For
Immediate Release: June 12, 1997
Carnegie
Corporation's Program, 1983-1997
HIGHLIGHTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
NEW YORK, June 12 -- The twin preoccupations of
Andrew Carnegie's philanthropy were education
and peace, and these great themes have also permeated
Carnegie Corporation's programs under David A.
Hamburg, who steps aside as the foundation's eleventh
president on June 12.
"Carnegie's
personal philanthropy reflected a unique combination
of ideas, institution building, and social action,
the spirit of which the Corporation has tried
to uphold during the past fourteen years," Hamburg
observed in his last annual report essay, "A
Perspective on Carnegie Corporation's Program,
1983-1997," published today.
In the essay, Hamburg provides a detailed accounting
of his stewardship of the foundation since 1983,
when he set forth new program directions in the
context of drastic changes in the American family
and society and, more broadly, the Cold War and
the worldwide transformation in science and technology.
The essay further lays out a "democracy agenda"
for national and international attention in the
future, focusing on the need for "communities
of the world" to reconcile their differences and
cooperate in creating systems for the prevention
of mass violence.
During the period 1983-97, the foundation developed
grant programs to improve the education and healthy
development of children and youth, improve the
superpower relationship and prevent deadly conflict,
strengthen human resources in developing countries,
especially Africa, and promote democratic processes
in the United States and abroad, appropriating
approximately $622 million for grants and special
projects for these purposes.
Across all of these programs, the common thread
is the "prevention of rotten outcomes," in Hamburg's
phrase. "From child and adolescent development
to international relations, the underlying logic
is the same: Prevention begins with anticipation,
even with long-range foresight, in which research
can identify risk factors and point to steps that
can be taken to counteract or avoid an undesirable
outcome, and pivotal institutions can cooperate
in shaping behavior away from risk factors and
dangerous directions."
Thus the Corporation supported research and projects
to clarify the positive conditions for ensuring
healthy child and adolescent development, to make
this knowledge widely understood throughout the
country, and to strengthen the capacity of key
institutions, beginning with the family and schools,
to meet the developmental and educational needs
of children from the prenatal period to age fifteen.
"So,
too, in seeking to avoid deadly conflicts leading
to mass violence, the Corporation sought ways
that governments, intergovernmental organizations,
and the institutions of civil society could foster
the conditions under which different human groups
can learn to live together amicably."
Hamburg added that "one of the great privileges
of a foundation like Carnegie Corporation is the
opportunity to stimulate, support, and facilitate
the work of scientists, scholars, and other experts
of the first rank. This, in turn, opens up the
possibility of playing a kind of brokerage function,
fostering mutually beneficial contact between
policymakers in various sectors -- government,
business, the media -- with independent experts
in major problem areas." The Corporation has facilitated
such interchanges through the work of its grantees
and the use of its convening function.
Sounding a major theme of his presidency, Hamburg
said that "pivotal institutions such as the family,
schools, community-based institutions, and the
media have the power to shape attitudes and skills
toward decent human relations or toward hatred
and violence." Ethnic prejudice and hatred exist
all over the world, he said, but there are also
stunning examples of tolerance, cooperation, and
friendship between different groups. What are
the conditions under which the outcome can go
one way or another? "If we could understand such
questions better, perhaps we could learn to tilt
the balance toward cultures of peace."
To counteract the ancient human tendencies toward
ethnocentrism and prejudice, it will be necessary
in child development "to put deliberate, explicit
emphasis on developing prosocial orientations
and a sense of worth based not on depreciation
of others but rather on the constructive attributes
of oneself and others," Hamburg declared.
On the international level, "we must seek ways
to expand favorable contact between people from
different groups and nations. Some measure of
comprehension of a strange culture is vital. At
a deeper level, joint projects involving sustained
cooperation can provide, if only on a small scale,
an experience of working together toward a superordinate
goal."
Hamburg noted that "human societies have been
remarkably inattentive to the possibilities for
breaking down antagonisms between groups or, preferably,
preventing these conflicts from arising in the
first place."
While there is little precedent for well-organized
international efforts to help substantially with
the process of democratization, Hamburg said "the
challenge becomes vital and the opportunity precious"
if democracy can be seen as a powerful and constructive
mechanism for resolving "the ubiquitous ongoing
conflicts of our highly contentious species."
The power of technological advance and global
economic integration to change social conditions
is another critical issue for the democracy agenda,
said Hamburg, recalling that new opportunities
brought by the industrial revolution also produced
severe disruptions that had much to do with the
emergence of communism, fascism, and the Nazi
catastrophe.
Warning that the frustrations and uncertainties
of a complex, rapidly changing world can trigger
scapegoating of highly visible groups like minorities,
immigrants, and government officials, he said
such groups have already become the targets of
irrational, hateful, or extremist responses, which
can have serious implications for democratic societies
throughout the world.
The concepts of governance appropriate to the
mid-twentieth century have not been easily adapted
to the internationalization of information, capital,
and labor occurring in the late twentieth. "On
topic after topic, old notions of governance are
challenged." The question is, "Are there some
minimal, essential functions that government must
perform -- functions about which there is broad
agreement?"
The drastic changes under way also raise educational
questions, in which people must learn to adjust
their knowledge and skills to new circumstances,
prepare for the unpredictable -- indeed, prepare
for change itself.
Human resources are central to the task of upgrading
development opportunities everywhere. Fundamental
for development is the growth of knowledge, skill,
and freedom. "Knowledge is mainly generated by
research and development; skills are mainly generated
by education and training; freedom is mainly generated
by democratic institutions." Without these"essential
ingredients," many countries could slide down
a slope of degradation -- become an incubator
of hatred, violence, and terrorism as well as
a source of accelerating environmental damage
and massive refugee flows.
In closing, Hamburg expressed his gratitude for
the opportunity to lead Carnegie Corporation's
efforts during these fourteen years. "By the same
token, I relish the opportunity of passing the
baton to my distinguished successor, Vartan Gregorian,
and pursuing my substantive work with enthusiasm."
Hamburg will continue leading with Cyrus Vance
the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict
and write books.
Hamburg thanked the Corporation's trustees, who
have been "highly collegial, constructive, and
forward looking. They have been deeply engaged
in the work of the foundation while providing
important oversight and policy direction." He
also acknowledged the work of the staff, which
"has been highly effective in program development,
finance, and administration -- receptive to good
ideas and innovations while applying high standards
of appraisal and fair procedures in decision making."
During the year ending September 30, 1996, Carnegie
Corporation of New York made 335 grants and 8
appropriations totaling $59 million. The 1996
annual report contains the president's essay and
detailed descriptions of the foundation's activities
for the year. The Corporation was founded in 1911
by Andrew Carnegie "for the advancement and diffusion
of knowledge and understanding." The Corporation's
capital fund, originally donated at a value of
$135 million, had a market value of $1.37 billion
on December 31, 1996.