Ploughshares Fund

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Ploughshares Fund's 25th Aniversary Logo
Established 1981
Exec. Dir. Naila Bolus
President/Founder Sally Lilienthal (1919 - 2006)
Chairman Roger Hale
Headquarters San Francisco, CA, USA
Homepage http://www.ploughshares.org

The Ploughshares Fund is a public grantmaking foundation that supports initiatives to prevent the spread and use of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons and other weapons of war, and to prevent conflicts that could lead to the use of weapons of mass destruction.

Contents

[edit] History

Concerned about the world’s burgeoning nuclear arsenals, San Francisco philanthropist Sally Lilienthal founded the Ploughshares Fund [1] in 1981 to enable individual contributors to pool their resources and support the most effective initiatives for preventing the spread and use of nuclear weapons. In the twenty-five years since it was founded, Ploughshares has made grants totaling nearly $50 million to become one of the largest grantmaking foundations in the U.S. focusing exclusively on peace and security issues. During this time, as nuclear dangers have evolved, Ploughshares Fund responded to new threats to global security as they have emerged – the vulnerability of nuclear weapons and materials following the collapse of the Soviet Union; the changing nature of armed conflict after the Cold War; emerging challenges to the nonproliferation regime; and the geopolitical upheavals in the wake of the September 11th, 2001 attacks. Sally Lilienthal passed away in October of 2006, at the age of 87, while still acting as Ploughshares Fund's president.

Ploughshares Fund works to directly influence public policy on weapons and security. The Fund’s strategies include providing start-up funding for peace and security entrepreneurs; granting emergency funding to meet urgent needs; supporting advocacy programs; influencing public opinion through the media; making grants internationally; building grassroots leadership.

[edit] Issue areas

Ploughshares Fund’s grantmaking is focused on the following issues:

  • Nuclear Weapons
  • Nuclear Materials
  • Biological and Chemical Weapons
  • Missiles and Space
  • Conventional Weapons
  • Conflict Prevention

[edit] Notable grants

  • Support for the Institute for Science and International Security and its President David Albright, whose work with scientists in Brazil and Argentina in the mid-1980s paved the way for those countries to renounce their pursuit of nuclear weapons. Albright continues to track nuclear-related developments worldwide and devise creative approaches for stemming proliferation.
  • The first program, by William Potter at the Center For Nonproliferation Studies, to identify the foremost risks of nuclear terrorism and approaches for addressing them.
  • Environmental challenges by a coalition of grassroots organizations that halted the production of nuclear weapons in the U.S.
  • Programs to reorient Russian nuclear weapons facilities and scientists to productive, economically viable endeavors, including the establishment of non-proliferation centers at former nuclear weapons labs at Sarov and Snezhinsk.
  • The Bioweapons Prevention Project, a network of civil society organizations monitoring governments’ adherence to the Biological Weapons Convention, in the absence of any official verification regime.
  • Legislative advocacy to stop the development of a new generation of nuclear weapons led by the Arms Control Advocacy Collaborative, co-founded by Ploughshares Fund and the Steven and Michele Kirsch Foundation.
  • The Peace and Security Initiative,involving members of advocacy organizations, think tanks, funders and activists in efforts to increase their capacity to influence U.S. policy to promote a more secure, peaceful and just world.
  • Grants to Search for Common Ground and the United Nations Association of the United States for initiatives to maintain communication and engagement with Iran aimed at a peaceful, mutually acceptable resolution to the dispute of Iran’s nuclear program.

[edit] Board of Directors

  • Reza Aslan
  • James B. Blume
  • Michael Douglas
  • Mary Lloyd Estrin
  • Angela Foster
  • Roger Hale, Chair
  • David Holloway
  • Alastair Mactaggart
  • Richard Pritzlaff
  • Robert A. Rubinstein
  • Cynthia Ryan
  • Gail Seneca
  • Robert E. Sims
  • Patricia F. Sullivan, Treasurer
  • Brooks Walker III, Secretary
  • Edith Wilkie
  • Philip Yun

[edit] External links