Institute for Policy Studies: Difference between revisions
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* [http://www.ips-dc.org/ Institute for Policy Studies website] |
* [http://www.ips-dc.org/ Institute for Policy Studies website] |
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* [http://www.heritage.org/Research/GovernmentReform/IA2.cfm Extended critical history of the IPS] |
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[[Category:Political and economic think tanks]] |
[[Category:Political and economic think tanks]] |
Revision as of 22:55, 5 May 2006
Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) is an American lobby for progressive or leftist causes based in Washington, DC.
The organization was founded in 1963 with a stated mandate to provide "an independent center of research and education on public policy problems in Washington." From the very start, the organization identified with "progressive" and revolutionary causes.
Although it is primarily a public relations lobby, the IPS describes itself as a scholarly think tank and uses pseudo-academic titles to describe its employees, e.g. fellow and associate fellow, but it produces no peer-reviewed resesarch. The IPS's most famous fellow was Chilean exile Orlando Letelier, a former member of Salvadore Allende's cabinet. Letelier was assassinated in 1976 by agents of the Pinochet regime while carrying a pay receipt from Cuban DGI station chief Luis Fernandez Ona.
IPS's current director is John Cavanagh.
The institute was founded in 1963 by two former aides to Kennedy administration advisers: Marcus Raskin, aide to McGeorge Bundy, and Richard Barnet, aide to John J. McCloy. Start-up funding was secured from the Sears heir, Philip Stern, and banker, James Warburg.
IPS claims to have "played key roles in the civil rights and anti-war movements in the 1960s, the women's and environmental movements in the 1970s, the anti-apartheid and anti-intervention movements in the 1980s, and the fair trade and environmental justice movements of the 1990s and 2000s."
Current list of fellows, associate fellows, and research fellows
- Sarah Anderson
- Phyllis Bennis
- Steve Cobble
- Karen Dolan
- Stacie Jonas
- Saul Landau
- Eric Leaver
- Nadia Martinez
- Miriam Pemberton
- Marcus Raskin
- Sanho Tree
- Daphne Wysham
References
- The Left-Leaning Think Tank by Peter Kovler, from Change magazine