New America Foundation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The New America Foundation is a non-profit public policy institute and think tank located in Washington, D.C. that promotes innovative political solutions transcending conventional party lines—what they call radical centrist politics. Founded by Ted Halstead, the foundation aims to be non-partisan, and its board includes people with a range of political beliefs. Well-known board members include political commentator and Newsweek columnist Fareed Zakaria, former Republican governor of New Jersey and former head of the United States Environmental Protection Agency Christine Todd Whitman, conservative philosopher and historian Francis Fukuyama, author and Atlantic Monthly correspondent James Fallows, and liberal economist and professor Laura D'Andrea Tyson. Author Parag Khanna is currently a senior research fellow at the Foundation. Google's CEO, Eric Schmidt, is chairman-elect of the foundation[1]
[edit] Ideology and research
The New America Foundation actively encourages a variety of opinions. The politics of the board members and fellows range from the American left to the American right. Scholars represent many different areas of public policy, from economics to the environment to gender to political philosophy. The methodologies are equally varied, with some specializing in quantitative analysis and others favoring historical ruminations. The research is undertaken in order to achieve the Foundation's stated mission: "to bring exceptionally promising new voices and new ideas to the fore of our nation's public discourse."
[edit] Published articles
Articles by numerous New America Foundation members have appeared in leading publications. The Atlantic Monthly has had extensive coverage in several issues from New America Foundation writers, expounding on their analyses and proposing solutions to persistent US problems. Board members and fellows have written cover stories for a large number of periodicals, including centrist publications like Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, The Wilson Quarterly, Wired, The New Yorker and most recently The New York Times; conservative publications like The National Interest and The American Conservative; and liberal publications like The American Prospect, The New Republic and Mother Jones.
[edit] External links
- New America Foundation webpage
- Source Watch
- Higher Ed Watch Blog of the New America Foundation's Education Policy Program
- Early Ed Watch Blog of the New America Foundation's PK-3 Early Education Initiative
- Federal Education Budget Project Federal funding data and budget explanations from the New America Foundation's Education Policy Program
- The Washington Note Blog of Steve Clemons, New America Foundation Senior Fellow and Director of the American Strategy Program