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Carnegie Corporation of New York Spring 2007
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“The Corporation has had a long history in removing barriers to civic participation,” says Geri Mannion, who leads the Corporation’s U.S. Democracy grantmaking. She adds, “Many of the grantees described in this report—for example, the legal defense funds—continue to work on these issues with Corporation funding, although some of the program directions and grantees have changed over the years. While much progress in voting and civil rights has been made since the Corporation’s initial grantmaking in this area forty years ago, the 2000 and subsequent election cycles illustrate that the U.S. continues to be challenged in ensuring all citizens’ votes are counted. The Corporation’s recent focus on youth, immigrants and traditionally disenfranchised communities continues its commitment to encouraging the political and civic involvement of those most shut out or disillusioned by the current political system.” Committed to the belief that the
United States also needed to focus on preparing its future leaders—and
ensuring that they represented all segments of American society—Alan
Pifer saw the education of the nation’s children as central to this
concern. That was among the reasons for Pifer’s 1972 launch of the
Carnegie Council on Children. Headed by noted author and social psychologist
Kenneth Keniston, the panel of Carnegie Council leaders from across the
nation included Marian Wright Edelman, who in 1973 founded the Children’s
Defense Fund, formerly the Washington Research Project; www.childrensdefense.org.
Corporation support of the Washington Research Project began in 1969 and
of the Children’s Defense Fund in the early 1970s. Ellen Lagemann,
author of a history of Carnegie Corporation of New York2
writes, “Edelman enjoyed unusual respect within the Corporation
and played an unusual role... they [Carnegie Corporation] invested a great
deal of money in projects with which she was involved (more than $3.2
million between 1970 and 1982), asked her to serve on the Carnegie Council
on Children, and generally listened with care to what she thought.”
Staffing the council was Hillary Rodham Clinton, who served as a research
associate with the panel. The Council spent four years exploring the forces
that shape children’s lives from conception to age nine and, in
1977, published All Our Children: The American Family Under Pressure
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977), which helped establish an agenda for
high-quality programs for all children, with a special concern for disadvantaged
youngsters. |