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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Civil Rights and Sunbelt Georgia, 1945-1990 >> Groups/Organizations >> Carter Center |
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Carter Center The Carter Center is a nongovernmental, not-for-profit organization established in Atlanta in 1982 by Jimmy Carter, former president
President Carter said, "When I was in the White House, I thought of human rights primarily in terms of political rights, such as rights to free speech and freedom from torture or unjust imprisonment. As I traveled around the world since I was president, I learned there was no way to separate the crucial rights to live in peace, to have adequate food and health care, and to have a voice in choosing one's political leaders. These human needs and rights are inextricably linked." In its first two decades of operation, the center gradually expanded its programming from an initial focus on conflict resolution and the promotion of peace to an array of activities
In this way the center attained a track record of achievement during its first twenty-five years, citing among its milestones: the observation of sixty-seven elections in twenty-six countries; helping farmers double or triple grain production in fifteen African countries; creating avenues to peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Haiti, Liberia, North Korea, Sudan, and Uganda; preventing unnecessary diseases in Latin America and Africa, including reducing cases of Guinea worm disease worldwide from 3.5 million in 1986 to fewer than 50,000 in 2007; and making significant headway in the effort to diminish the stigma against people with mental illness by raising public awareness. Citing the center's achievements in conflict resolution, human rights, election observation, and disease control, as well as President Carter's negotiation of the Camp David accords between Egypt and Israel during his presidency, the Nobel Peace Prize Committee named him the 2002 Nobel Peace Laureate. In 1999 The Carter Center, along with Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter, received the inaugural Delta Prize for Global Understanding, an award administered by the University of Georgia. Peace Programs The center's peace programs work to advance human rights, strengthen democracy, promote economic development, and prevent and resolve conflict.
Realizing that people's faith in democracy and a country's chances for peace are bolstered by adequate economic opportunity, the peace programs expanded in the mid-1990s to help countries craft comprehensive strategies for economic and social development, focusing on the need to include people from all sectors of society in strategy formation. Health Programs The center's unique programmatic focus on both peace and health is founded not only on Carter's broad vision of human rights but also on the knowledge that poor and oppressed people may resort to violence to secure the basic health care and food they need to survive. Thus, along with its peace work, the center has become a leader in Africa and Latin America in teaching people how to prevent unnecessary diseases and increase crop production. Most notably, it heads a worldwide coalition, funded in large part by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, to eradicate Guinea worm disease, a water-borne parasitic disease endemic to remote rural communities of sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. The center also teaches interventions to control river blindness, trachoma, lymphatic filariasis (commonly called elephantiasis), and schistosomiasis. Other health programs train teaching staff for public health schools in Ethiopia, work to diminish the stigma against mental illness and improve mental health services, and teach farmers in Africa better crop-production techniques. Leadership and Staffing Under the Carters' guidance the center's programs are led by international experts in the fields of peace and health, including those with experience in foreign service, academe, and public health policy. The staff of 160 is based primarily in Atlanta, on a thirty-five-acre park between downtown Atlanta and Emory University. Augmenting the staff expertise are several high-level councils of persons with expertise in specific action areas of the center, including many former heads of state from Latin America and Africa. These include the Council of Presidents and Prime Ministers of the Americas, the International Council for Conflict Resolution, the International Task Force for Disease Eradication, and the Mental Health Task Force. The center is governed by an independent board of trustees, which oversees the center's assets and property and promotes its objectives and goals. The center also works closely in partnership with Emory University, and each year more than 100 students from universities worldwide are granted internships to work with center staff on current global issues. Situated on the same grounds as the center is the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, a separate organization run by the National Archives Administration of the U.S. government. Here researchers can find documents and audiovisual materials from the Carter presidency (1977-81), and museum visitors can learn about the Georgia roots and political career of our nation's thirty-ninth president. Suggested Reading Douglas Brinkley, The Unfinished Presidency: Jimmy Carter's Journey beyond the White House (New York: Viking Penguin, 1998). Jimmy Carter, Beyond the White House: Waging Peace, Fighting Disease, Building Hope (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007). Deanna Congileo, The Carter Center Updated 10/12/2007 |
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