Preventing
Deadly Conflict
In
the post-Cold War world, ethnic, nationalist, and religious enmities,
both within and between states, pose a grave threat to global
security. They also present new and formidable challenges to governments
and to multilateral organizations often charged with resolving
them. The dangers are heightened in situations where the hatreds
and fears of groups are exploited in violent ways by political
opportunists or where possession of nuclear, chemical, and biological
weapons has the potential for menacing the lives of millions.
Under
its program, Preventing Deadly Conflict, the Corporation supports
independent research and discussion among scholars, policymakers,
and informed members of the public to examine major interstate
and intrastate conflicts and to advance ideas for their prevention
or enduring resolution. This work is carried out under the subprogram,
preventing mass intergroup violence, in close cooperation
with the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict, a
study group of the foundation whose final report was released
in December 1997.
Fundamental
questions explored in this subprogram include the origins of conflicts,
the conditions that deter or encourage their deadly outbreak,
the conflicts that are most likely to escalate into violence and
lawlessness, and the functional requirements for an effective
system of prevention. Funded projects include research on ways
to reconcile tensions between group rights and individual rights,
analyses of the media's role in reporting responsibly on conflicts
and helping to defuse them, and efforts to inform those living
in conflict-prone areas about the concepts, techniques, and institutions
of conflict resolution.
The
Corporation is also examining ways of strengthening democratic
institutions in the former Soviet Union and Eastern and Central
Europe, where ethnic and nationalist conflicts pose especially
ominous threats to international stability. Support is given for
efforts to create and undergird democratic institutions in the
nations of this region; to build elements of a civil society in
the Soviet successor states; and to increase the effectiveness
of Western responses to the threat of disintegration or destabilization
in the new states.
In
the subprogram on cooperative security and nonproliferation,
the Corporation supports policy research and the interaction of
scholars and policymakers toward developing a strong international
security strategy. Such a strategy would be based on principles
of cooperation rather than competition, integration rather than
isolation, and transparency rather than secrecy. Primary emphasis
is placed on encouraging more robust efforts by the United States,
Russia, and other nations to curb the spread of advanced weaponry
and weapons technologies that threaten to raise the stakes dangerously
in regional or intrastate conflicts.
Grantmaking
will continue in these three subprogram areas during the Corporation's
review of its current programs. Staff members will pay particular
attention to elements of the final report of the Carnegie Commission
on Preventing Deadly Conflict that offer compelling opportunities
for grantmaking in the future.
PREVENTING
MASS GROUP VIOLENCE
Carnegie
Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict, Washington, DC.
Appropriation administered by the officers of the Corporation.
One year, $3,345,000.
Approximately
seventy actual or emerging ethnic, nationalist, territorial,
and religious conflicts exist throughout the world today. In
their intensity and number, they have the potential to threaten
world peace and have left international organizations struggling
to find effective ways of responding.
To
address the looming threats to world peace posed by mass intergroup
violence and to advance new ideas toward the prevention and
resolution of deadly strife, the Corporation in 1994 established
the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict. Corporation
president emeritus David A. Hamburg and former U.S. secretary
of state Cyrus R. Vance are cochairs; political scientist Jane
E. Holl is executive director.
The
commission members sixteen international scholars and
policy practitioners have met quarterly over three years,
pursuing three main avenues of inquiry. First, they have determined
what differentiates the deadly conflicts of the 1990s, both
between and, more commonly, within states, from those of other
periods in history. They have also identified the roles that
international institutions, regional organizations, individual
states, and ad hoc coalitions can play in preventing mass violence.
Finally, they have considered what blend of political, military,
economic, social, and other tools are, or should be, at the
disposal of these institutions.
The
commission's work is expected to result in eight commercially
published books and twenty-five reports. The final report, Preventing
Deadly Conflict, was released in December 1997. As part
of an extensive two-year outreach program, individual commissioners
are delivering the report to their respective parliaments and
are making presentations to the editorial boards of major international
newspapers and to international conferences.
David
C. Speedie, Program Chair, Preventing Deadly Conflict, Carnegie
Corporation of New York.
Council
on Foreign Relations, New York, NY. Support for the Center
for Preventive Action. Eighteen months, $600,000.
The
mission of the Council on Foreign Relations' Center for Preventive
Action is to enhance prospects for resolving interstate and
intrastate conflicts before they escalate to violence. Working
groups of experts in several disciplines conduct case studies
of preventive action by visiting areas of conflict and producing
reports on mitigating steps that might be taken. Studies are
under way in Burundi, Nigeria, the South Balkans, and the Fergana
Valley in Central Asia. Through an annual conference, the series
Preventive Action Reports, and a library, the center
serves as a clearinghouse of information on groups working to
prevent and resolve conflict. Funding also comes from the Twentieth
Century Fund.
Barnett
R. Rubin, Director, Center for Preventive Action, Council on Foreign
Relations.
University
of California, Los Angeles, CA. Project on creating a coalition
of states to prevent deadly conflict. Two years, $500,000.
Scholars
at the Center for International Relations at the University
of California, Los Angeles, are studying the economic and normative
requirements for creating "encompassing coalitions," which comprise
various states that are united by the intent to prevent deadly
conflict. In analyzing cases from Asia, Europe, and South America,
the researchers are assessing the role of economic incentives
and of status incentives for example, membership in a
prestigious international organization. They are also exploring
the communication and institutionalization of such norms as
military and defense transparency in altering the behavior of
states. Findings will be presented in published materials, briefings
for policymakers, and outreach programs for students and others.
Richard
N. Rosecrance, Director, Center for International Relations.
National
Endowment for Democracy, Washington, DC. Support for the International
Forum for Democratic Studies. Two years, $250,000.
The
National Endowment for Democracy is a nonpartisan grantmaking
agency established in 1983 by U.S. Congressional mandate. Through
a resource center, the Journal of Democracy, and a visiting
fellows program, the endowment's International Forum for Democratic
Studies serves as a center for analyses of the theory and practice
of democratic transition and consolidation worldwide and as
a clearinghouse for information about democratization. Meetings
in 1997 and 1998, funded also by the Smith Richardson and the
Lynde and Harry Bradley foundations, address the future of democracy,
the creation of organizations that provide democratic assistance,
ways of combating abuses of power, and roles for local governments
in promoting democracy.
Marc
F. Plattner, Codirector, International Forum for Democratic Studies.
Institute
for Foreign Policy Analysis, Cambridge, MA. Project on European
security institutions, organized jointly with Tufts University.
Two years, $300,000.
Senior
scholars at the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis and the
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University are
studying how major multilateral institutions are collectively
adapting to the security challenges of the post-Cold War era.
They are analyzing the European Union, NATO, and the P-8 (the
seven major industrial democracies and Russia) and their responses
to terrorism, narcotics trafficking, and international crime;
irredentism and interethnic violence; and threats from economic
insecurity in states on Europe's periphery and beyond. Their
recommendations will figure in debates over the U.S. Senate's
ratification of nato expansion.
Robert
L. Pfaltzgraff, President, Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis.
Institute
for EastWest Studies, New York, NY. Project on subregional
security and cooperation. One year, $250,000.
Several
subregional organizations in Eastern and Central Europe were
founded in the early 1990s to promote economic and social cooperation.
In 1996 the Institute for EastWest Studies launched a comparative
study of the groups' potential for enhancing European security.
The institute is continuing this work by advising the European
Union, the West European Union, the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe, and nato on their evolving subregional
policies. The aim is to explore ways in which three of Europe's
conflict-prone areas the western part of the former Soviet
Union, its southern tier, and the former Yugoslavia can
cooperate with each other and attain closer integration with
Europe.
Dag
Hartelius, Vice President, European Security Programme, Institute
for EastWest Studies.
United
Nations Institute for Training and Research, Geneva, Switzerland.
Program in peacemaking and preventive democracy. Two years, $150,000.
In
1993 the United Nations Institute for Training and Research,
in cooperation with the International Peace Academy, created
the Fellowship Programme in Peacemaking and Preventive Diplomacy.
The program teaches mediators and diplomats how to analyze international
disputes, understand international negotiation, and practice
negotiating and mediating skills. Components include a two-week
core course of study and research, including fieldwork, on specific
cases. Thirty-five men and women participated in 1997. Additional
funding comes from the governments of Austria and Switzerland
and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
Connie
Peck, Coordinator, Fellowship Programme in Peacemaking and Preventive
Diplomacy, United Nations Institute for Training and Research.
Voice
of America, Washington, DC. Conflict resolution initiative.
One year, $100,000.
The
Voice of America (VOA), a branch of the United States Information
Agency, in 1995 launched a conflict resolution initiative to
reach 100 million listeners in fifty-two languages. More than
200 stories with conflict resolution themes have been broadcast
in countries where violent conflict has erupted or is likely
to occur. A core conflict resolution series in the Balkans,
Central Asia, and South Asia explores multilateral efforts to
combat hatred and the role of political and religious elites
in promoting or preventing violence. These analyses will be
complemented by reporting from journalists working on the ground.
VOA held a conference in October 1997 to examine further the
role of radio in conflict.
Gregory
Alonso Pirio, Senior Development Manager, Voice of America.
Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY. Study of interethnic conflict. One
year, $75,000.
Since
1994 Valerie J. Bunce of Cornell University and Shibley Telhami,
now at the University of Maryland at College Park, have analyzed
the interaction between domestic and international politics
in ethnic and nationalist conflict. Two books and two workshops
will complete their work. One book will pursue the hypothesis
that U.S. foreign policy increasingly reflects grassroots politics.
A second book will compare the breakup of Czechoslovakia, the
Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia and will examine the reasons why
the first two were peaceful while the third was accompanied
by mass violence. One workshop will consider interethnic relations
and domestic stability; the other will deal with ethnicity and
foreign policy in the Middle East.
Valerie
J. Bunce, Codirector, Institute for European Studies, Cornell
University, or Shibley Telhami, Anwar Sadat Chair for Population,
Development and Peace, University of Maryland.
Conflict
Management Group, Cambridge, MA. Project on managing ethnic
conflict within the former Soviet Union. One year, $250,000.
Conflict
Management Group is an international organization that offers
governments and nongovernmental organizations training and consultations
in negotiation and conflict resolution. The group's Project
on Ethnic Conflict Management in the Former Soviet Union incorporates
the electronic Network on Ethnological Monitoring and Early
Warning of Conflict, which links twenty-eight regular users
over thirty-three sites in the successor states. The project's
Hague Initiative brings together regional political and ethnic
leaders from Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia to discuss
the relationship between central and regional governments. Further
funding comes from public and private sources.
Bruce
J. Allyn, Program Director, Conflict Management Group.
Columbia
University, New York, NY. Research on evaluating the strategies
of nongovernmental organizations to promote democracy and prevent
conflict in the former Soviet Union. Twenty-seven months, $200,000.
Hundreds
of nongovernmental organizations are engaged in projects to
promote democracy and prevent deadly conflict in the former
Soviet Union. Researchers at Columbia University's Institute
of War and Peace Studies and its Harriman Institute have launched
a project to assess the effectiveness of these activities. At
a May 1997 conference, experts and practitioners produced guidelines
for evaluating strategies for democratization and conflict prevention.
Project team members are now conducting field research to determine
the effectiveness of ngo projects, and their underlying strategies,
in the successor states. The results of the studies will be
published in reports, journal articles, and a book.
Jack
L. Snyder, Director, Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia
University.
Partners
for Democratic Change, San Francisco, CA. Project to develop
ethnic conciliation commissions in Central and Eastern Europe.
One year, $50,000.
In
1996 Partners for Democratic Change, which pursues grassroots
solutions to ethnic, national minority, and religious conflicts
in Central and Eastern Europe, created ethnic conciliation commissions
in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia. The
commissions are permanent institutions where groups may address
social, economic, and political concerns that lie behind intergroup
conflict. Their members are local leaders trained by the Partners'
field offices in negotiation and mediation. Commissioners build
caseloads by giving presentations at community meetings and
by developing referrals from minority leaders, police, and the
courts. Support also comes from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.
Raymond
Shonholtz, President, Partners for Democratic Change.
Center
for Political and Strategic Studies, Chevy Chase, MD. Project
on Central Asia and the Transcaucasus in the post-Cold War era.
Eighteen months, $250,000.
When
the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, prospects for peace among
Kazakstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan
seemed dim. Yet, except for the civil war in Tajikistan, Central
Asian stability is growing. The Center for Political and Strategic
Studies, formerly the Center for Post-Soviet Studies, is comparing
the region's transition from Soviet rule with that of the Transcaucasian
nations of Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia, where severe tensions
remain. Through meetings with regional experts and by examining
published sources, scholars are studying religion, political
change, nationalism, language, and the legacy of Soviet military
intervention. They are also analyzing types of regional cooperation
that have worked in Central Asia but not in the Transcaucasus.
Roald
Z. Sagdeev, Senior Associate, Center for Political and Strategic
Studies.
University
of Maryland, College Park, MD. Project on conflict resolution
in the Transcaucasus and Central Asia. One year, $100,000.
In
1995 the Center for International Development and Conflict Management
at the University of Maryland launched its Partners in Conflict
project, which has recruited and trained eight scholars from
Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. After taking courses in conflict
resolution, democracy, and human rights, the scholars have returned
home to set up conflict management centers, publish articles,
and speak on radio programs. They communicate with each other
through electronic mail and have access to other conflict resolution
networks. The center, also funded by the Winston Foundation,
will assess their activities and present the results in three
working papers.
Barri
S. Sanders, Project Director, Center for International Development
and Conflict Management.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Working group on Israeli-Palestinian
relations. One year, $75,000.
The
Joint Working Group on Israeli-Palestinian Relations, convened
under the auspices of Harvard University's Program on International
Conflict Analysis and Resolution, has a membership of politically
and intellectually influential Israelis and Palestinians. The
group addresses such issues in the Mideast peace process as
Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, Palestinian refugees,
and the interim agreement signed by Israel and the Palestinian
Liberation Organization. Deliberations and research lead to
working papers for scholars and policymakers. The efforts are
an example of Track II diplomacy, which provides a forum for
examining problems and options that official negotiators might
be constrained from exploring openly.
Herbert
C. Kelman, Director, Program on International Conflict Analysis
and Resolution, Center for International Affairs.
Yale
University, New Haven, CT. Publication of the papers of the
secretary-general of the United Nations 1992B96, Boutros-Ghali.
Two years, $100,000.
During
the Cold War, the strategic contest between the superpowers
marginalized the United Nations' role in maintaining global
security. In the 1990s, in contrast, the UN has led attempts
to resolve several international crises the collapse of
governance in Somalia, the breakup of the former Yugoslavia,
threats to democratization in Haiti, and genocide in Rwanda.
It has also addressed nonproliferation and economic development.
Yale University scholars are researching Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali's public and nonpublic documents and his reports
to the Security Council. Selections that explain the legal and
political transformation of world affairs will be published
in two volumes. The UN's publication fund also provides support.
Charles
Hill, Diplomat-in-Residence and Lecturer in International Studies,
Yale Center for International and Area Studies.
Search
for Common Ground, Washington, DC. Project on conflict resolution
and negotiation in Macedonia. One year, $50,000.
Search
for Common Ground, which works to prevent mass violence around
the world, has a field office in Macedonia that aims to help
the former Yugoslav republic resolve its ethnic disputes peacefully.
Staff members of the Macedonia project conduct conflict resolution
training for law students and, as part of a plan to introduce
a conflict resolution curriculum in the nation's schools, mediation
training for teachers. A fellowship program operated with New
York University's Center for War, Peace, and the News Media
brings together radio journalists for collaborative cross-ethnic
investigative reporting. Additional funding comes from the Soros
Foundation and bilateral and multilateral sources.
Eran
Fraenkel, Executive Director, Search for Common Ground in Macedonia.
Institute
for Multi-Track Diplomacy, Washington, DC. Series of conflict
resolution meetings for public policy leaders in Cyprus. Fourteen
months, $75,000.
Since
1964 a United Nations peacekeeping force in Cyprus has served
as a buffer between the Turkish Cypriot north and the Greek
Cypriot south. The Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy has led
a consortium of nongovernmental organizations in training Greek
and Turkish Cypriots in conflict resolution. Its study group
of journalists, politicians, educators, business people, and
other opinion leaders and decision makers from both communities
is analyzing conflicts once considered intractable including
those in South Africa and the Middle EastCand will draw conclusions
that might be applied to the conflict in Cyprus.
Louise
Diamond, Executive Director, Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy.
STRENGTHENING
DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Programs with Russian military
personnel and policymakers on foreign and security policies. One
year, $325,000.
Two
programs organized by Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School
of Government promote dialogue between Russian and U.S. officials.
A program for general officers of the Russian Federation, also
funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, offers contacts and
workshops on economic, political, and foreign policy issues
at a time when morale in Russia's armed forces is low and resources
are limited. A program of lectures on political party formation,
budgeting, and lawmaking helps members of the Russian Duma better
understand democratic governance. The Russian participants give
presentations as well, on economic and security issues.
Robert
D. Blackwill, Lecturer in Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School
of Government.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Project on strengthening democratic
institutions in the former Soviet Union. Two years, $850,000.
The
mandate of Harvard University's Strengthening Democratic Institutions
Project is to conduct research and provide technical assistance
in the Soviet successor states as they struggle to make the
transition to sustainable democracy, free-market economies,
and cooperative international relations. In addition to Russian
democratization, the project's current focus is on Russian security
and on ethnic conflict in the new states. The aims of these
three strands, respectively, are to bring expertise to bear
on issues of privatization, democratization, denuclearization,
constitutional and legal reform, and conflict prevention; to
enhance Western understanding of current issues in Russian security;
and to formulate prescriptions for action by international organizations
in preventing ethnic conflict in the new states.
Among
other issues, staff members are analyzing the development of
political parties in Russia and monitoring Russian regional
legislative and gubernatorial elections. Lessons will be culled
from the experience of multiparty systems outside the United
States and communicated to Russian political elites.
Research
in the security field includes an exploration of the effects
of continued deterioration of Russia's military. Staff members
are also organizing a conference to address the policy implications
of various perspectives on Russia's national identity. An edited
volume of essays representing these points of view will be distributed
to the project's network of policymakers, scholars, and journalists
in the United States and in Europe.
In
their work on ethnic conflict, project staff members are holding
a seminar series and producing research reports, briefing materials,
and opinion pieces. The focus is the North Caucasus, which encompasses
Chechnya.
Graham
T. Allison, Director, Belfer Center for Science and International
Affairs, and Douglas Dillon Professor of Government, John F. Kennedy
School of Government.
Aspen
Institute, Queenstown, MD. Support of the international activities
of the Congressional Program. One year, $750,000; six months,
$55,000.
In
1986 Dick Clark, former U.S. senator and a senior fellow at
the Aspen Institute, launched a series of bipartisan conferences
and smaller meetings for congressional leaders on relations
between the United States and the Soviet Union. Following the
end of the Cold War, the project evolved to include U.S. policy
toward the successor states and the new democracies of Eastern
Europe. The aim is to help members of Congress bridge the gap
between the scholarly analysis of foreign policy issues and
the political realities of dealing with these issues as an elected
official. Participants also include parliamentarians from Russia,
Ukraine, and nations in Western and Eastern Europe.
A
second series of conferences, for members of Congress and the
Russian Duma, was instituted in 1995. One goal of the series
is to promote an understanding among American policymakers of
the importance of continuing a deeper engagement with their
Russian counterparts. The other goal is to foster a collegial
dialogue on critical policy issues among the factions in the
Duma and thus to strengthen that institution's credibility.
To
date the institute has held nineteen major conferences and thirty-three
interim meetings. More than a hundred members of Congress have
attended. One 1997 conference, focusing on the U.S. relationship
with Russia, Ukraine, and the nations of Western and Eastern
Europe, brought U.S. scholars and members of Congress together
with their counterparts from those countries. Supplemental Corporation
funding permitted the addition of a fourth day for a presentation
of the interim findings of the Carnegie Commission on Preventing
Deadly Conflict. At another 1997 conference, members of Congress
and the Duma discussed the U.S.-Russian relationship and the
difficulties in shaping responsible foreign and domestic policy
at a time when public opinion in both countries is marked by
antigovernment sentiment.
Dick
Clark, Director, Congressional Program, Aspen Institute.
Aspen
Institute, Queenstown, MD. Discussions between U.S. and Russian
policymakers conducted by the Aspen Strategy Group. Two years,
$518,000.
The
Aspen Strategy Group, a standing committee of the Aspen Institute,
has launched a program that enables the United States and Russia
to address contentious security-policy issues before they become
critical. In partnership with the Moscow-based Council on Foreign
and Defense Policy, the group is organizing a team of U.S. and
Russian private citizens with expertise in foreign and security
policy. Members will discuss obstacles to international weapons-control
agreements, the safety of U.S. and Russian inventories of nuclear
weapons and fissile materials, and third-country issues in U.S.-Russian
relations. Reports of the meetings will be issued in English
and Russian and made available on line.
Robert
Zoellick, Director, Aspen Strategy Group.
RAND,
Santa Monica, CA. Collaborative research and training programs
for policy analysts in Russia. Fifteen months, $300,000.
Since
1994 Corporation funds have enabled rand to collaborate with
two independent Russian research centers that produce analyses
for policymakers in Moscow and the regional capitals. The Center
for Ethnopolitical and Regional Research analyzes sociopolitical
changes in the Russian republics and the likely impact of these
changes on relations among the republics. The Center for Demography
and Human Ecology monitors and forecasts demographic trends
in Russia. rand scholars assist both centers by offering training
in research methodology and by conducting joint studies and
briefing central and regional policymakers on the results. Published
reports and proceedings of summary conferences are issued in
Russian and English.
Jeremy
R. Azrael, Director, Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies,
RAND.
University
of California, Berkeley, CA. Research project on prospects
for stability or disorder in Russia. Two years, $250,000.
Some
observers argue that Russia is on a path to social disorder,
institutional disintegration, and economic ruin. Others point
to an emerging middle class and viable new institutions as positive
counterweights to instability. University of California scholars
Victoria E. Bonnell and George W. Breslauer are leading an examination
of current trends and the strengths and weaknesses in Russia's
major institutions and sectors. The study encompasses the state
of legal reform, the military, economic elites, organized crime,
public opinion, and nationalism. A multiauthored volume will
consider several possible outcomes of the economic and political
transformations under way.
Victoria
E. Bonnell, Chair, Center for Slavic and East European Studies,
or George W. Breslauer, Chair, Berkeley Program in Soviet and
Post-Soviet Studies, University of California.
Council
on Foreign Relations, New York, NY. Study of political, economic,
and social change and international relations in the post-Cold
War era. Two years, $150,000.
The
Council on Foreign Relations' East-West Project studies the
effects of domestic developments in the former Soviet bloc countries
on relations with the West. Four books of essays are being produced.
Two volumes analyses of Russia's foreign policy and of
the potential for conflict created by cross-border movements
of Hungarians, Russians, Serbs, and Albanians continue
the project's focus on Europe. Two volumes consider, respectively,
the future of China and the fate of India's founding principles
of secularism, socialism, democracy, and nonalignment. All four
books are being written for journalists, policymakers, academics,
and interested citizens.
Michael
E. Mandelbaum, Director, East-West Project, Council on Foreign
Relations.
New
York University, New York, NY. Media assistance program in
the Russian Federation. One year, $250,000.
New
York University's Center for War, Peace, and the News Media,
in association with the Moscow-based Institute for USA and Canada
Studies, established the Russian-American Press and Information
Center (RAPIC) in 1992. RAPIC, also supported by other foundations,
U.S. federal agencies, and U.S. and Russian corporations, operates
in six regional offices in Russia. Through briefings, seminars,
publications, and training, it helps journalists cover elections,
market economics, and ethnic conflicts. RAPIC also addresses
issues facing journalists and media managers, including financial
management, codes of ethics, and new broadcast technologies.
Robert
Karl Manoff, Director, Center for War, Peace, and the News Media,
New York University.
International
Research and Exchanges Board, Washington, DC. Technical assistance
in computer telecommunications for projects between the United
States and the former Soviet Union. Thirteen months, $105,000.
The
International Laboratory VEGA was established with Corporation
assistance to develop the telecommunications infrastructure
of Russian research institutes. Its main aim is to enhance collaboration
and information exchange among scientists and other scholars
within the successor states and abroad. The laboratory also
works with staff of the Network on Ethnological Monitoring and
Early Warning of Conflict, overseeing operational needs, training
users, and ensuring access to the Internet. Since 1993 VEGA
has been a project of the International Research and Exchanges
Board, which has offices in Moscow.
Daniel
C. Matuszewski, President, International Research and Exchanges
Board.
Financial
Services Volunteer Corps, New York, NY. Assistance and training
in the development of free-market financial institutions in the
former Soviet Union. One year, $75,000.
The
Financial Services Volunteer Corps brings U.S. business leaders
to Russia and other former Soviet states to consult on the creation
of viable market economies. Serving on a pro bono basis, these
bankers, lawyers, accountants, and other professionals draft
regulations, train bank managers, advise policymakers, and help
develop financial services. The corps is continuing its efforts
to strengthen the capabilities of the central banks and to assist
parliaments in creating workable regulatory environments for
national economies. It is also extending its work to the private
sector and to regional centers in Russia and in other states.
Other funders include the U.S. Agency for International Development
and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
J.
Andrew Spindler, Executive Director, Financial Services Volunteer
Corps.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Project to strengthen democratic
leadership in Eastern and Central Europe. Nineteen months, $75,000.
Under
Communist regimes of Eastern and Central Europe, women parliamentarians
existed but never acquired influence or power. Today, women
in the former Eastern bloc countries find their concerns neglected
in policymaking. Harvard University's Project Liberty encourages
women's organizations in North America and abroad to form transatlantic
networks. It also teaches women in various professions the skills
needed to become effectively engaged in politics. Workshops
cover the differing models of democracy; equal opportunity legislation,
family policies, and affirmative action; coalition building;
and dealing with the media. Support also comes from the European
Union.
Shirley
Williams, Director, Project Liberty, John F. Kennedy School of
Government.
Brown
University, Providence, RI. Conferences on the end of the
Cold War, organized jointly with Ohio State University. One year,
$113,000.
Brown
University's Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International
Studies and the Mershon Center at Ohio State University are
holding two 1998 conferences on the end of the Cold War. Policymakers
of the period and Russian and U.S. scholars will evaluate historical
materials from the archives of both countries and examine competing
explanations for the end of the Cold War. These include the
West's "victory" through unrelenting military pressure on the
Soviet Union; an increasingly costly arms race; and Mikhail
Gorbachev's ideas about the economy and national security. Two
books, written by American and Russian scholars, will analyze
the explanations for and lessons of the Cold War and its resolution.
Thomas
J. Biersteker, Director, Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute for International
Studies.
COOPERATIVE
SECURITY AND NONPROLIFERATION
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Program on new approaches to Russian
security. Two years, $300,000.
The
Program on New Approaches to Russian Security, based at Harvard
University's Davis Center for Russian Studies and the Center
for International Affairs, encourages innovative analyses of
the societal, economic, and political forces that will ultimately
shape Russia's national security interests. Through conferences
and workshops in the United States and Russia, the program is
developing a network of young scholars from both countries.
They will initially address two topics: the role of the military
in Russian security and Russia's security linkages with international
and regional institutions. Working papers and policy briefs
will be disseminated to scholars and policy analysts in the
United States and beyond.
Celeste
A. Wallander, Associate Professor of Government, Davis Center
for Russian Studies.
Brookings
Institution, Washington, DC. Research on the transformation
of international relationships and its implications for international
security. Two years, $1,000,000.
Since
1990 scholars at the Brookings Institution have been developing
a program of research and leadership education to explore the
concept of cooperative security as a guiding principle for the
postBCold War world. They have defined cooperative security
as a formal reliance on collaboration rather than confrontation
between countries and the creation of political, economic, and
security relationships that protect the integrity of borders
and that provide transparency, mutual reassurance, safeguards,
and means of verification to allies and former adversaries alike.
Brookings
team members are now exploring ways that the United States could
lead efforts to improve standards for the security and control
of nuclear weapons and materials and to pursue an international
arrangement for the clear, comprehensive accounting of weapons
and fissionable material. They are also considering how to bring
Russia and China into an inclusive international security arrangement.
Finally, they are analyzing Brookings' recent case studies on
unresolved conflicts in the Balkans, Sudan, and Somalia and
on the contrasting outcome in South Africa. The aim is to advance
an understanding of the characteristics of effective intervention
in civil conflicts and further develop strategies for preventive
action. As part of their research, they are using the Internet
to conduct a worldwide dialogue among a group of institutes
on relationships between security, economic development, social
equity, and environmental issues.
The
project, which receives additional support from the W. Alton
Jones Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, will result in books, occasional papers, articles
in professional journals and public media, and a new Brookings
series of policy briefs.
John
D. Steinbruner, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution.
Stanford
University, Stanford, CA. Research and training in international
security and arms control. Two years, $2,000,000.
Stanford
University's Center for International Security and Arms Control
works at the intersection of science, technology, public policy,
and international security. The efforts of its resident team
former policymakers, academics in a range of disciplines,
and conflict resolution and prevention specialists are
augmented by a group of visiting fellows. Since the center's
founding in 1983 to study the danger of nuclear war, security
in northeast Asia, and the U.S.-Soviet relationship, it has
adapted to new security challenges.
The
center's Science Program has begun addressing ways in which
technology might be brought to bear on issues of terrorism,
internal conflicts, and United Nations peacekeeping operations.
Current studies include an analysis of the technical and political
issues associated with the proliferation of chemical and biological
weapons and an examination of the possible effect of new information
technologies on the ways in which future wars may be fought.
Under
the center's General Research Program, scholars are studying
regional security issues in the AsianBPacific region, Russian
nuclear security and proliferation issues, and the circumstances
that lead states to acquire nuclear weapons. A new project on
conflict prevention and resolution is examining the manipulation
of nationalist sentiments for political gain, the effect of
civil conflict on the process of democratization, the threat
posed to regional security arrangements by interstate and intrastate
conflicts, and the problems for outside intervention in internal
conflicts.
Michael
M. May or Scott Sagan, Codirectors, Center for International Security
and Arms Control.
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA. Research at the Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs on international security. Two
years, $700,000.
Since
1995 scholars at Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science
and International Affairs have been developing broad new concepts
of international security and formulating policy recommendations
on security issues. The center has published two books in the
past year: one examining the security measures used to guard
Russian nuclear materials and one summarizing the implications
of internal conflicts for the international community. The research
is being extended in three areas, the results of which will
be produced in books, articles, and monographs and brought to
the attention of U.S. policymakers.
In
the area of democracy and peace, center scholars have three
works in progress. One is an identification of the conditions
favorable to the "democratic peace" hypothesis that advanced
democracies tend not to engage each other in conflicts. A second
is an exploration of whether U.S. foreign policy should seek
to promote democracy abroad and, if so, why. A third is a study
of the hypothesis that many democratizing states undergo a volatile
transition in which they tend to be relatively more likely to
engage in war.
In
the area of proliferation, the scholars are addressing the capabilities
and incentives of terrorist groups seeking to acquire and use
weapons of mass destruction. They are also examining the methods
employed by governments to counter terrorism and preserve security
and the consequences these methods may have for civil liberties.
Additional topics include the U.S.-Russian nuclear relationship
and the management of nuclear weapons policy in the U.S. and
Russia.
The
scholars' efforts in the area of internal conflict are focusing
on how governments, especially in Asia, manage ethnic relations
to prevent or contain intergroup conflict. They are also studying
the causes and prevention of civil wars.
Graham
T. Allison, Director, Belfer Center for Science and International
Affairs, and Douglas Dillon Professor of Government, John F. Kennedy
School of Government.
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. Support of the Defense
and Arms Control Studies Program. Two years, $900,000.
The
Defense and Arms Control Studies Program at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology enables some sixty social and physical
scientists to apply technological perspectives to policy analysis.
The program's working groups of faculty members, visiting scholars,
and graduate students are now conducting four projects.
In
an examination of ways to control the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction, the scholars are addressing how current
U.S. efforts to develop and deploy ballistic missile defense
systems pose a threat to prospects for further nuclear arms
reduction, especially by the United States and Russia, and to
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. A second project concerns
the possibility of exchanges among members of various professions
and groups clergy, physicians, nongovernmental organizations
working on social welfare, and the military to promote
peace. In a third area, the researchers are studying the political
and management lessons of the Cold War. They are considering
the ways in which the U.S. government identified and confronted
the Soviet threat, translated official assessments of the Soviet
Union into policy, and successfully mobilized scientific, technological,
and other resources. A fourth project entails the analysis of
the causes of deadly conflict, the domestic constraints on U.S.
humanitarian and peacekeeping activities, and the military requirements
for effective interventions.
The
results of the studies will be communicated in the program's
journal, Breakthroughs, and through other scholarly publications,
meetings with academics and policymakers, and a World Wide Web
site. Support also comes from other foundations and from public
and other private sources.
Harvey
M. Sapolsky, Director, Defense and Arms Control Studies Program,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, and Harvard University, Cambridge,
MA. Research and writing on international security by William
J. Perry and Ashton B. Carter. Thirteen months, $136,000 (Stanford)
and $264,000 (Harvard).
William
J. Perry, former secretary of defense, and Ashton B. Carter,
former assistant secretary of defense for international security
policy, articulated a post-Cold War strategy known as preventive
defense. The objective is to draw the security leaders of other
countries into mutually beneficial and durable cooperative security
relationships. Mechanisms for doing so include the development
of regular consultations among defense leaders and specialists
and the promotion of a shared body of practical experience among
military establishments that creates new precedents and patterns
for joint action.
Perry
and Carter have returned to their academic bases at, respectively,
Stanford and Harvard universities. Under two grants, they are
continuing to explore applications of preventive defense and
are jointly producing a book with the working title, Preventive
Defense in an Age of Hope. The book will cover U.S. interests
and leadership, deterrence, efforts to reduce the nuclear danger,
counterproliferation, and peacekeeping and humanitarian operations.
William
J. Perry, Michael and Barbara Berberian Professor, Stanford University,
or Ashton B. Carter, Ford Foundation Professor of Science and
International Affairs, John F. Kennedy School of Government.
University
of Maryland Foundation, College Park, MD. Professional development
program for women in international security. One year, $100,000.
Women
in International Security is a membership organization dedicated
to strengthening opportunities for women working in international
security studies and related fields. It has created a network
of women professionals around the world, organized workshops
on media relations, and cultivated resources to support women
seeking professional employment and career advancement. Planned
activities include the promotion of information exchange among
women at the senior-career stage, policy fellowships and skills-building
workshops for midcareer women, and a summer symposium for graduate
students and mentoring activities for younger women. Additional
funders are the Ford Foundation and Citibank.
Peggy
Knudson, Executive Director, Women in International Security,
University of Maryland.
Monterey
Institute of International Studies, Monterey, CA. Research
and education on the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
Two years. $450,000.
The
Newly Independent States Nonproliferation Project is an undertaking
of the Monterey Institute's Center for Nonproliferation Studies.
The center is developing a cadre of nonproliferation specialists
in the successor states who can strengthen their countries'
nonproliferation and export control policies. Beyond offering
training to scholars, journalists, and policymakers, the center
links working groups with nonproliferation institutes around
the world, publishes a journal, and tracks data on the smuggling
of nuclear materials and the brain drain of nuclear expertise
from the successor states. Funding also comes from U.S. government
agencies, other foundations, and database usage fees and publication
subscriptions.
William
C. Potter, Professor of International Policy, Center for Nonproliferation
Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies.
Institute
for Defense and Disarmament Studies, Cambridge, MA. International
survey of cooperative policy on conventional arms control. Two
years, $150,000.
The
Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies' Arms and Security
Project has analyzed postBCold War trends in global arms industries
and the impact of advanced conventional weapons on international
security. The project's international team of scholars has addressed
the continued deployment, production, and export of combat aircraft
by industrialized and developing nations. In a new annual publication,
Arms and Security, the institute is surveying global
armament trends and likely policy choices in arms control, describing
how current arms export policies undermine security. It is advancing
ideas on new forms of international cooperation to curb arms
sales.
Randall
Forsberg, Executive Director, Institute for Defense and Disarmament
Studies.
Stanford
University, Stanford, CA. Project on industry restructuring
and the political economy in Russia. One year, $225,000.
Since
the early 1990s, researchers at Stanford University's Center
for International Security and Arms Control have studied and
assisted Russian efforts to convert part of its defense industry
to peacetime uses. The project is focusing on three aspects
of this transformation: cooperative ventures with U.S. companies;
the prospects for military-oriented research and development
firms; and the effects that privatization, corporate governance,
market structure, and state financial support for manufacturing
firms are having on defense conversion. Findings from the research
will be presented in a book on Russia's attempts to restructure
and transform its defense sector. The Eurasia Foundation also
provides support.
Michael
M. May or Scott Sagan, Codirectors, Center for International Security
and Arms Control.
National
Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC. Support of activities
of the Committee on International Security and Arms Control with
China and Ukraine. One year, $250,000.
The
Committee on International Security and Arms Control (CISAC)
of the National Academy of Sciences draws together scientific
and technical specialists to work toward common solutions of
security and defense problems. In discussions with scientists
in China, cisac is addressing Asian-Pacific security, the future
of nuclear weapons policy, and issues involving the proliferation
of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons. It is meeting
with scientists from Ukraine to address energy and security,
missile proliferation, and that country's participation in international
arms control efforts. Funding also comes from the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Jo
L. Husbands, Director, Committee on International Security and
Arms Control, National Academy of Sciences.
Atlantic
Council of the United States, Washington, DC. Programs on
Ukrainian-American relations and the reduction of the risks of
nuclear proliferation. One year, $100,000.
The
Atlantic Council's Further Reins on Nuclear Arms project aims
to create international consensus on ways to reduce the nuclear
threat. It holds consultations and produces policy papers for
government officials, military and business leaders, diplomats,
scholars, and journalists in this country and abroad. The council's
Future of Ukrainian-American Relations project, which is also
supported by other foundations, holds exchanges for policymakers
from the two nations. Among the goals are to sharpen U.S. interest
in Ukraine and introduce Ukrainian leaders to economic and military
policy alternatives. Recommendations are circulated to governmental
and nongovernmental leaders in Ukraine and the United States.
Andrew
J. Goodpaster, Chairman, Atlantic Council of the United States.
Wisconsin
Project on Nuclear Arms Control, Washington, DC. Research,
writing, and advocacy on the enforcement of export controls. Eighteen
months, $75,000.
The
Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control tracks international
sales of ballistic missile and nuclear weapons technologies.
It also monitors legislation and regulations to control the
export of these technologies. Each month the project's electronic
bulletin Risk Report examines the nuclear, chemical,
or missile program of a different country and presents an unclassified
list of weapons buyers there that are linked to the spread of
weapons of mass destruction. The objective is to help exporters
make informed, responsible sales decisions. Additional support
for the project comes from other foundations and from subscription
sales of Risk Report.
Gary
Milhollin, Director, Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control.
Fund
for Peace, New York, NY. Media and Security Project. One year,
$75,000.
The
aim of the Media and Security Project of the Fund for Peace
is to strengthen media coverage of international security issues.
The project's on- and off-the-record gatherings bring print
journalists, editors, television correspondents, producers,
and bureau chiefs together for discussions and briefings with
military and national security experts and representatives of
the departments of State and Defense. Through a new fellowship
program, each year a minority graduate student from the School
of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University
works with the project to gain exposure to the field of international
security journalism. The Ford, W. Alton Jones, and Robert R.
McCormick Tribune foundations provide further support.
Harry
J. Disch, Director, Media and Security Project, Fund for Peace.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York, New York, NY. Research and an edited
volume on McGeorge Bundy's role in policymaking on the Vietnam
War. Nine months, $70,000.
At
the time of his death in 1996, Corporation scholar-in-residence
McGeorge Bundy was writing a book on his role, as national security
advisor to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, in formulating policy
on Vietnam. He intended the book for a broad audience. The Corporation
is enabling Gordon Goldstein, Bundy's collaborator in the project,
to draw on the public record of Bundy's writings and on unpublished
materials to complete an edited volume that will come as close
as possible to the volume Bundy envisaged. The materials will
be reviewed by members of Bundy's family and by experts selected
in consultation with Yale University Press, which will publish
the book.
David
C. Speedie, Program Chair, Preventing Deadly Conflict, Carnegie
Corporation of New York.
DISCRETIONARY
GRANTS
Carnegie
Corporation of New York, New York, NY
For research and writing by McGeorge Bundy, $12,000
Center
for Civil Society International, Seattle, WA
Toward a project on civil society in Central Asia, $25,000
Conflict
Management Group, Cambridge, MA
Toward a conference on peace and stability in Chechnya-Russian
Federation relations, $25,000
Donetsk
Scientific-Applied Association Psychological Center, Donetsk,
Ukraine
Toward support of conflict resolution in Ukraine and development
of a network of conflict resolution organizations and practitioners,
$25,000
George
Mason University, Fairfax, VA
Toward a workshop on conflict resolution in the Transcaucasus,
$15,000
Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA
For research and writing on international security by Ashton B.
Carter, $25,000
Institute
of USA and Canada Studies, Moscow, Russia
For a research project on U.S.BRussian relations, $25,000
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Toward research and writing on nuclear deterrence and U.S.BRussian
relations, $15,000
National
Peace Institute Foundation, Washington, DC Toward a network
of women civic and professional leaders in Armenia, Azerbaijan,
and Georgia, $25,000
Omsk
State University, Omsk, Russia
Toward an international conference on RussianB Eurasian relations,
$15,000
Search
for Common Ground, Washington, DC
For strengthening its fund-raising capacity, $25,000
State
of the World Forum, San Francisco, CA
Toward travel costs of participants in a conference on global
priorities in the twenty-first century, $25,000
United
Nations Association of the United States of America, New York,
NY
Toward a project on the United Nations and U.S. national interests,
$25,000