Foundations of the American Century

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Foundations of the American Century Page 47

by Inderjeet Parmar


  Cainkar, Louise, 253

  Campbell, Kurt, 242

  Cantril, Hadley: antiwar party research of, 81; Latin American public opinion studied by, 80; Office of Public Opinion Research led by, 79–80; policy makers using research techniques of, 82–83

  Can We Be Neutral? (Dulles and Armstrong), 77

  capitalism, 7, 92, 224

  capitalist globalization, 222, 224, 254–55

  capital markets, 329n9

  Capra, Frank, 88

  Cardoso, Fernando Henrique, 57, 183

  career businessmen, 50

  Carlson, Reynold E., 187

  Carmichael, William, 200, 215, 326n137

  Carnegie, Andrew, 35, 36, 44–45, 59; dead-eyed focus of, 61; methods of, 37–38; social Darwinism attachment of, 62–63

  Carnegie, William, 44

  Carnegie Corporation (CC), 40; African center funded by, 315n100; AIPR funded by, 85–87; American studies programs approved by, 101–3; American values promoted by, 100–103; ASA grant funded by, 160–64; committees project of, 89–90; initiative of, 286n143; investment strategy post-9/11 of, 253; Islam and globalization research of, 252–53; Islamic Initiative funded by, 254; Latin America research funding of, 186–87; Lynd funding rejected by, 90–91; racialization in, 62

  Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP), 40; AIPR program funded by, 86–87; elites and, 49–53; foreign affairs organizations connections of, 52–53; trustees of, 49–50

  Carter, Edward C., 85

  Carter, Gwendolen, 160, 162, 164, 173

  Castagno, Al, 162

  Castells, Manuel, 8

  Castillo, Donald, 204

  Castro, Herta, 202

  Catholic University, 191–92, 321n56, 324n108; CEPLAN founding at, 208–10; Chicago boys and, 196; economists trained at, 181; Ford Foundation funding to, 206–8; neoliberal agricultural economists of, 207; pluralism eroded at, 206–7; RF funding and, 195, 204; University of Chile political differences with, 201

  Cauas, Jorge, 205–6

  CC. See Carnegie Corporation

  CCD. See Council for the Community of Democracies

  CCF. See Congress for Cultural Freedom

  CDAAA. See Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies

  CEIP. See Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

  Centeno, Miguel, 327n158

  Center for National Planning Studies (CEPLAN/CIEPLAN): CU founding of, 208–10; Ford Foundation funding of, 208–10; growth with equity approach of, 217; members political affiliations of, 209; new independent research center and, 209–10

  centrist polity, 328n167

  CEPLAN/CIEPLAN. See Center for National Planning Studies

  CFI. See Colorado Fuel and Iron Company

  CFR. See Council on Foreign Relations

  Chana, Dean, 196

  Chapin, William W., 52

  Chase National Bank, 47

  Chatham House. See Royal Institute of International Affairs

  Cheney, Lynne, 240

  Cherrington, Ben, 52

  Chiang Kai-shek, 285n125

  Chicago boys, 192–99, 205–6, 324n108

  Chicago research community, 197–98

  Chile: American foundations influencing, 181–82, 196–97; democracy of, 211; democratic socialist party in, 219; Ford Foundation in, 191–92, 215–16, 218–19; foundations pluralism promoted in, 182; globalization and, 183; neoliberal experimentation in, 193–94, 219–20; new economic model in, 206; political strategies in, 328n168; social neoliberalism in, 216–17; social science programs in, 189–93; as totalitarian state, 212–13; unequal wealth in, 318n2; U.S. corporate investment dependency of, 184–85; U.S. strategy transforming economy of, 180–81. See also Latin America; University of Chile

  Chilean Institute of Humanistic Studies, 328n166

  Christian Democratic Party, 190, 219, 327n155

  Christopher, Warren, 237

  civil rights, 272n11

  civil society: global, 3–6, 28; globalization and, 224–29; organizations, 15; private actors roles in, 268n19; self-conscious builders of, 6

  Civil War, 35

  Clark, John Bates, 60

  Clarke, John Henrik, 165

  class organization, 10–11

  Clavel, Carlos, 202

  Cleaves, Peter, 216, 257

  Clement, Alain, 107

  Clinton, Bill, 230, 231, 239; Communities of Democracies construction by, 234; democratic enlargement dropped by, 333n75; Diamond’s introducing DPT to, 232–34; Diamond’s report and, 332n53; DPT securitized by, 233; Kantianism and, 238; pragmatic neo-Wilsonianism of, 233

  coal production, 35

  Cohen, Bernard C., 72

  Colby, William, 307n120

  Cold War, 91, 221–22, 298n112

  Coleman, James, 162–63, 309n9

  Collado, Emilio G., 109

  Collier, Peter, 42

  Collins, Norman, 207–8

  Colorado Fuel and Iron Company (CFI), 38

  Columbia University, 90–91

  Colwell, Mary, 55

  commercial development, 274n49

  committee project, of CC, 89–90

  Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies (CDAAA), 81

  communism, 304n60; coup of, 144; leaders of, 307n120; subversion of, 184

  communist party, 125, 132

  Communist Party Indonesia (PKI), 300n10

  communities, 14

  Communities of Democracies, 234

  Compton, Karl T., 49

  concert of democracies, 249–50

  Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF), 241; Ford Foundation’s favorable view of, 118–19; foundations in, 298n112; political impact in Britain of, 119

  Conquest, Robert, 289n182

  Conrad, Joseph, 155

  consent, 271n64

  consent of governed, 23

  Conway, Gordon, 226

  Cooper, Robert, 242

  Copenhagen School, 332n54

  Cornell University, 130–31, 134–35

  corporate ideal, 277n3

  corporatism, 18–19

  Coser, Lewis, 91

  Council for the Community of Democracies (CCD), 234

  Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), 26, 77, 282n71; foreign policy value of, 77–78; foreign relations committees of, 87–90; study-group method of, 77

  Cowan, L. Gray, 149, 158, 162, 165

  Cox, Pat, 239

  Cox, Robert, 91

  Croly, Herbert, 60

  Crosland, Tony, 119

  Crossman, R. H. S., 119

  Crozier, Michel, 110

  Cultural Apparatus, The (Mills), 261

  cultural capital, 9

  cultural codes, 8

  Cumings, Bruce, 246

  Cunliffe, Marcus, 113, 118

  Curtin, Philip, 162

  Curtis, Lionel, 94

  Dahrendorf, Ralf, 110

  D’Arms, E. F., 114

  Davis, John W., 48, 51–53

  Davis, Norman H., 52

  Dean, Vera Micheles, 83

  de Castro, Sergio, 205–6

  de Kiewiet, Cornelis W., 154

  de la Cuadra, Sergio, 205

  Delpar, Helen, 185–86

  democracy: accountability in, 31–32; of Chile, 211; difficulties establishing, 236–37; International Security promoting, 235–36; liberal features in, 32; party for, 218–19; polities in, 32–33; U.S. arsenal of, 35

  democratic engagement, 230–31

  democratic enlargement, 231, 333n75

  democratic peace theory (DPT), 289n183; capitalist globalization in, 222; Clinton securitizing, 233; defense of, 334n81; defining, 221; development of, 230–32; Diamond’s introduction to Clinton Administration of, 232–34; Harvard University and, 234–38; liberal values and national security unified in, 237; U.S. power through, 230, 254–55

  dependency theory, 320n40

  dependista economics, 199–205

  d’Estaing, Giscard, 107

  development programs, 12

  de Wee
rd, Harvey, 76

  Dewey, John, 60

  Diamond, Larry, 255; approaches merged by, 233–34; Clinton and report from, 332n53; democratic enlargement agenda of, 231; DPT introduced to Clinton administration by, 232–34; Promoting Democracy in the 1990s by, 233

  Dike, Kenneth O., 171

  Dillon, Wilton, 163

  diplomacy, track two, 92

  Disney, Walt, 88

  Divine, Robert, 50

  Djokosutono, Dean, 131, 133

  Dobell, P. C., 93

  Dobriansky, Paula, 235

  Doctrine of Isolation in American History, The (Weinberg), 75

  Dollard, Charles, 84, 87

  domestic infrastructure, 98

  dominant class power, 16

  Donovan, William, 75

  Douglas, Lewis W., 48–49

  Doyle, Leonard A., 138, 141–42

  Doyle, Michael, 230–32, 332n48, 334n82

  DPT. See democratic peace theory

  Du Bois, W. E. B., 315n103

  Dulles, Allen, 135

  Dulles, John Foster, 48–49, 51, 53, 56, 77

  Dunn, Frederick, 69–70

  Dye, Richard, 212

  EAAS. See European Association for American Studies

  Earle, Edward Mead, 72, 76, 82, 91, 280n42; FPA leadership of, 83; as internationalism advocate, 73; national security and, 73–74

  East Coast: elites, 33; foreign policy establishment, 2; liberal internationalists, 67–68

  ECA. See Economic Cooperation Administration

  ECLA. See Economic Commission for Latin America

  economic class, 176–77

  Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA), 181

  Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA), 127

  Economic Handbook of the Pacific Area (AIPR), 87

  Economic Planning Unit, 176

  economics: Chile’s new model of, 206; CU training in, 181; globalization and policies in, 328n172; Indonesia crisis in, 146; at University of Chile, 198–200, 210–11, 321n55; U.S. transformation in, 35

  education, 83–84, 309n9, 317n132

  Edwards, Michael, 228

  Edwards, Robert, 313n65

  EFC. See European Foundation Centre

  egalitarian vision, 296n86

  Eisenach, Eldon, 19

  Eisenhower, Dwight, 184

  Electing to Fight (Mansfield and Snyder), 236

  electoral politics, 22

  elites: anti-Sukarno, 135–36, 258; black fellows joining universities of, 168–69; CEIP and, 49–53; democratic polities interests of, 32–33; East Coast, 33; foundation leaders and, 7, 31, 58–63; foundations run by, 63–64; global hegemony strategies sought by, 98; higher executives interest of, 22; international associations built by, 93–94; military, 143–44; Nigerian political, 177; organic intellectual, 194; power-knowledge networks, 142–43; professional universities for, 11–12; regional opinion of, 89; RF and, 47–49; self-organization, 16; social occasions arranged for, 106–7; study of, 4; U.S., 258

  Elliott, William Y., 103

  Ely, Richard T., 60

  Emerson, Rupert, 151–52, 157, 313n62

  epistemic communities, 20–22

  ERP. See European Recovery Program

  Escobar, Luis, 199

  ESCOLATINA (Graduate School in Economics), 201–2, 323n96; Ford Foundation’s social sciences efforts in, 204; pluralistic economic faculty of, 205; technocratic work underway at, 202; U.S graduate school professors visiting, 203

  Espinosa, J. Manuel, 110

  Establishment, the, 17–18

  ethnocentrism, 61

  Europe: American society understanding of, 108–9, 113–14; balance kept in, 69; foundations influence from, 66–67; U.S. abstract problem concern and, 104; U.S. dissent of, 293n50; U.S. foreign policy opposition of, 99. See also Britain; United States

  European Advisory Commission, 282n70

  European Association for American Studies (EAAS), 116–17

  European Foundation Centre (EFC), 225

  European Recovery Program (ERP), 118

  executive branch, 17

  expansionism, 339n1

  Fallers, Lloyd, 158

  Farrell, John, 180

  fascism, fighting against, 90

  Federal Union, 94

  Feinstein, Lee, 240

  Ferguson, Niall, 235

  Ferguson, Thomas, 19

  Field, Frederick Vanderbilt, 85

  Fight for Freedom, 112

  Final Report, 243, 245, 247, 250–51

  Fisher, Ali, 297n99

  Fisher, Donald, 4, 153

  focus, dead-eyed, 61

  Ford, Edsel, 46

  Ford, Henry, 45–47, 275n66

  Ford Foundation, 41; academic agenda funding of, 132; African American empowerment and, 258–59; as African studies benefactor, 158; anti-Sukarno elite and, 135–36, 258; Asian studies network interest of, 128; Catholic University funding of, 206–8; CCF’s favorable view of, 118–19; CEPLAN funding by, 208–10; in Chile, 191–92, 215–16, 218–19; Cornell University grants from, 134–35; development programs funded by, 12; elite power-knowledge networks constructed by, 142–43; founding of, 33; guilty of naivete, 323n104; Harvard Center endowment from, 333n69; Harvard Seminar financed by, 105–8; healthy international environment and, 290n3; Howard University grant from, 310n33; human resources of knowledge network preservation by, 212; Indonesian role of, 126, 136, 147–48; internal liberalism of, 215; International Training and Research Division of, 159; ITR of, 129–30; Kahin’s Indonesian report to, 132–33; Latin American investment of, 187; military coup influencing, 210–11, 214–15; Nigerian economic planners training funded by, 317n131; policy-oriented research and, 190–91; PPNS funded by, 242; Rostowian modernization theory and, 213–14; senior leadership of, 326n137; social sciences at ESCOLATINA and, 204; Sukarno to Suharto transition and, 142–47; trustees of, 53–58; UI program of modernization from, 138–39; University of Chile’s new grants from, 201–2; University of Ibadan funding by, 171–73; U.S. foreign policy and, 147; U.S. policy of empire and, 148; WSF delegates funded by, 321n38; WSF supported by, 228; Yale University funded by, 330n27

  Ford Service Department (FSD), 46

  Foreign Affairs, 236, 244

  foreign affairs organizations, 52–53

  foreign aid, 301n21

  foreign policy: American foundations backing resetting of, 223; American foundation’s role in, 3–6; CFR’s value to, 77–78; Europe’s opposition of, 99; Ford Foundation and U.S., 147; foundation’s role in, 17–18, 27; national security and, 73; reports, 284n106; Southeast Asia, 124

  Foreign Policy Association (FPA): Earle’s leadership of, 83; education programs of, 83–84; membership of, 284n104; NBC radio network used by, 84; U.S. global role beliefs of, 83–85

  foreign relations, 87–90

  Fosdick, Harry Emerson, 60

  Fosdick, Raymond, 43–44, 78

  foundation leaders, 7, 31, 58–63

  foundation networks: common cultural codes developed through, 8; frames of thought created through, 14–15; habitus in, 8–9; self-perpetuation of, 15; Third World university building of, 11–12

  foundations: African studies contributions of, 153; American studies networks promoted by, 121; anti-Americanism charges against, 290n6; Bill and Melinda Gates, 1–2, 225, 262–63; in CCF, 298n112; communities sponsored by, 14; dependista economics and, 199–205; elitist groups running, 63–64; European influence of, 66–67; foreign policy role of, 17–18, 27; funding programs of, 26–27; global capital market investments of, 329n9; global hegemony promoted by, 2, 65, 178–79; globalization influencing, 34; global leadership stages of, 3–4; growth of, 224–25; influence on research of, 261–62; knowledge networks formed by, 11, 257, 259–60; MacArthur, 332n48; pluralism in Chile promoted by, 182; politics and, 4–6; pro-American/Western approach of, 7; roles of, 26; scholar’s grants from, 295n79; as self-conscious global civil society builders, 6; state independence and relationships of, 260–61; strategic goals of, 33�
��34; U.S. isolationism marginalized by, 256–57. See also American foundations; Big 3 foundations; Carnegie Corporation; Ford Foundation; philanthropy; Rockefeller Foundation

  Foundations of National Power, 72

  Fox, Elizabeth, 216

  Fox, Melvin, 156

  Fox, William T. R., 71, 76, 112

  Foxley, Alejandro, 206, 208–9, 216–17, 219

  FPA. See Foreign Policy Association

  frames of thought, 14–15

  Fraser, Leon, 53

  Frazier, E. Franklin, 161

  Freeman, Douglas S., 53

  free market of ideas, 31

  Frei, Eduardo, 190, 206, 320n44

  Ffrench-Davis, Ricardo, 209

  Friedman, Milton, 180, 194

  Friedman, Thomas, 224

  From Voting to Violence (Mansfield and Snyder), 236

  FSD. See Ford Service Department

  Fukuyama, Francis, 237

  Fulbright commission, 112–14, 116

  Fulbright program, 109, 116

  funding programs, 26–27

  Gaddis, John Lewis, 246

  Gaines, Francis P., 52

  Gaines, W. I., 296n89

  Gaither, Rowan, 46, 128

  Gaitskell, Hugh, 119

  Galbraith, J. K., 119

  Gallup, George, 80, 82

  GAP, 289n179

  Garcia, Eduardo, 206

  Gardner, John W., 97, 98, 101–2, 155–56

  Gates, Bill, 1, 225, 273n18

  Gates, Frederick T., 43–44, 60–61

  General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), 193

  German Marshall Fund of the United States (GMFUS), 223; complementary goals of, 238; research fellowship initiative of, 239–40; transatlantic cooperation built by, 238–39; Transatlantic Fellows Program of, 240; West German government grant to, 335n86

  Gershenhorn, Jerry, 161

  GF. See Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

  Gide, Andre, 155

  giving, 61

  Gladden, Washington, 60

  global civil society, 3–6, 28

  global health programs, 340n14

  Global Inclusion Program, 338n137

  globalism: domestic infrastructure developed for, 98; philanthropy in, 28, 95–96; of U.S., 15–16, 35–36, 57, 225–26, 247–48

  globalist consensus, 79–80

  globalization: American foundations supporting, 227; of American values, 337n132; CC’s research on, 252–53; Chile and, 183; civil society and, 224–29; economic policy and, 328n172; foundation programs influenced by, 34; neoliberal, 15, 226, 229; rise of, 65–66; smart, 262–63; U.S. leading, 223; U.S. networks for, 250–51

 

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