IPS opened its doors in 1963 with a simple, straightforward notion: that progressive thought, advocay, and action can build a better society. Over the next three decades that idea proved to be a revolutionary one. It supported grassroots movements that co
![]() IPS opened its doors in 1963 with a simple, straightforward notion: that progressive thought, advocay, and action can build a better society. Over the next three decades that idea proved to be a revolutionary one. It supported grassroots movements that contributed to ending the war in Vietnam; to improving the legal status of African-Americans and women; to weaking the nuclear power industry; to protecting worker rights through US trade programs; to cutting off aid to the Nicaraguan Contras; to curbing disastrous IMF and World Bank structural adjustment policies; to crushing apartheid in South Africa; and to halting the superpowers' nuclear arms race. THEMES FOR THE 21st CENTURY Life in the United States after the Cold War will be defined by three overlapping questions: What should be our new defense and foreign policies? How can an environmentally sound economy thrive in an increasingly integrated world economy Global Security Program For decades, IPS has pushed for policies to end the Cold War, cut military spending, reverse the nuclear arms race, and wind down US military intervention abroad. At the same time, IPS has sought to strengthen the requisites of international World Economy Program The underlying premise of the World Economy Program is that the rapidly multiplying transnational connections integrating the United States (and every other industrial nation) into the world economy have undermined all existing 20th century ideologies - state socialism, Keynesianism, and the Reagan-Thatcher dogmas of deregulation and free trade. Fundamentally new policies and institutions concerning trade, development, corporate behaviour, and immigration are needed to secure the economic well-being of the majority of the world's people. Among the policies IPS is now advocating are: a 'social charter' in all trade agreements setting decent standards for corporate treatment of workers, consumers, and the environment; national and transnational laws that make mobile multinational corporations more accountable to communities and citizens; substantial reduction in the loans poor nations now owe rich ones; elimination of IMF and World Bank structural adjustment policies; provision of loans, aid, and investment only to development projects that are consistent with the goals of equity, sustainability, full employment, and democratic participation; and an overhaul of the US bilateral aid program to target communities and grassroots organizations in the South. Domestic Policy Program After twelve years of conservative administrations, American society is now in deep crisis. With the larger debt of any country in the world, the United States has too little will and too little wallet to solve a growing number of social and economic problems. Even now, Washington remains frozen by political gridlock and corrupted by hundreds of millions of dollars dispensed by political action committees. The results of federal neglect are plain for everyone to see: race riots in the cities, Who We Are One way to view IPS is as a collection of talented individuals who are dedicated both to producing high-quality public scholarship and to testing their ideas through advocacy, organizing, and experimentation. We currently have seven fellows who are at the core of IPS. But IPS is mich broader than these seven: Each year IPS helps a dozen exceptional scholars design new programs and raise funds. Transnational Institute Since 1973, IPS has collaborated with a sister think tank in Amsterdam called the Transnational Institute (TNI). TNI serves as an umbrella for a network of international scholars committed to the values of equity, sustainability, participation, and demilitarization. Through TNI, IPS work on many security, global economy, and development issues is replicated in or exerts influence on other countries. |
See also
- An overview of activist resources on the web
- The night was April 5, 1983, the place the grand National Building Museum where Abraham Lincoln held his inaugural ball over a century before, and the occasion the 20th anniversary of the Institute for Policy Studies. It seemed as if the entire liberal ac
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