent drug crime and served 40 months in prison. Since his release, he completed college and law school and has become a tireless advocate of second chances for people with criminal records. Now a Senior Staff Attorney at The Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ) - a nonprofit organization committed to partnering with and representing economically disadvantaged individuals and communities of color as they seek to dismantle structural racism and oppression Atkinson is dedicated to ending the second-class citizenship assigned to individuals returning from incarceration. Almudena Bernabeu, a Spanish international attorney with the Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA), has led the prosecutions of several of the worst Latin American perpetrators of crimes against humanity. Working with international human rights activists, Bernabeu and CJA have also played key roles in several victories this year, including the U.S. extradition of a former Salvadoran military officer to stand trial in Spain for the 1989 massacre of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper, and her daughter. From left: Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA), Anita Earls and Daryl Atkinson of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, Almudena Bernabeu and Dixon Osburn of the Center for Justice and Accountability, MSNBC’s Dorian Warren, and IPS Director John Cavanagh. Page 4 Page 5 IDEAS INTO ACTION: IPS also reaches broad audiences with bold, progressive ideas through its Foreign Policy in Focus website (FPIF.org) and Inequality.org, which is widely seen as the most extensive and accessible source of analysis on inequality in the country. SHIFTING THE NARRATIVE Beyond our in-house media outlets, IPS worked to advance progressive ideas and innovative solutions in mainstream and alternative media. ips is invested in working with social movements for change that helps people and the planet. ips public scholars believe that the interconnected crises of the economy, environment, democracy, militarism, and racial injustice require deep systemic change. ips has organized its overlapping and intersectional work in three arenas that are vital to change: shifting the key narratives through which people understand the world, building power to stand up to corporate and military opposition to change, and putting forward game-changing rules for peace, justice, At IPS, we are shifting the narrative by amplifying progressive ideas though our own online publications and in the mainstream and alternative media. In 2015, the Institute’s own op-ed service, OtherWords (OtherWords.org), steadily expanded its reach. It distributed over 400 newsroom-ready opinion pieces that garnered at least 5,000 hits in the nation’s op-ed sections. In 2015, OtherWords also attained a longstanding goal: Women now are the authors of half of the op-eds and columns that it distributes. In addition to achieving gender parity in our bylines, we developed an op-ed writing curriculum designed for a series of hands-on workshops, increased the number of youth-authored commentaries that we distribute, and introduced two new columns. OtherWords also gained new exposure in newspapers and online. Among the latest newspapers to start running our work are the Sanford, North Carolina Herald, the Willmar, Minnesota West Central Tribune, and The Mt. Clemens, Michigan Macomb Daily. and the environment. For example, our research on a long-time IPS CEO pay reform idea - the elimination of a loophole that now allows firms to deduct unlimited “performance” pay from their taxes - received unprecedented media coverage in 2015, even showing up on an episode of the popular Netflix series House of Cards. We also produced a report revealing that the Wall Street bonus pool was twice as large as the combined earnings of all U.S. full-time minimum wage workers. Working with our allies, we also compared the size of the bonus pool to the cost of lifting home health workers, restaurant servers, and fast food workers up to a wage of $15 per hour. The report received coverage in most of the mainstream print media, including two pieces in the New York Times and two articles in USA Today. Another pathbreaking report, “Money to Burn: How CEO Pay is Accelerating Climate Change,” was the first to spell out how our short-termist executive pay system is bad for the planet. Patriotic Millionaires network, enlisting hundreds of new members. IPS staff provided key research and communications to amplify the important voice of business leaders and wealthy individuals advocating for fair taxes, living wages, and reduced influence of money in our political system. Patriotic Millionaires spokespersons had several media appearances, including The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Finally, IPS launched the Criminalization of Poverty project in 2015, which aims to look at the ways our criminal justice system disproportionately impacts poor people and people of color. The project’s first report, The Poor Get Prison: The Alarming Spread of the Criminalization of Poverty, garnered significant attention in news outlets and social media. Described as “groundbreaking” by activist Marian Wright Edelman, the report put the phrase “criminalization of poverty” into the media lexicon and is helping tell the criminalization of poverty story as it relates to the #BlackLivesMatter movement. In April, anti-tax forces in Congress mobilized to abolish the estate tax, a public policy that effectively reduces the concentration of wealth and power. IPS sprang into action, working with allied groups including the Patriotic Millionaires and Americans for Tax Fairness. We assembled the best research and talking points, wrote and placed op-eds, and provided tools to grassroots groups, policy-makers, and media. One of our op-eds by Ben & Jerry’s Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield was published in USA Today and syndicated nationally. finally shining a light on the way The Wealth for the Common Good network, nurtured by IPS, combined efforts to build up the poor people just for being poor .” ...groundbreaking ... [ this ] report and similar studies are some municipalities are criminalizing — marian wright edelman, founder, children’s defense fund Page 6 Page 7 image: flickr / WINSTON VARGAS remixed under cc by-nc 2.0 http://bit.ly/1o9GBwn image: flickr / ANNETTE BERNHARDT remixed under cc by-sa 2.0 http://bit.ly/22IYf9X IDEAS INTO ACTION: BUILDING POWER THROUGH SOCIAL MOVEMENTS we believe that social movements equipped with bold ideas and cutting-edge research are the keys to change in societies where corporations have corrupted politics and rigged the rules of the economy. In 2015, IPS worked closely with economic justice and low-wage worker organizations, including National People’s Action, the Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC), the National Domestic Workers Alliance (NDWA), Jobs with Justice (JWJ), and the National Guest Workers Alliance, to develop strategic research and communications plans highlighting their core issues. For instance, IPS co-published a detailed infographic with the National Domestic Workers Alliance on the homecare industry at a time when the U.S. Supreme Court was considering a case on extending basic rights to these workers. After the court made a historic decision in favor of the workers, IPS partnered with NDWA to create easy-to-understand materials for NDWA affiliates to unpack the results of the ruling. IPS also published several op-eds related to this Supreme Court case over the past year. This year, under the leadership of Marc Bayard, IPS launched our new Black Worker Initiative (BWI), a project deeply committed to helping achieve both the historic and contemporary aims of the labor and civil rights movements. Black workers have been particularly hard hit by the rising tide of inequality in today’s economy, and we hope this initiative will be a part of the solution to helping expand opportunities for black worker organizing. In May, the Initiative released its flagship report, And Still I Rise: Black Women Labor Leaders’ Voices, Power and Promise, which profiled 27 inspiring black women labor and worker rights activists from across the country who are in different stages of their careers and work in a range of different sectors of the economy. The report also featured the results of a national survey of over 450 black women in the labor movement about their experiences as workers and as union and workers’ rights activists. The report and the Initiative garnered attention from a wide range of media outlets, including The American Prospect, Buzzfeed, The Clarion Ledger, Ebony, In These Times, MSNBC, The Nation, Huffington Post, The National Journal, NBCNews. com, PBS, RH Reality Check, and Women’s eNews. Finally, as the U.S.-led, U.S.-armed, and U.S.backed wars and occupations continued across the Middle East in 2015, IPS Middle East expert Phyllis Bennis spent much of the year working with partners in the U.S. and global peace movements, challenging military policies and working to defend the rare victories of diplomacy over war. Bennis strategized with many allies, including Win Without War, Peace Action, Code Pink, and the National Iranian-American Council to defend the Iran deal from congressional efforts to scuttle it. Bennis also worked with the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation to mobilize Congressional opposition to the efforts of Israel and AIPAC, including the joint congressional address by Binyamin Netanyahu, to undermine the deal. These efforts resulted in 60 members of Congress signing on to publicly skip Netanyahu’s speech. with her customary lucidity and talent for judicious interpretation , phyllis bennis provides an authoritative introduction to all that is now known about isis . it is more than a ‘ primer ,’ offering an indispensable account of the complex turmoil afflicting the middle east.” — richard falk, professor emeritus of international law & practice at princeton university In 2015, Bennis published her newest book, Understanding ISIS and the New Global War on Terror, as well as the latest (6th) updated edition of her popular Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: A Primer. She then spent much of her time on the road, speaking and strategizing with various students groups, organizations, and others across the world on how to build movements to fight for the alternative approaches outlined in her writing. ' americas remixed under cc by-nc-sa 2.0 image: flickr / unhcr/acnur http://bit.ly/1RA4ULp Page 8 Page 9 IDEAS INTO ACTION: CHANGING THE RULES AND SHIFTING THE STATUS QUO our country and the planet need a transformation from a militarized, fossil fuel, wall street economy to a peaceful, clean, and caring main street economy. In this work, IPS has worked closely with groups in El Salvador that have come together in a National Roundtable Against Mining, and that are fighting a lawsuit by OceanaGold, a Canadian gold mining company, against that country's government. In 2015, IPS helped expose the activities of OceanaGold's foundation in El Salvador, and helped publicize four Salvadoran municipalities where majorities voted to make the towns "territories free of mining." This year, our Peace Economy Transitions project continued its work to reduce the hold of militarism over our economy through a new effort to help communities adjust to lower levels of defense spending. Through planning grants offered by the Pentagon’s Office of Economic Adjustment, we are now working with experienced organizers in five states — two “blue,” two “purple,” and one “red” state — to push these transitions in the right direction: toward real community dialogue about a future beyond defense dependency, giving priority to green manufacturing. In addition to supporting the transition from a militarized economy, we are also helping local and regional communities build an inclusive, sustainable, and fair economy for all. In 2015, our Program on Inequality and the Common Good based in Boston, MA helped two local businesses transition away from toxic substances as part of its Cancer-Free Economy initiative. We also launched a “time bank,” an online platform where neighbors connect to help each other with needs like childcare, carpentry, and tutoring. Through our Climate Policy Program we are also helping shape the global transition away from dirty energy to clean renewable energy in a way that builds community power and local resilience. In 2015, we worked with allies in securing a micro, small, and medium-sized enterprise program at the global Green Climate Fund that focuses on bringing renewable energy access to communities across the global South and strengthening the leadership of women in the clean power sector. For six years, IPS has played a leadership role in U.S. and international campaigns for a tax on Wall Street speculation. In 2015, this issue moved into the center of the Democratic presidential debate and 10 EU countries are on the verge of finalizing the details of a regional financial transaction tax. this is a huge victory for ordinary americans who are fed up with a ceo pay system that rewards the guy in the corner office hundreds of times more than others who add value to their companies . ” — sarah anderson, director, global economy project, ips In August, the SEC beat back fierce opposition and voted to require corporations to report the ratio between their CEO and worker pay - something IPS has been advocating for nearly 20 years. As Sarah Anderson, director of the Institute’s Global Economy project, explained in a column featured in the New York Times, there are active efforts in Rhode Island and California, and now Washington state, to build on this disclosure requirement by linking the ratio to tax and procurement policies. We are collaborating with living wage and other economic justice groups to build on this mechanism for both lifting up the bottom and bringing down the top. the world bank faces serious challenges in matching its pro - climate discourse with its fossil heavy lending ... at a time when climate change is recognized by the bank itself as one of the greatest risks to development, its actions need to reflect its rhetoric .” The Institute's Global Economy project has also been at the forefront of opposing corporate trade agreements since the fight over NAFTA 25 years ago. In particular, IPS has focused on exposing the negative impacts of the investment rules in these agreements that favor corporations over governments, communities, and the environment. — janet redman, director, climate policy program, ips image: dela jari, alp community early warning volunteer, reading the rain gauge in aman bader village, dakoro niger. photo by agnes otzelberger. 2015. image: flickr / SCOTT S remixed under cc by 2.0 http://bit.ly/1pLVhUg Page 10 Page 11 IDEAS INTO ACTION: BUILDING THE NEXT GENERATION OF PROGRESSIVE LEADERS the newman fellowship has not only allowed me to explore and build upon my interests in digital media, but has also exposed me to the ideas of leaders and social movements that 2013, have helped to edify my own ideology and set our board and staff made a major commitment to my work around. i have been so fortunate during the institute’s 50th anniversary year in increasing the institute's programs to mentor a next generation of diverse public scholars. ips now has six fellowship programs that focus on this mentoring. of core values that i seek to live by and center to come to a workplace that continually forces me to challenge my privilege and my perception of what’s achievable in terms of social progress, and allows me to envision ips introduced me to public scholarship, challenged me to grow as an activist, and empowered me to combine public scholarship with my organizing work in new mexico. i feel that i am a stronger and more well rounded activist thanks to ips.” the world in which i want to be a part of more — cecilia velasco, new mexico fellow vividly than any professional experience has new economy maryland fellows before.” In 2015, IPS launched a pilot program in Maryland to mentor the next generation of public scholars working to build the New Economy movement. This first cohort of 15 New Economy Maryland fellows not only gained a personal understanding of the systematic change that needs to occur, but they were mentored in op-ed writing, and learned to share their perspectives widely. Every fellow who wrote an op-ed had it placed in mainstream newspapers garnering nearly 60 appearances, with several hits in the Baltimore Sun. The fellows were able to make connections with our broader network of key Maryland groups, which culminated in the outstanding success of a September 19 event with over 200 participants in Baltimore, featuring Annie Leonard of Greenpeace USA and local leaders. The gathering addressed how to build on the Baltimore uprising, following the death of Freddie Gray in police custody, to generate a sustained and powerful movement for lasting social change. IPS is building on this momentum with our 2016 program, where fellows are meeting more frequently and participating in media training to expand the message of the New Economy even further. — eric van dreason, carol jean and edward f. newman fellow eric van dreason carol jean and edward f. newman fellow Each year, IPS selects a fellow, based on an endowment left by Carol and Ed Newman. As the 2015 Newman Fellow, Eric VanDreason designed the layout and created infographics for some of our most widely circulated reports, while broadening our base of followers on social networks. His infographics accompanying our 2015 Executive Excess report were featured by Greenpeace USA and 350.org. He has created digital materials promoting the Institute’s major accomplishments with our Giving Tuesday campaign and Year In Review highlights. Eric will pursue a Master's in City Planning at MIT in the fall of 2016. Page 12 Page 13 cecilia velasco new mexico fellow During her time as a New Mexico fellow, Cecilia Velasco focused on issues of immigration and education policy. Cecilia wrote a series of op-eds for OtherWords that were published in newspapers throughout the country, including her firsthand experience of the 100-woman pilgrimage from York, Pennsylvania to Washington, DC for immigration reform. Cecilia also dedicated much of her time at IPS to our leadership development programs. She created a proposal for the implementation of an IPS Associate Board, participated as a New Economy Maryland fellow and played a vital role in launching our Next Leaders program. She was also crucial in the planning and execution of our 2015 Letelier-Moffitt Awards ceremony. IDEAS INTO community leaders fellowship ACTION: In 2015, the Institute’s Boston-based Community Leaders Fellowship was able to bring together twelve stellar leaders who wanted to invest more permanently in their communities – from Annie Hamilton who launched the Time Exchange, which connects more than 200 neighbors, to Sobeida Pena who organized the first ever Spanish-language overview of JP NET. BUILDING THE NEXT GENERATION OF PROGRESSIVE LEADERS The fellows supported the Cancer Free Economy project, which helped Jamaica Plain’s Salcedo Auto Center stop using lead and switch to toxinfree materials. They forged a partnership with the Jamaica Plains Adult Learning Program to help English language learners connect with the broader community and access mutual aid networks. Others worked at the Boston Food Forest, supporting harvest parties and garden raisings in neighborhood yards. Communications fellow Jeanette Origel worked with New England New Economy Transitions director Sarah Byrnes to publish A Tale of Two Supermarkets - an article that makes the argument that gentrification systematically undermines people who are working hard to improve their communities. next leaders program student debt action fellows In 2015, IPS intentionally bucked the trend of unpaid internships and offered a new and diverse cohort of fourteen Next Leaders paid internship positions. We made this move not only because we believe in fair compensation for labor, but also because we know that unpaid internships reduce the participation of potential change-makers of color and people from low-income communities. Summer 2015 saw the launch of a new internship program created by Chuck Collins and Josh Hoxie at the Institute’s Boston office, in partnership with the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA). Student Debt Summer brought a dozen young leaders to study, organize, and advocate around an issue that is considered by millennials to be among the top political crises facing the country today. The students staged protests at for-profit colleges, like ITT Tech, that are defrauding veterans and other groups by providing substandard education at an extremely high cost, both on their campus and at their corporate headquarters. The summer interns produced original research focusing on how to fund debt-free college and eliminate student debt. Participants in the program have gone on to engage in student activism on campus and with groups like the Student Labor Action Projection, the student wing of close IPS ally, Jobs with Justice. Out of an applicant pool of 500, we selected a brilliant and diverse group of young activists to participate in a comprehensive skills training and progressive frameworks curriculum. Over 10 weeks, we exposed this first cohort to the practice of public scholarship and positioned them for longlasting careers in our social justice community. They published 15 pieces of writing and research that have been cited in notable places, such as “Morning Reads” by Bill Moyers and in the National Journal. IPS helped more than half of them find jobs or receive scholarships or awards of recognition within our social justice community and among the Institute’s closest allies. Page 14 Page 15 IDEAS INTO ACTION: labor movement pushes, yet again, to get more black IN THE NEWS in women in charge marc bayard may 10, 2015 http:// www.buzzfeed.com/ coralewis/ labor-movement-pushes-for-more-black-women-in-charge#.mjNv7QB2M 2015, ips experts appeared on dozens of television and radio cuban flag over the new embassy in washington signals shows, wrote hundreds of op-eds, were quoted in dozens of a victory shared by american advocates newspapers, and our studies were covered in thousands of phyllis bennis media outlets around the world. here is a brief sample: july 21, 2015 http:// www.washingtonpost.com/ blogs/ style-blog/ wp/2015/07/21/ cuban-flag-over-the-new-embassy-in-washingtonsignals-a-victory-for-american-advocates/ the european union may be on the verge of collapse 35 soul-crushing facts about american income john feffer january 27, 2015 inequality sarah anderson http:// www.thenation.com/article/196193/ european-union-may-be-verge-collapse/ july netanyahu side-steps white house in bid to sabatoge [sic ] iran talks pope francis has a big to-do list for world leaders phyllis bennis january sanho tree & phyllis bennis 22, 2015 september http:// www.commondreams.org/ news/2015/01/22/ netanyahu-side-steps-white-house-bid-sabatoge-iran-talks the coal industry is hurting, but its execs are still marjorie wood 9, 2015 getting raises sarah anderson http:// www.ipsnews.net/2015/02/ youth-unemployment-income-inequality-keep-rising/ september one chart that shows just how ridiculously huge wall 100 ceos have more in retirement savings than 41 sarah anderson 17, 2015 percent of americans combined sarah anderson http:// www.vox.com/2015/3/17/8233343/ one-chart-that-shows-just-how-ridiculously-huge-wall-street-bonuses october all you need to know about income inequality, in one the wealthiest dozen Americans own more than the sarah anderson 13, 2015 bottom half josh hoxie & chuck collins http:// www.nytimes.com/2015/03/14/ upshot/ wall-street-bonuses-vs -total-earnings-of-full-time-minimum-wage-workers. html december mitchell: shooting of unarmed black man in s.c. makes karen dolan 8, 2015 http:// chicago.suntimes.com/ mary-mitchell/7/71/511221/ shooting-unarmed-black-man-video 5 ways it's become a crime to be poor in america, punishable by further impoverishment karen dolan april 26, 2015 http:// www.alternet.org/ economy/5-ways -its-become-crime-be-poor-america-punishable-further-impoverishment Page 16 2, 2015 http://america.aljazeera.com/ opinions/2015/12/ the-wealthiest-dozen-americans-own-more-than-the-bottom-half.html case for video cameras april 30, 2015 http:// www.motherjones.com/ politics/2015/10/ top-100-ceos-retirement-savings-racial-inequality comparison march 2, 2015 http:// time.com/ money/4020724/ coal-industry-executive-pay/ street bonuses are march 25, 2015 http:// www.refinery29.com/2015/09/94611/ united-nations-pope-francis -new-york-visit-climate-speech youth unemployment, income inequality keep rising february 15, 2015 http:// www.salon.com/2015/07/15/35_soul_crushing_facts_about_american_income_inequality_partner/ Page 17 Page 18 Page 19 FINANCIALS THANK YOU 2015 All of us at the Institute for Policy Studies draw great strength from our community of donors*, including those who give anonymously. Our accomplishments in 2015 are a credit to each of you. INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT 2015 INCOME TOTAL: $4,200,000 2015 EXPENSES TOTAL: $4,183,000 NOTE: THESE FIGURES ARE UNAUDITED AND SUBJECT TO ADJUSTMENTS. Page 20 Page 21 The 515 Foundation Lucy & Isadore B. Adelman Foundation American Federation of Government Employees American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations American University Washington College of Law Anonymous Arca Foundation The Atlantic Philanthropies Director/Employee Designated Gift Program Paul and Edith Babson Foundation The Bauman Foundation Ben & Jerry’s Foundation Benevity Community Impact Fund Harris and Frances Block Foundation Heinrich Boell Foundation The Boston Beer Company The Annie E. 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Coward Charles Crane Susan Cranmer Sarah Creighton Paula Cronin Hilary and Kip Crosby Christina Curtin Katherine Curtin Lydia Curtis Jeffrey Dahn Jim Dail Arthur MacEwan and Margery Davies Ronald and Shirley Davis Zane Davis Cathy Davis-Baker Freya De Cola Robert Karasiewicz and Patricia de la Fuente Stefan de Vylder Dorothea de Zafra Atwell Russell DeFauw Kate Nahapetian and Stefan Deichmann Michael Delgado Aaron Dellutri Marie Dennis Elena Kolesnikova and Prof. Charles Derber Jean Derrick Jordan Dey Diana Digges Frank and Patricia Dina Carolina Kenrick and John Dinges Vilunya Diskin Michael Dolan Terrance Dougherty Lawrence Drake Mark Drake Kay Drey Julie Drizin Steve Dubb David Duhalde Genevieve Duncan Bruce Dunne Frederic Duperrault Bene Durant James and Miriam Early Kent Eaton Enid Eckstein Dr. Gretchen Eick Rusti Eisenberg Joe Eldridge Michael Elliott William Ellis Anne Ellsworth *We apologize for any names that have been misspelled or omitted in our acknowledgement. Please feel free to contact us at [email protected] to make corrections. Page 22 Glenn Embrey Gael Murphy and Laurie Emrich Kathleen Engel Karen Engle Reita Ennis Maxwell Epstein Noura Erakat Charlie Roberts and Cristina Espinel-Roberts Carlos Espinoza-Toro Jodie Evans Tess Ewing Richard Falk Charles Fantz George Farenthold Sissy Farenthold Coralie Farlee Elizabeth Farnsworth Rosemary Faulkner Holly Fechner Manuel Feliz Michael Ferber Harvey Fernbach, MD MPH Loretta Figueroa Chester Hartman and Amy Fine Esther Finkelstein Kathryn Fitzpatrick Arthur Flache Laura Flanders Flannery Family Fund Pierce Flynn Tope Folarin Nancy Folger Rosemary Foster Helen Shapiro and Jonathan Fox Maurice Fox Ann Stark and Douglas Foxvog Virginia Franco Arthur Frank Dana Frank Penny Franklin Clark Freifeld Margot Friedman Deborah Frieze Grace Gabe Katherine Gallagher Steve Gallant William and Zee Gamson Gardow-Bradlee Family Fund Jill Gay John Geissman Mary Geissman Anne and Ross Gelbspan S.M. Ghazanfar Robert Giron Kate Godfrey John and Yetta Goelet Lisa Gold Alicia Goldberg Jonathan Lewis and Alison Goldberg Walter Goldfrank Debbie Goldman Dan Goldrick Richard Gollub Adelaide Gomer Laurel Gonsalves Riana Good Bill Goodfellow Connie Goodly-LaCour Robert Goodrich Sally Goodwin Hugh Gordon Dr. Michael Gottfried Andy Gottlieb Daniel Gottovi Robert Grandinetti Terri Shaw and Steven Gray David Graybeal, Ph.D. Adam Green Lauren Greenberger Adam Greenblatt Elizabeth Skarie and Jerry Greenfield Myrna Greenfield Paul Gregg Gregory Griffin Amanda Grondin Bill Grover Beth Grupp David Ludlow and Joann Gu Joe Guinan Joyce Guinn Robert Guitteau David Gurney Nina Gutierrez Sandra K. Guzman Florence and Martin Haase Leif Haase The Rev. Sylvia Haase Margaret Hacskaylo Carole Haddad Robert Hadley Conn Hallinan Beth Miller and Thomas Hallock Bertrand and Helena Halperin Kenzo Hamano C. Fraser Smith and Carole Hamlin F. James Handley Kathleen Handron Ellie Hansen John Harcketts Kaaren Hardy Melvin Hardy Mary Harman Diana and John Harrington Marge and Fred Harrison Judith Hart Beth Hatfield Emmy and Rick Hausman Christine Hawkins Rod Haxton Kevin Healy Suzanne Helburn Jill Henderson Kimberly Hendler Pedro Henrique Robert Henschen Brian Hentz Suzanne Hetric Monroe Heyman Nadia Hijab Rachel Hill John Hirschi Wichita Falls Area Community Foundation David Hirschmann Mary Hladky Chris Hoeh Dr. Nancy Hollander Amanda Holloway Joan Holt Lisa Honig Hoppin Family Fund Donald Horenstein Julia Taberman and Richard Horsley Sydney Howard Emily Howe Caroline Huber Keith Hui Samuel Hummel Jr. John Hutchinson Joan Intrator Adam Isacson Natasha Isma Barbara Iverson Maha Jahshan Christopher Jencks Jennifer Jinot Faith and Richard Jodoin George Johnson David Johnston Susanne Jonas Katie Jordan Erik Josephson Virginia Junkin Alfred Kagan Dr. Henry Kahn Silja Kallenbach Elizabeth Schulman and David Kamens Betsy Krieger and David Kandel Susan Kaplan Martin Karcher Robert Keilbach Roxanne Kenison Chris and Marie Kennedy Joseph Kennedy Dr. Patricia Kenschaft Harry Kershner Alvin Kho Alice Kirkman Eric Kleinschmidt Scott Klinger Dr. Edgar Klugman Thomas Kluzak Jeffrey Kupers and Kay Kohler Andrew Korfhage David and Frances Korten Valerie Koster *We apologize for any names that have been misspelled or omitted in our acknowledgement. Please feel free to contact us at [email protected] to make corrections. Page 23 INDIVIDUAL SUPPORT Kovler Fund Janet Kranzberg Merle and Phyllis Krause Robert and Carol Krinsky Pam Kristan Viviana Krsticevic Edward & Laura Labaton Charitable Fund Jennifer Ladd, donor of RSF Social Finance Dal LaMagna Francoise LaMonica David Landskov Kalleigh Landstra Mike Lapham Lillian Jacobs Laskin and Herbert Laskin Erika Leaf Eleanor LeCain Dabney Lee Gerry Lee Mark Simon and Thea Lee Norma and Roger Lesser Nina Lev Robert Levering Andy Levine Catherine and Jerry Levinson Jay Levy Mary and Sheldon Levy Caijsa Lewis Nancy Lewis Kenneth and Colleen Lewis Fund of The Oregon Community Foundation Theodore Lieverman Angela Liggins Philip and Susan Fanselow Likes Sandra Lilligren Lynn Lindsay Live to Give Account Lee Loe Yvonne Logan Leslie Lomas Dennis Lombardo Robert J. Lord Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Phoenix Robert Love Marc Lowenstein Ed Lowry Dr. Michael Lubic Brinton Lykes Susan Lytle David MacMichael Michael and Rose Mage Kemba Maish Elizabeth and Frank Malone Frank Manitzas Dan Mapes-Riordan Glenn Marcus Steve Marks Beverly Marmion Dorothy Marschak Martha Martin Darrin and Shaula Massena Family Fund Michael Broad and Grace S. Massey Charitable Fund Allan Matthews Janet Matthews Mary Beth Maxwell Tom Mayer Richard Mazess David McAnulty James McCarthy Bill McCartney Carolyn McCoy Rev. Dr. E. McCoy Maureen McCue Maureen McElroy Gwen McKinney Anne McKinnon Marianne McLaughlin Megan McLaughlin Molly McLaughlin James McLoughlin Priscilla McMillan Stephen McNeil Michaela McNichol Constance Means Felicia Mednick Krishen Mehta Allison Meierding Isa-Kae Meksin Jerry Meldon Martin Melkonian Gil Mendelson Juan and Silvia Mendez Guy Mendilow Dr. Mary Anne Mercer Eileen and Morris Mericle Metalitz and Gage Family Fund James Michel E. Ethelbert Miller Elissa Ruth Miller Joe Miller Marc Miller Peter Miller Ron Miller Joseph Miller Gamble Miller/Fine Fund Paul and Sally Misencik Cynthia and Ronald Moe-Lobeda Tristan B.H. Mohabir Oliver Moles Cornelius Moore Elizabeth Moore Liz Moore Robert Moore Lawrence B. & Claire K. 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Dennis Olson George Orr Jessica Osborn Stuart Oskamp Irene Ostroff Sally Ouellette Paul Overhauser Edith Oxfeld Nancy Page Brigham Joseph Palen Cheryl Panek Elizabeth Pappalardo Luis Parada Laura Park Patricia Parker Claudia Paz y Paz Roger Peace Ted Peck III Pelican Fund Anne Penniman The Perpetua Fund Elizabeth Perry Willie Perryman Janice Ann Peterson Charlotte Phillips Sarah Pick Fred Pincus Mike Poage Joseph and Mary Podorsek Deborah Polhemus Ellyn and James Polshek Allen Post Sally Powell-Ashby Katherine Power Virginia Pratt Hank Prensky Steve Pretl Charlton Price Rob Prince Kwei Quartey Gail Radford Caroline Ramsay Merriam Priscilla Ramsey, Ph.D. David Ranney Eileen Raphael Eden Raskin Lynn and Marc Raskin Amelie Ratliff Alvin and Susan Ravenscroft Linda Ray James Rayton Mary Reardon Paul Rehm Jeffrey Reiman David Rensin Ana C. Reyes González Denise Rickles Fred Solowey and Kathryn Ries Charles and Lora Ann Rinker Jacquelyn Rivas Kamila Rivas Karen Robbins Mark Robinson Stephen Rock Abby Rockefeller Rockefeller Family Trust Leonard Rodberg Allan Rodgers Stephanie Rogall Jill and Ron Rohde Alan Rollins Abigail Rome Herb and Lynne Roosa Frank Roosevelt Francesca Rosa Marshall Rose Rich Rosen Marguerite Rosenthal Rose-Ramo Fund Adam and Rachele Rosi-Kessel Edna Rossenas Round Hill Fund Brigette Rouson Dr. Kenneth Ruby Rebecca Ruggles John Ruthrauff Joan Stanne and Roderick N. Ryon Luisa Saffiotti, Ph.D. Anthony Saidy Katya Salazar Carlos Salinas Pat Saloman Rodriguez Patricia Sammann *We apologize for any names that have been misspelled or omitted in our acknowledgement. Please feel free to contact us at [email protected] to make corrections. Page 24 Nicholas Sanders Ken Sandin Craig Sandvig Shira Saperstein Rabinder Sara Judith Saum Karen Saum Steve Savner Leigh Sax Saul Schapiro Joseph Schechla Jill Sternberg and Charles Scheiner Linda Schmoldt Alan Schneider John Schneider Franz Schneiderman Dick and Sharon Schoech Charitable Fund Tom Scholegel Christiane Schomblond Lisbeth Schorr Dave Schott Gary Schreiner Charles Schultz George and Pat Schuyler Ann Schwartz Debra Schwartz Gerald Schwinn Al Sesona Andy and Marjan Shallal Yasir Shallal Paul Shannon Lewis Shapiro Peter Shapiro Shapiro Gordon Family Fund Shared Prosperity Fund John Shaw Marisa Shea Jonathan Shefner Ruth Sheridan Daniel Shively Becky Shuster Robert Siegel Sonia Silbert Jane Singer Neville Roy Singham Eduardo Siqueira Ursula and William Slavick Richard and Ruth Smith Reuben Snipper PoLin So Rachael Solem Katherine Soltis Carolyn Sonfield Marie Soveroski Liz Spark W. Katherine Yih and Jack Spence Erik Sperling Greg Squires Hans Stahlschmidt Kurt and Lisa Stand Lynn Stanford Leigh Stanley Stansbury Family Foundation Kitty and Lewis Steel Karen Steele Jane Stein Eric Edward Sterling Mona Stern Daniel Weiss and Anne Stewart Howard Stewart Jean Stokan Margaret Stoltzfus The Lee and Byron Stookey Fund Alexis Stoumbelis Charles Stover James Strassberger Judy Strauss Bo Svensson Alan and Mary Swedlund Stephen Swonk Tarbell Family Foundation Clark Taylor Deborah Taylor June Taylor Shirley Taylor Haile Tekle Jamie Tessler Geoff Thale Barbara Thatcher Kannan Thiru Alice Thompson John Thompson John Thorstenberg Ann Tickner Martin Tiersten Walter Tillow TJ Family Fund Joyce Tobias Yolanda Toure Christopher Townsend Robert Trafford Cory Trenda Ginnie Tyson Susan Udin Carol Van Houten James Van Orden Dick Vanden Heuvel Joanna Vaughan Lisa VeneKlasen Mike Vetter Fernanda Vicente Nunes Tom Viles Philippe Villers David Vine Arturo Viscarra Dr. Eve Vogel Amsal Wajihuddin Steven Waldbaum Kathy Walker Dr. Carolyn Wallace Wallace Action Fund F. Walsh Dorothy Ward George Waring Larry Wartels Kathryn Watts Diana Weatherby Shana Weaver Al Weinrub David Weinstein Matthew Weinstein Douglas Weinstock Cora and Peter Weiss James Wellman Ross Elliott Wells Andrew Wells-Dang John Wetherby Kenneth White Anne Widmark Ann C. Wilcox Cheryl Wilfong Anthony Williams Cathleen Williams J. McDonald Williams Robin Williams Jack and Mary Willis Carol Winstanley Rev. William L. Wipfler Veronica Wolken Nicole Woo William Wood Carol Woolfe Catherine Woolner Lark Worth Henry and Shelli Wortis Ann Wright Dorothy Wysham Martha Yee Glenda Yoder Rick Yoder Dennis York Coletta Youngers Donald Youngers Michael Zielinski John Zilber Edna and Robert Zimmerer Zimmerman Family Fund Chuck Zlatkin Robert Zucker *We apologize for any names that have been misspelled or omitted in our acknowledgement. Please feel free to contact us at [email protected] to make corrections. Page 25 THE NEXT GENERATION LEGACY SOCIETY SUSTAINING OUR WORK The Institute for Policy Studies is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Your donation is fully tax-deductible and supports our work to educate, connect, and sustain social movements for peace, justice, and the environment. For more than half a century, the Institute for Policy Studies has played the key role of providing public scholarship to cutting-edge social movements in the U.S. and the world. We can’t predict what new issues will emerge in the next half century and beyond, but we do know that IPS will be needed to provide the intellectual groundwork to support movement-building groups, and to speak with an unwavering independent voice – unaligned with any political party, and steadfast in promoting equity, sustainability, peace, and democratic participation, the values we uphold as progressives. Looking toward the future, IPS is intentionally mentoring the next generation of public scholars, especially individuals from low-income backgrounds and communities of color. Working closely with public scholars who helped build and inform the movements for social and economic equality, the new economy, demilitarization and diplomacy, and environmental justice, they will rise to be the next generation to build on the Institute’s legacy of inspiring progressive ideas and actions to serve the people and planet. Richard Barnet, Isabel Letelier, Roger Wilkins, Marc Raskin, Saul Landau, 1980s Ann Barnet Anonymous (two individuals) Bernice Bild* Elsbeth Bothe* Julie Buckles John Cavanagh Jodie Evans Shirley Fingerhood* David Hart T.S. Holman* Fran and David Korten Andrew Levine Nancy Lewis Kathleen A. Maloy, JD PhD Seymour Melman* Caroline Ramsay-Merriam Marcus Raskin Jan Reiner* Herbert and Evelyn Robb Luisa Saffioti Margaret Spanel* Marvin Stender and Drucilla Ramey Monthly gifts of just $10 are a crucial source of dependable funding to support our community of scholars and activists working toward real social change. Marc Bayard, John Cavanagh, Chuck Collins, Sarah Anderson, 1998 To donate online, please visit the Institute’s donation page at www.ips-dc.org/donate. IPS Student Debt Fellows, 2015 By including IPS in their estate plans through a bequest or other planned gift, members of the Next Generation Legacy Society demonstrate a commitment to ensuring that IPS has a future in putting progressive ideas into action for the people and our planet. IPS would like to express our deepest gratitude toward the extraordinary commitment, generosity, and thoughtfulness of the following Next Generation Legacy Society members: To speak truths to power for half a century, the Institute has relied entirely on individual contributions and foundation grants to support our work. We ask that you please make as generous a gift as you can afford this year, and every year – for the long haul. To donate by mail, please make checks payable to the Institute for Policy Studies. If you wish, you may designate a specific project on the memo line. Please send your contribution to: Institute for Policy Studies ATTN: Development Department 1301 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20036 To donate by phone, please call our Development Coordinator at (202) 787-5272. IPS Next Leaders, 2015 In 2015, an extraordinary lawyer and activist for justice, Allan Brotsky, passed away and left a gift to IPS in his will. His children continue his work for peace and justice, and IPS salutes his lifetime of service. We miss our friend. If you would like to become a member of the IPS Next Generation Legacy Society but want to speak to someone about the details first, please call our Development Director at (202) 787-5235 or email [email protected]. *Denotes members who are deceased, but live on in our memories and the work we are able to accomplish. Page 26 Page 27 1301 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 600 Washington, DC 20036