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[[Image:Carnegie Endowment.jpg|thumb|right|The Endowment's headquarters at 1779 [[Massachusetts Avenue (Washington, D.C.)|Massachusetts Avenue]] NW, [[Washington, D.C.]] ]]
[[Image:Carnegie Endowment.jpg|thumb|right|The Endowment's headquarters at 1779 [[Massachusetts Avenue (Washington, D.C.)|Massachusetts Avenue]] NW, [[Washington, D.C.]] ]]


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The Endowment is engaged in research, publishing, and convening and creating new institutions and international networks. Its interests span geographic regions and the relations among governments, business, international organizations and civil society, focusing on economic, political, and technological forces driving global change.
The Endowment is engaged in research, publishing, and convening and creating new institutions and international networks. Its interests span geographic regions and the relations among governments, business, international organizations and civil society, focusing on economic, political, and technological forces driving global change.


==History==
Carnegie offers [[Arabic language|Arabic]], [[Chinese language|Chinese]] and [[Russian language|Russian]] language portals to its website.


At the beginning of the 20th Century, [[Andrew Carnegie]] renewed his long-standing interest in world peace. "I am drawn more to this cause than to any," he wrote in 1907.<ref>[http://www.carnegieendowment.org/about/index.cfm?fa=history CEIP official website - history]</ref> Like other leading internationalists of his day, Carnegie believed that war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and organizations. Between 1900 and 1914, he gave generously in support of this belief, including $1.5 million in 1903 for the construction of the [[Peace Palace]] at [[The Hague]]. Carnegie's single largest commitment to this field, however, was his creation of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
==International operations==
Unlike most [[think tanks]], which are based in one country{{Fact|date=June 2008}}, The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is based out of several countries. In 1993, the Endowment launched the Carnegie Moscow Center, with the belief that, "in today's world a think tank whose mission is to contribute to global security, stability, and prosperity requires a permanent presence and a multinational outlook at the core of its operations".<ref name=about>[http://www.carnegieendowment.org/about/ About the Endowment] Carnegie Endowment website</ref>


On his seventy-fifth birthday, November 25, 1910, Carnegie announced the establishment of the Endowment with a gift of $10 million. He selected 28 trustees who were leaders in American business and public life; among them [[Harvard University]] president Charles W. Eliot; philanthropist Robert S. Brookings; former Ambassador to the [[United Kingdom]] Joseph H. Choate; former Secretary of State John W. Foster; former president of [[MIT]] and then-president of the [[Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching]] Henry S. Pritchett; and Carnegie Institution president Robert S. Woodward.
Carnegie's stated goal is to become the first multinational/global think tank.<ref name=about/>


In his deed of gift, presented in Washington on December 14, 1910, Carnegie charged trustees to use the fund to "hasten the abolition of international war, the foulest blot upon our civilization," and he gave his trustees "the widest discretion as to the measures and policy they shall from time to time adopt" in carrying out the purpose of the fund.
The Carnegie Endowment now has operations in several countries, with headquarters in [[Moscow]], [[Beijing]], [[Beirut]], [[Brussels]], and [[Washington, D.C.]].


Carnegie chose longtime adviser [[Elihu Root]], Senator from [[New York]] and former [[Secretary of War]] and of State, to be the Endowment's first president. Awarded the [[Nobel Peace Prize]] in 1912, Root served until 1925.
==History==
[[Andrew Carnegie]], like other leading internationalists of his day, believed that war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and organizations. "I am drawn more to this cause than to any," he wrote in 1907.{{Fact|date=June 2008}} Carnegie's single largest commitment in this field was his creation of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


The Endowment was initially organized into three divisions: one to aid in the development of international law and dispute settlement, another to study the causes and impact of war and a third to promote international understanding and cooperation. A European Center and advisory board was set up in Paris.
On his seventy-fifth birthday, November 25, 1910, Andrew Carnegie announced the establishment of the Endowment with a gift of $10 million. In his deed of gift, presented in Washington on December 14, 1910, Carnegie charged trustees to use the fund to "hasten the abolition of international war, the foulest blot upon our civilization," and he gave his trustees "the widest discretion as to the measures and policy they shall from time to time adopt" in carrying out the purpose of the fund.{{Fact|date=June 2008}}


Although World War I shattered the high expectations of turn-of-the-century internationalists, the Endowment persevered with its international conciliation efforts. During the interwar period, the Endowment revitalized efforts to promote international conciliation, financed reconstruction projects in Europe, supported the work of other organizations and founded the [[Academy of International Law]] at The Hague. Endowment publications include the unprecedented 22-volume Classics of International Law and the seminal 150-volume Economic and Social History of the World War.
Carnegie chose longtime adviser [[Elihu Root]], Senator from [[New York]] and former Secretary of War and of State, to be the Endowment's first president. Awarded the [[Nobel Peace Prize]] in 1912, Root served until 1925.


In 1925, [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] succeeded Elihu Root as president. For the next 20 years that flamboyant and energetic figure—who also won the Nobel Peace Prize—promoted his vision on international cooperation in business and politics. Among other accomplishments, he was instrumental in fashioning the Kellogg-Briand no-war pact of 1928.
In 1914, the Endowment helped created the [[Hague Academy of International Law]]. The Academy is housed in the [[Peace Palace]] in [[The Hague]], [[Netherlands]], and opened its doors in 1923.

Following World War II and Butler's retirement, the Endowment's three divisions were consolidated under the direction of President Joseph E. Johnson. John Foster Dulles led the board.

For the next two decades, the Endowment conducted research and public education programs on a range of issues, particularly relating to the newly created United Nations and on the future of the postwar international legal system. The Endowment provided diplomatic training for some 250 foreign service officers from emerging nations and published International Conciliation, a leading journal in the field. The European Center moved to [[Geneva]] for closer contact with UN agencies and became a focal point for European and American dialogue on international issues.

The 1971 inauguration of a new president, Thomas L. Hughes, came at a time of deepening interdependence among nations, new challenges to world security and intensified debate within the United States about the country's course. The Endowment's board was chaired by Milton Katz, then John W. Douglas. Programs were consolidated and designed to be more relevant to U.S. policy. The Endowment moved its headquarters back to Washington, D.C., and by 1983 had closed both the [[New York]] and [[Geneva]] offices. In 1971, the Endowment inaugurated "Face-to Face," a forum facilitating dialogue among governmental and nongovernmental participants on major international issues. In the early 1970s, the Endowment also acquired ownership of [[Foreign Policy]] magazine.
Once virtually alone in conducting international affairs research, the Endowment now found itself among a growing array of think tanks and nongovernmental organizations concerned with foreign relations in one form or another, a trend that continues to the present. The Endowment contributed to this proliferation by "incubating" new organizations—among them the [[German Marshall Fund]] of the United States, the [[Institute for International Economics]], and the [[Arms Control Association]]. On the Endowment's seventy-fifth anniversary in 1985, it published Estrangement: America and the World, an examination of the position of the United States in the postwar period.

In 1991, Morton I. Abramowitz became president, leading the Endowment during five eventful post-Cold War years under the chairmanships of Charles J. Zwick and Robert Carswell. In keeping with Carnegie's tradition, they saw new opportunities in the rapidly shifting international landscape.

A distinguished group of senior associates tackled such timely issues as democracy promotion, the political economy of market reforms, and the use of force and peacekeeping. In 1992, the Endowment generated the first comprehensive studies of the new foreign policy environment, including Changing Our Ways: America and the New World and Memorandum to the President-Elect: Harnessing Process to Purpose, a bipartisan assessment of the executive branch.

The Endowment also committed a sizable amount of its own funds to founding the [[Carnegie Moscow Center]]. Established in 1993, the Center has become one of the leading public policy institutions operating in the region. Also during Abramowitz's tenure, the Endowment built its new, permanent headquarters at 1779 Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, D.C.

Jessica T. Mathews took over as president in May 1997. Under Mathews' leadership, the Endowment has experienced rapid growth, partly fueled through increased support from outside funders.

Mathews transformed a group of small research projects into a field-defining, interdisciplinary study of [[globalization]], called the [[Global Policy Program]]. The program addresses the policy challenges arising from the simultaneous processes of economic, political, and technological change. The effort has made the Endowment an important worldwide policy center for understanding this phenomenon.

Also during Mathew's tenure, the Carnegie Endowment transformed Foreign Policy from a quarterly journal into a vibrant, accessible bimonthly magazine. Relaunched on its 30th anniversary, the magazine has won growing readership and recognition in a time when traditional media are cutting back coverage of international affairs.

Following its century-long practice of adapting to changed circumstances, the Carnegie Endowment launched in 2007 an ambitious new vision to transform itself from a think tank on international issues to the first truly global international think tank. This new initiative seeks to: develop improved understanding in the United States on the local and regional perspectives of those in other countries and regions; formulate actionable and practical policy prescriptions for United States foreign policy and international relations; and provide a model of how to do first-rate, independent policy research. This new vision expanded the Carnegie Endowment geographically from Washington, D.C., and Moscow to a new presence in Beijing and offices in Beirut and Brussels.


=== Presidents ===
=== Presidents ===
Line 56: Line 74:
*[[James C. Gaither ]] (?-current)
*[[James C. Gaither ]] (?-current)


==Carnegie Endowment Archive==
==Experts==
Carnegie Endowment historic materials, from 1910 to 1954 (approx.), are archived at Columbia University in New York City. <ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/rbml/collections/carnegie/CEIP.html CEIP archive at Columbia University]</ref> Materials after that time have not been added to the archives and are not currently available.
The Endowment offers leading experts on international affairs, particularly in the areas of [[Russia]] and [[Eurasia]], [[China]], the [[Indian subcontinent]]/[[South Asia]], [[globalization]], [[nonproliferation]] and security affairs.

==Carnegie Trusts and Institutions==
When Carnegie retired from business in 1901, he set about in earnest to distribute his fortune. His most significant contribution, both in terms of money and in terms of enduring influence, was the establishment of several endowed trusts or institutions bearing his name. Andrew Carnegie died in 1919, having given away about $350 million during his lifetime, but the legacy of his generosity continues to unfold in the work of the trusts and institutions that he endowed. These, bearing his name, are described in this booklet.
==Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy==
The Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy were inaugurated on December 10, 2001, by the more than 20 Carnegie institutions that he established during his lifetime all over the world. The Carnegie Endowment—along with the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Carnegie Institution of Washington DC—was one of the three members of the steering committee that organized and launched the medal to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Carnegie philanthropy.

The Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy are given every two years to one or more individuals who, like Andrew Carnegie, have dedicated their private wealth to public good and who have a sustained an impressive career as a philanthropist.

The 2007 medal recipients are:
*Teresa Heinz and the Heinz Family for their work on the environment, education, economic opportunity, and the arts.
*Ratan Tata and the Tata Family. The Tata family made one of its first donations in India in 1898 and through their trusts donate an average of eight to fourteen percent of its net profits every year in India.
*Eli Broad, founder and chairman of SunAmerica Inc. and KB Home, for a range of philanthropic and community causes including art, education, science, and civic development.
*The Mellon Family, which has had a profound effect in the U.S. through its support of museums and art conservation, higher education and scholarship, information technology research, performing arts, and conservation and the environment.


==Programs==
==Programs==
Line 70: Line 102:
*Trade, Equity and Development Program
*Trade, Equity and Development Program
*U.S. Role in the World Program
*U.S. Role in the World Program

==Publications==
Carnegie publishes a variety of books, policy briefs, papers, and articles/Op-Eds. Additionally, the Endowment publishes ''[[Foreign Policy]],''. Carnegie also offers a range of newsletters that are available by email subscription.

==Junior Fellows program==
Carnegie has a Junior Fellows program for graduating seniors and recent college graduates. Each year the Endowment offers 8-10 one-year fellowships to uniquely qualified graduating seniors and individuals who have graduated during the past academic year. They are selected from a pool of nominees from close to 300 colleges.{{Fact|date=June 2008}} Carnegie Junior Fellows work as research assistants to the Endowment's senior associates.


==Controversies==
==Controversies==


===Discussion of Israel===
===Discussion of Israel===
It is reported by [[Philip Weiss]] in the [[New York Observer]] that Carnegie’s Senior Associate [[Anatol Lieven]] “had to parachute out of Carnegie when they didn't want to hear what he had to say about Israel” – Lieven was critical of some elements of the US relationship with Israel. Weiss reports that Lieven told him, "People at the [[thinktank]]s have courage somewhere between a seaslug and sheep-guts."<ref>[http://www.observer.com/2007/mondoweiss?page=8 The New York Observer], [[December 18]], [[2006]]</ref>
It is reported by [[Philip Weiss]] in the [[New York Observer]] that Carnegie's Senior Associate [[Anatol Lieven]] "had to parachute out of Carnegie when they didn't want to hear what he had to say about Israel" – Lieven was critical of some elements of the US relationship with Israel. Weiss reports that Lieven told him, "People at the [[thinktank]]s have courage somewhere between a seaslug and sheep-guts."<ref>[http://www.observer.com/2007/mondoweiss?page=8 The New York Observer], [[December 18]], [[2006]]</ref>


===Hanes protest===
===Hanes protest===
Line 87: Line 113:
==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
{{refbegin}}
*''Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: Summary of Organization and Work'' Washington, D.C.: published by the endowment, 1941
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
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*[http://www.hkjournal.org/ Hong Kong Journal]
*[http://www.hkjournal.org/ Hong Kong Journal]
*[http://www.hrb.at/bzt/victory-is-not-enough/ Victory is not enough]
*[http://www.hrb.at/bzt/victory-is-not-enough/ Victory is not enough]
*[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/rbml/collections/carnegie/index.html CEIP archive at Columbia University]


[[Category:Andrew Carnegie]]
[[Category:Andrew Carnegie]]

Revision as of 19:45, 28 October 2008

The Endowment's headquarters at 1779 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, D.C.

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace is a formally private, nonprofit organization, in practice closely associated with the United States Department of State, many US presidents, "numerous private foreign affairs groups" and the leaders of major US political parties[1]. The organization describes itself as being dedicated to advancing cooperation between nations and promoting active international engagement by the United States. Founded in 1910 by Andrew Carnegie, its work is not formally associated with a political party and it says that it is dedicated to achieving practical results.

The Endowment is engaged in research, publishing, and convening and creating new institutions and international networks. Its interests span geographic regions and the relations among governments, business, international organizations and civil society, focusing on economic, political, and technological forces driving global change.

History

At the beginning of the 20th Century, Andrew Carnegie renewed his long-standing interest in world peace. "I am drawn more to this cause than to any," he wrote in 1907.[2] Like other leading internationalists of his day, Carnegie believed that war could be eliminated by stronger international laws and organizations. Between 1900 and 1914, he gave generously in support of this belief, including $1.5 million in 1903 for the construction of the Peace Palace at The Hague. Carnegie's single largest commitment to this field, however, was his creation of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

On his seventy-fifth birthday, November 25, 1910, Carnegie announced the establishment of the Endowment with a gift of $10 million. He selected 28 trustees who were leaders in American business and public life; among them Harvard University president Charles W. Eliot; philanthropist Robert S. Brookings; former Ambassador to the United Kingdom Joseph H. Choate; former Secretary of State John W. Foster; former president of MIT and then-president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Henry S. Pritchett; and Carnegie Institution president Robert S. Woodward.

In his deed of gift, presented in Washington on December 14, 1910, Carnegie charged trustees to use the fund to "hasten the abolition of international war, the foulest blot upon our civilization," and he gave his trustees "the widest discretion as to the measures and policy they shall from time to time adopt" in carrying out the purpose of the fund.

Carnegie chose longtime adviser Elihu Root, Senator from New York and former Secretary of War and of State, to be the Endowment's first president. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1912, Root served until 1925.

The Endowment was initially organized into three divisions: one to aid in the development of international law and dispute settlement, another to study the causes and impact of war and a third to promote international understanding and cooperation. A European Center and advisory board was set up in Paris.

Although World War I shattered the high expectations of turn-of-the-century internationalists, the Endowment persevered with its international conciliation efforts. During the interwar period, the Endowment revitalized efforts to promote international conciliation, financed reconstruction projects in Europe, supported the work of other organizations and founded the Academy of International Law at The Hague. Endowment publications include the unprecedented 22-volume Classics of International Law and the seminal 150-volume Economic and Social History of the World War.

In 1925, Nicholas Murray Butler succeeded Elihu Root as president. For the next 20 years that flamboyant and energetic figure—who also won the Nobel Peace Prize—promoted his vision on international cooperation in business and politics. Among other accomplishments, he was instrumental in fashioning the Kellogg-Briand no-war pact of 1928.

Following World War II and Butler's retirement, the Endowment's three divisions were consolidated under the direction of President Joseph E. Johnson. John Foster Dulles led the board.

For the next two decades, the Endowment conducted research and public education programs on a range of issues, particularly relating to the newly created United Nations and on the future of the postwar international legal system. The Endowment provided diplomatic training for some 250 foreign service officers from emerging nations and published International Conciliation, a leading journal in the field. The European Center moved to Geneva for closer contact with UN agencies and became a focal point for European and American dialogue on international issues.

The 1971 inauguration of a new president, Thomas L. Hughes, came at a time of deepening interdependence among nations, new challenges to world security and intensified debate within the United States about the country's course. The Endowment's board was chaired by Milton Katz, then John W. Douglas. Programs were consolidated and designed to be more relevant to U.S. policy. The Endowment moved its headquarters back to Washington, D.C., and by 1983 had closed both the New York and Geneva offices. In 1971, the Endowment inaugurated "Face-to Face," a forum facilitating dialogue among governmental and nongovernmental participants on major international issues. In the early 1970s, the Endowment also acquired ownership of Foreign Policy magazine. Once virtually alone in conducting international affairs research, the Endowment now found itself among a growing array of think tanks and nongovernmental organizations concerned with foreign relations in one form or another, a trend that continues to the present. The Endowment contributed to this proliferation by "incubating" new organizations—among them the German Marshall Fund of the United States, the Institute for International Economics, and the Arms Control Association. On the Endowment's seventy-fifth anniversary in 1985, it published Estrangement: America and the World, an examination of the position of the United States in the postwar period.

In 1991, Morton I. Abramowitz became president, leading the Endowment during five eventful post-Cold War years under the chairmanships of Charles J. Zwick and Robert Carswell. In keeping with Carnegie's tradition, they saw new opportunities in the rapidly shifting international landscape.

A distinguished group of senior associates tackled such timely issues as democracy promotion, the political economy of market reforms, and the use of force and peacekeeping. In 1992, the Endowment generated the first comprehensive studies of the new foreign policy environment, including Changing Our Ways: America and the New World and Memorandum to the President-Elect: Harnessing Process to Purpose, a bipartisan assessment of the executive branch.

The Endowment also committed a sizable amount of its own funds to founding the Carnegie Moscow Center. Established in 1993, the Center has become one of the leading public policy institutions operating in the region. Also during Abramowitz's tenure, the Endowment built its new, permanent headquarters at 1779 Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, D.C.

Jessica T. Mathews took over as president in May 1997. Under Mathews' leadership, the Endowment has experienced rapid growth, partly fueled through increased support from outside funders.

Mathews transformed a group of small research projects into a field-defining, interdisciplinary study of globalization, called the Global Policy Program. The program addresses the policy challenges arising from the simultaneous processes of economic, political, and technological change. The effort has made the Endowment an important worldwide policy center for understanding this phenomenon.

Also during Mathew's tenure, the Carnegie Endowment transformed Foreign Policy from a quarterly journal into a vibrant, accessible bimonthly magazine. Relaunched on its 30th anniversary, the magazine has won growing readership and recognition in a time when traditional media are cutting back coverage of international affairs.

Following its century-long practice of adapting to changed circumstances, the Carnegie Endowment launched in 2007 an ambitious new vision to transform itself from a think tank on international issues to the first truly global international think tank. This new initiative seeks to: develop improved understanding in the United States on the local and regional perspectives of those in other countries and regions; formulate actionable and practical policy prescriptions for United States foreign policy and international relations; and provide a model of how to do first-rate, independent policy research. This new vision expanded the Carnegie Endowment geographically from Washington, D.C., and Moscow to a new presence in Beijing and offices in Beirut and Brussels.

Presidents

Chairmen

Carnegie Endowment Archive

Carnegie Endowment historic materials, from 1910 to 1954 (approx.), are archived at Columbia University in New York City. [3] Materials after that time have not been added to the archives and are not currently available.

Carnegie Trusts and Institutions

When Carnegie retired from business in 1901, he set about in earnest to distribute his fortune. His most significant contribution, both in terms of money and in terms of enduring influence, was the establishment of several endowed trusts or institutions bearing his name. Andrew Carnegie died in 1919, having given away about $350 million during his lifetime, but the legacy of his generosity continues to unfold in the work of the trusts and institutions that he endowed. These, bearing his name, are described in this booklet.

Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy

The Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy were inaugurated on December 10, 2001, by the more than 20 Carnegie institutions that he established during his lifetime all over the world. The Carnegie Endowment—along with the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Carnegie Institution of Washington DC—was one of the three members of the steering committee that organized and launched the medal to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Carnegie philanthropy.

The Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy are given every two years to one or more individuals who, like Andrew Carnegie, have dedicated their private wealth to public good and who have a sustained an impressive career as a philanthropist.

The 2007 medal recipients are:

  • Teresa Heinz and the Heinz Family for their work on the environment, education, economic opportunity, and the arts.
  • Ratan Tata and the Tata Family. The Tata family made one of its first donations in India in 1898 and through their trusts donate an average of eight to fourteen percent of its net profits every year in India.
  • Eli Broad, founder and chairman of SunAmerica Inc. and KB Home, for a range of philanthropic and community causes including art, education, science, and civic development.
  • The Mellon Family, which has had a profound effect in the U.S. through its support of museums and art conservation, higher education and scholarship, information technology research, performing arts, and conservation and the environment.

Programs

  • China Program
  • Democracy and Rule of Law Program
  • Globalization 101 Program
  • Group of 50 Program
  • Middle East Program
  • Nonproliferation Program
  • Russia & Eurasia Program
  • South Asia Program
  • Trade, Equity and Development Program
  • U.S. Role in the World Program

Controversies

Discussion of Israel

It is reported by Philip Weiss in the New York Observer that Carnegie's Senior Associate Anatol Lieven "had to parachute out of Carnegie when they didn't want to hear what he had to say about Israel" – Lieven was critical of some elements of the US relationship with Israel. Weiss reports that Lieven told him, "People at the thinktanks have courage somewhere between a seaslug and sheep-guts."[4]

Hanes protest

Jessica T. Mathews, the current president of the institute, has become a source of controversy for the institute due to the claims by the International Labor Rights Forum that garment workers at the TOS factory owned by HanesBrands Inc. in the Dominican Republic are subject to serious workers' rights violations.[5] Mathews is a Board Member of HanesBrands. On March 14, 2008, students and labor activists demonstrated outside the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the Carnegie Endowment, in order to "pressure" Mathews to "use her power as a Hanes board member to end sweatshop conditions" at the factory.[6] One worker from the Hanes factory, Julio Castillo, carried a poster with the slogan "Human Rights Hypocrite of the year". According to the protestors, Mathews refused to meet the workers.[6][7]

References

  1. ^ Parmar, Inderjeet (2000). "Engineering consent: the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the mobilization of American public opinion 1939–1945". Review of International Studies. 26. Cambridge University Press: 35–48. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ CEIP official website - history
  3. ^ CEIP archive at Columbia University
  4. ^ The New York Observer, December 18, 2006
  5. ^ "TOS Dominicana (DR)". International Labor Rights Forum. 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-26. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ a b Richards, Andy (2008-03-14). "Workers Rally Against Hanes Sweatshops". Metropolitan Washington Council, AFL-CIO. Retrieved 2008-03-26. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  7. ^ Mahoney, Jack (2008-03-13). "TOS Workers' Protest Hanes Boardmember Jessica Matthews". Georgetown Solidarity Committee. Retrieved 2008-03-15. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: Summary of Organization and Work Washington, D.C.: published by the endowment, 1941