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Geraldine P. Mannion
Program Director
U.S. Democracy and the Special Opportunities Fund
As
director of Carnegie Corporation's U.S. Democracy Program, Geri
Mannion brings a wealth of experience about the role of philanthropy
in challenging, improving and deepening the civic dialogue. She
has directed the division since 1998, after staffing the Corporation's
program of Special Projects for almost ten years. Until recently,
the Corporation's grantmaking in civic participation was a subprogram
in Special Projects. In addition to supporting projects that focus
on improving broad civic engagement, the U.S. Democracy Program
focuses on immigrant civic integration, youth civic education, and
election administration.
Separately,
Mannion continues to direct the Corporation's Special Opportunities
Fund, which is housed within the Office of the President. The fund
allows the Corporation to respond to proposals that are important
but not related to the foundation's primary foci. These projects
are few and often one-time-only grants.
A generalist,
Mannion has spent more than thirty years in the field of philanthropy.
Before joining Carnegie Corporation, she worked for the Rockefeller
and Ford Foundations. At the Rockefeller Foundation, where she spent
thirteen years in a variety of positions, she became a program associate
in the international relations program. During a short-term assignment,
she also helped reorganize the administrative functioning of its
field office in Nairobi, Kenya. At the Ford Foundation, Mannion
consulted with its international affairs program, assisting with
both grant evaluation and grantmaking in its focus on arms control
and security issues.
Active
in professional organizations that work to advance and strengthen
the philanthropic and nonprofit world, Mannion cochaired the Funders'
Committee for Citizen Participation from 1993 to 1995, an affinity
group of funders that encourages foundations to fund voter registration,
voting rights, civic education and campaign finance reform. She
remains an active leader in this organization and is once again
serving as cochair. She also serves on the boards of the Washington
Center for Internships and Academic Seminars and the Center for
Development and Population Activities.
Mannion
holds a B.A. in English and an M.A. in political science, both from
Fordham University.
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