Hubbry Logo
Marcus RaskinMarcus RaskinMain
Open search
Marcus Raskin
Community hub
Marcus Raskin
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Marcus Raskin
Marcus Raskin
from Wikipedia

Marcus Goodman Raskin (April 30, 1934 – December 24, 2017) was an American progressive social critic, political activist, author, and philosopher. He was the co-founder, with Richard Barnet, of the progressive think tank the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, D.C. He was also a professor of public policy at The George Washington University's School of Public Policy and Public Administration.

Key Information

Early life and education

[edit]

Raskin was born in Milwaukee, the second son of Russian Jewish immigrants. His parents, Ben Raskin and Anna Goodman Raskin, owned a plumbing store in Milwaukee, where his father worked as a master plumbing contractor. At the age of 16, Raskin left home to study piano performance at the Juilliard School under Rosina Lhévinne and Lee Thompson. He abandoned a piano career to study at the University of Chicago. Raskin studied under Rexford Guy Tugwell, an economist and member of FDR's Brain Trust, and Quincy Wright, a legal scholar for whom Raskin served as an assistant during his law school years. He graduated from the University of Chicago with a Bachelor of Arts in liberal arts in 1954 and from the University of Chicago Law School with a J.D. degree in 1957.

Career

[edit]

Government service

[edit]

Raskin moved to Washington, D.C. in 1958, where he became a legislative counsel to a group of liberal congressmen, including Democrats Robert Kastenmeier from Wisconsin and James Roosevelt from California, the oldest son of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Raskin soon became the secretary for the Liberal Project, a group of House liberals, organized by Kastenmeier and Roosevelt into a liberal leadership group. As the secretary, Raskin linked the House members with notable intellectuals, including sociologist David Riesman, historian H. Stuart Hughes, and former finance advisor to Franklin D. Roosevelt, James Warburg.

In 1961, Raskin became McGeorge Bundy's assistant on national security affairs and disarmament as a member of the Special Staff of the National Security Council. In 1962, he was a member of the U.S. delegation to an 18-nation disarmament conference in Geneva.

Tensions with Bundy led to Raskin's reassignment in the Bureau of the Budget (now the Office of Management and Budget), where he continued his service on the Presidential Panel on Education. On the panel, Raskin wrote papers on the consequences of technology and the need for democratic education and scientific research.[1]

The Institute for Policy Studies

[edit]

In 1963, Raskin left government service, and with Richard Barnet, a State Department official in the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, created an independent institution, outside of government, to critique official policy.

Much of Raskin's initial work with IPS focused on opposing the Vietnam War. He co-authored the Vietnam Reader with Bernard Fall in 1965, which was used in teach-ins across the country. In 1967, he co-authored with Arthur Waskow, a colleague at the Institute, "A Call to Resist Illegitimate Authority", which urged support for those who resisted the draft and the Vietnam War. The "Call to Resist" was signed by thousands of people, and because of it, Raskin and Waskow took part in turning in a thousand draft cards to the Department of Justice.[2] In 1968, Raskin was indicted -— along with William Sloane Coffin, Dr. Benjamin Spock, Michael Ferber, and Mitchell Goodman—for conspiracy to aid resistance to the draft. The group became known as the "Boston Five". In the case, Telford Taylor, prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials, served as the defense attorney for Raskin. Not long after his acquittal, Raskin published the book Washington Plans an Aggressive War with Barnet and Ralph Stavins. These two books would begin Raskin's critique of the "national security state", a term he coined that he would continue to assess in future works.

With the publication of his book Being & Doing in 1971, Raskin advocated the theory of "social reconstruction."[3] Raskin's thinking was largely influenced by the work of American pragmatist John Dewey, French existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre, and the politics of the New Left. According to Library Journal, Raskin "foresees a peaceful process of non-Marxist reconstruction that will replace authoritarianism and the status quo with politics of the people and a redefined social ethic."

In 1971, Raskin received from Daniel Ellsberg, documents that became known as the Pentagon Papers.[4][5] Raskin put Ellsberg in touch with New York Times reporter Neil Sheehan, whom Ellsberg had first met in Vietnam.[6][5]

In 1977, after conducting a first study of the budget and its spending priorities, 56 members of Congress, led by Congressional Black Caucus Dean John Conyers, requested that IPS undertake a deeper analysis of the federal budget. Raskin directed the project, which led to the publication of the 1978 book The Federal Budget and Social Reconstruction. In the 1980s, Raskin became a leader in the anti-nuclear movement as the Chair of the SANE / Freeze campaign.[7] He also worked with labor leaders to organize the Progressive Alliance, a coalition of 16 labor unions and 100 public interest groups that laid out a progressive alternative political agenda.

Raskin served as a Distinguished Fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies, in addition to teaching at George Washington University's School of Public Policy and Public Administration and serving on the editorial board of The Nation magazine. He also advised the Congressional Progressive Caucus and conceptualized the network of local elected officials that evolved into the Institute for Policy Studies' Cities for Peace project, which has coordinated hundreds of city council resolutions against the Iraq War.

Raskin's most recent scholarship included serving as the editor of a series of books laying out how to achieve peace and justice for the think tank's Paths for the 21st Century. This project aimed to generate ideas and proposals, across disciplinary lines and founded upon Raskin's notion of "reconstructive knowledge", which catalyze citizen action and help other scholars and activists pursue a progressive basis for a new society.

Personal life

[edit]

Raskin was married twice. In 1957, he married author Barbara Bellman of Minneapolis.[8] They had three children: Erika, Jamie and Noah.[8] They divorced in 1980.[8] Barbara went on to write the novel "Hot Flashes" and later married author Anatole Shub.[8] He resided in Washington, D.C. with his wife, Lynn Randels Raskin with whom he had one child, Eden.[9] He also had nine grandchildren. Raskin continued his passion for classical music, releasing his first piano recording, Elegy for the End of the Cold War in 2004. He died at the age of 83 on December 24, 2017, from a heart ailment.[10]

Raskin was the nephew of Max Raskin, a Milwaukee politician who later served as a state judge.[11]

Books

[edit]
  • (1962) The Limits of Defense, with Arthur Waskow
  • (1965) The Viet-Nam Reader: Articles and Documents on American Foreign Policy and the Viet-Nam Crisis, edited with Bernard B. Fall
  • (1965) A Citizen's White Paper on American Policy in Vietnam and Southeast Asia
  • (1965) After 20 Years: Alternatives to the Cold War in Europe, with Richard J. Barnet
  • (1971) Being and Doing: An Inquiry Into the Colonization, Decolonization and Reconstruction of American Society and Its State
  • (1971) Washington Plans An Aggressive War, with Ralph L. Stavins and Richard J. Barnet
  • (1971) An American Manifesto, with Richard Barnet
  • (1974) Notes on the Old System: To Transform American Politics
  • (1975) The American Political Deadlock: Colloquium on Latin America and the United States: Present and Future of their Economic and Political Relations
  • (1976) Next Steps for a New Administration
  • (1978) The Federal Budget and Social Reconstruction: The People and the State
  • (1979) The Politics of National Security
  • (1986) The Common Good: Its Politics, Policies, and Philosophy
  • (1987) New Ways of Knowing: The Sciences, Society, and Reconstructive Knowledge, with Herbert J. Bernstein
  • (1988) Winning America: Ideas and Leadership for the 1990s, with Chester Hartman
  • (1991) Essays of a Citizen: From National Security State to Democracy
  • (1992) Abolishing the War System: The Disarmament and International Law Project of the Institute for Policy Studies and the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy
  • (1995) Visions and Revisions: Reflections on Culture and Democracy at the End of the Century
  • (1997) Presidential Disrespect: From Thomas Paine to Rush Limbaugh – How and Why We Insult, Scorn and Ridicule Our Chief Executives, with Sushila Nayak
  • (2003) Liberalism: The Genius of American Ideals
  • (2005) In Democracy's Shadow: The Secret World of National Security, with Carl LeVan
  • (2007) The Four Freedoms Under Siege: The Clear and Present Danger from Our National Security State, with Robert Spero

Legacy

[edit]

A collection of personal and professional papers related to Raskin is maintained by the Special Collections Research Center of George Washington University. The collection includes correspondence, biographical information, essays, lecture notes, and materials related to the Institute for Policy Studies. The materials date from 1949 to 2013.[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Marcus Goodman Raskin (April 30, 1934 – December 24, 2017) was an American policy analyst, author, and co-founder of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), a Washington, D.C.-based think tank focused on progressive foreign and domestic policy critiques. A University of Chicago Law School graduate and former Kennedy administration National Security Council staffer, Raskin resigned in 1962 amid growing opposition to U.S. military escalation in Vietnam, subsequently establishing IPS with Richard Barnet to challenge establishment views on war, economic inequality, and civil liberties. His work, including authorship of books on national security and philosophy, emphasized civil disobedience against unjust laws and advocated for reduced military spending to address domestic priorities, influencing anti-war movements and providing analytical support for the Pentagon Papers release. Raskin also served as a professor at George Washington University, mentoring figures in progressive activism, though IPS's engagements with Soviet officials drew scrutiny from critics wary of ideological alignments.

Early Life and Family Background

Childhood and Early Talents

Marcus Goodman Raskin was born on April 30, 1934, in , , the second child of Russian Jewish immigrants Benjamin Samuel Raskin, a , and Anna Goodman Raskin, a seamstress. Raskin displayed early musical aptitude, beginning lessons at age four and rapidly advancing to become a recognized . He briefly attended the of Music as a youth before pursuing other interests, and by high school in , his skills were evident in local social circles.

Familial Influences

Marcus Raskin was born on April 30, 1934, in , , as the second child of Russian Jewish immigrants Benjamin "Ben" Raskin, a , and Anna Goodman Raskin, a seamstress. This modest, labor-oriented household provided Raskin with firsthand insight into the economic hardships and resilience required of working-class families in mid-20th-century America, elements that echoed in his enduring focus on inequality and social reform. While direct accounts of parental teachings are limited, Raskin's Jewish immigrant roots aligned with broader cultural emphases on , ethical , and community solidarity, fostering his early —evident in his piano prodigy status from age four—and later philosophical bent toward universal over parochial . The absence of inherited wealth or elite connections further propelled his independent path, distinguishing him from figures and reinforcing a of power structures rooted in experiential realism rather than abstract ideology.

Education

Undergraduate Studies

Raskin attended the for his undergraduate studies. As a college student there, he gave lessons to the future composer , reflecting his early proficiency as a child piano prodigy. Specific details regarding his major, graduation year, or academic honors prior to entering the University of Chicago Law School in the mid-1950s remain undocumented in available primary sources. Raskin earned his degree from the in 1957. This equipped him for subsequent roles in , including his entry into the Kennedy administration shortly after graduation. No specific coursework, faculty influences, or extracurricular involvements during his time at the law school are documented in available records.

Government Career

Entry into the Kennedy Administration

Following his graduation from the in 1957, Marcus Raskin worked as a to Democratic Representative Robert Kastenmeier of , serving from approximately 1959 to 1961 and contributing to policy development on progressive issues. In this role, Raskin engaged with Democratic Party strategies amid the transition from the Eisenhower to Kennedy era, honing his expertise in and international affairs through advocacy for measures. In 1961, shortly after John F. Kennedy's inauguration, Raskin was appointed to the special staff of the (NSC), where he served as an assistant to National Security Advisor , with a primary focus on and nuclear testing policy. His recruitment reflected recognition of his analytical skills and prior congressional experience by Kennedy administration officials seeking young experts to address challenges, including the test ban treaty negotiations. Raskin's NSC position involved drafting memoranda on nuclear policy, such as assessments of Soviet testing capabilities and U.S. verification strategies, as evidenced by declassified documents from the period. Raskin's entry into the administration positioned him at the intersection of executive decision-making on security matters, though his tenure was marked by early internal debates over military escalation, foreshadowing later tensions. He operated from the Executive Office Building, contributing to Bundy's team during pivotal events like the Crisis and preparations. This role lasted until 1963, when disagreements over policy prompted his reassignment to the Bureau of the Budget.

Role in National Security Policy

In 1961, Marcus Raskin was appointed to the Special Staff of the (NSC) in President John F. Kennedy's administration, serving as an assistant to National Security Advisor with a focus on affairs and . In this capacity, he acted as the NSC Assistant for and Nuclear Testing, drafting memoranda to Bundy on topics such as nuclear policy and arms control negotiations during the height of tensions with the . Raskin's work emphasized restraint in military escalation and skepticism toward provocative measures, positioning him as one of the few internal advocates for stronger within the administration; for instance, he critiqued initiatives as likely to heighten Soviet anxieties rather than enhance U.S. security. These efforts aligned with Kennedy-era achievements like the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963, though Raskin's influence was limited by the broader hawkish consensus on and deterrence. By early 1963, after approximately two years in the role, Raskin's deepening opposition to U.S. military commitments in —particularly the risks of escalation—prompted his from the NSC staff. He was subsequently reassigned to the Bureau of the Budget, marking the end of his direct involvement in policymaking, amid frustrations with the administration's trajectory toward greater interventionism.

Founding of the Institute for Policy Studies

Origins and Co-Founders

The Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) was established in by Marcus G. Raskin and Richard J. Barnet, both of whom had served in the Kennedy administration and grown critical of its foreign policy direction, particularly regarding the and early involvement. Raskin, a staffer, and Barnet, a State Department lawyer specializing in , first met in and initiated discussions on forming an independent research organization in spring 1962 to enable unfettered policy critique and promote alternatives through intellectual and channels. IPS was incorporated as a nonprofit in , in November 1962, with operations beginning in October 1963; its inaugural budget for the 1963-1964 totaled $177,432.82, supported by grants from small and mid-sized foundations. Initial seed funding came primarily from the Stern Family Fund, along with contributions from philanthropists like Philip Stern, James P. Warburg, and the Samuel Rubin Foundation, reflecting a commitment to independence from government and corporate influence. Raskin and Barnet positioned IPS as a venue for "speaking truth to power," drawing on their government experiences to advocate systemic reforms via public scholarship, though the organization's progressive orientation later drew scrutiny for associations with radical causes. No additional co-founders were involved in the establishment, with the duo providing the core vision for a multi-issue think tank focused on peace, justice, and economic equity.

Initial Focus and Operations

The Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) commenced operations in October 1963 as an independent, nonprofit center dedicated to policy research, education, and innovative social analysis, explicitly designed to operate free from the ideological limitations imposed by government funding or traditional foundation grants. Co-founders Marcus Raskin and Richard Barnet, leveraging their prior roles in the Kennedy administration's apparatus, positioned IPS to critique U.S. foreign and domestic policies from a perspective emphasizing systemic reform and demilitarization. The organization's inaugural budget for the full year 1963-1964 totaled $177,432.82, sourced primarily from private foundations such as the and individual donors, ensuring autonomy while enabling seminars, conferences, and fellowships that bridged academic theory with activist practice. From its outset, IPS concentrated on challenging War-era national security doctrines, particularly the escalating U.S. involvement in , which Raskin and Barnet viewed as emblematic of broader militaristic excesses. In 1963, the institute rapidly engaged the burgeoning anti- War movement, hosting discussions and producing analyses that questioned official rationales for intervention and advocated for diplomatic alternatives. A pivotal early output was the 1965 publication The Vietnam Reader, co-edited by Raskin and military historian Bernard Fall (an IPS associate fellow), which compiled primary documents and essays to inform public teach-ins and foster opposition to the war; the book became a staple resource in nationwide protests and academic critiques. Operationally, IPS functioned through a small cadre of fellows and resident scholars, including Raskin and Barnet as co-directors, who coordinated interdisciplinary seminars involving policymakers, labor leaders, and academics to explore alternatives to prevailing U.S. strategies. The institute's structure emphasized "social invention"—prototyping policy ideas outside bureaucratic channels—while maintaining a tax-exempt status under Section 501(c)(3) to support research dissemination via reports and public events. By 1966, as detailed in IPS's internal The First Three Years of the Institute for Policy Studies, 1963-1966, these efforts had established the organization as a hub for progressive policy innovation, though conservative observers later characterized its outputs as promoting radical societal overhaul rather than incremental .

Intellectual and Activist Contributions

Major Writings and Philosophical Ideas

Marcus Raskin's major writings critiqued entrenched political structures and advocated for transformative reforms grounded in democratic participation. In his 1974 book Notes on the Old System: To Transform American Politics, Raskin contended that the traditional mechanisms of checks and balances failed to prevent executive overreach, proposing instead a of power to local levels and enhanced citizen involvement to foster genuine political renewal. This work reflected his broader skepticism toward centralized authority, extending beyond specific administrations to systemic flaws in American governance. Raskin's philosophical contributions emphasized the pursuit of the through integrated political and ethical action. His 1986 volume The Common Good: Its Politics, Policies and served as a blueprint for alternatives to prevailing liberal and conservative paradigms, urging organization to address social inequities and policy failures while prioritizing collective welfare over individualistic or statist approaches. Earlier, in Being and Doing (1971), he explored the interplay between existential being and purposeful action, arguing for a that bridges personal authenticity with societal engagement to drive progressive change. Complementing these books, Raskin's essays, such as the 1963 New York Review of Books piece "The Megadeath Intellectuals," assailed academic and policy elites for rationalizing nuclear escalation, highlighting his commitment to in foreign policy discourse. Philosophically, Raskin drew on decentralist principles to advocate for empowered as the engine of reform, viewing movements in civil rights, anti-war efforts, and as essential for countering institutional inertia and promoting causal in . His ideas prioritized empirical critique of power concentrations, favoring verifiable paths to over ideological abstractions.

Anti-War and Foreign Policy Advocacy

Raskin resigned from his position as a special assistant in the National Security Council in 1962, citing opposition to the escalation of U.S. involvement in Vietnam and the handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis, which he viewed as symptoms of an overly militarized foreign policy apparatus. In September 1965, Raskin co-authored "A Diplomatic Alternative" with Bernard Fall in The New York Review of Books, condemning U.S. military tactics in Vietnam—including the use of napalm and fragmentation bombs—for causing an estimated 250,000 Vietnamese deaths since early 1965 and risking escalation toward genocide, while arguing that such actions violated the Geneva Conventions ratified by the U.S. in 1955. The piece proposed immediate de-escalation measures, such as halting air operations north of the 17th parallel, enforcing humanitarian protocols by recognizing the National Liberation Front's Red Cross, and withdrawing U.S. troops under United Nations supervision following a political convention in South Vietnam with amnesty for insurgents. Raskin and Fall advocated reconvening a Geneva-style conference under UN auspices to establish a demilitarized zone, limit Vietnamese armies, and foster regional economic integration, including inviting China to development projects, as a means to achieve independence and free elections without further bloodshed. That same year, Raskin co-edited The Viet-Nam Reader: Articles and Documents on American and the Viet-Nam Crisis with Fall, a compilation that became a staple in university teach-ins and contributed to mobilizing opposition to the war by compiling primary sources critiquing U.S. strategy. Through the Institute for Policy Studies, which he co-founded in 1963, Raskin positioned the organization as a hub for anti-war analysis, including research on draft resistance and the economic costs of military engagement; in 1967, he collaborated with fellow IPS scholar Arthur Waskow to amplify these efforts amid growing protests. Raskin's advocacy extended to direct action against conscription; in 1968, he was indicted alongside the "Boston Five" for conspiring to counsel , a charge stemming from his public encouragement of non-compliance with what he deemed an unjust war policy, though he was ultimately acquitted. In 1971, he co-authored Washington Plans an Aggressive War, documenting U.S. decision-making in Indochina as premeditated , reinforcing his critique of the " state"—a term he popularized to describe unelected bureaucracies prioritizing military solutions over democratic oversight. Later, Raskin chaired the SANE/Freeze campaign in the , advocating to halt and linking excessive defense spending to domestic inequities. In 2003, he directed the Cities for Peace initiative, securing resolutions from hundreds of U.S. city councils opposing the , and in works like Warfare Welfare (2012), he argued that perpetual war economies perpetuated foreign interventions at the expense of social reconstruction. Throughout, Raskin emphasized multilateral diplomacy and as alternatives to unilateral U.S. , as outlined in The Four Freedoms Under Siege (2006).

Domestic Policy Positions

Raskin critiqued the ' permanent for undermining domestic welfare by prioritizing military expenditures over social investments, arguing that this structure perpetuated economic disparities and limited resources for alleviation and services. In the edited volume Warfare Welfare: The Not-So-Hidden Costs of America's Permanent , co-edited with Gregory D. Squires, he detailed how compromised the nation's ability to address inequality and human needs, fostering a system where defense budgets crowded out funding for , healthcare, and . Through the Institute for Policy Studies, which he co-founded in 1963, Raskin advanced research linking policies to domestic inequities, including and racial , positing that overseas military commitments exacerbated and social divisions at home. He connected these issues to a broader "national security state" that prioritized elite interests over equitable resource distribution, warning that unchecked deepened class divides and hindered progressive reforms. In his earlier career, Raskin assisted Representative Robert Kastenmeier in crafting a progressive agenda for House Democrats during the , emphasizing expansions beyond New Deal-era to incorporate civil rights protections, anti-poverty initiatives, and participatory structures. This included for redirecting federal funds from defense to social programs, as outlined in memos like the "Liberal Project," which called for addressing structural inequalities through democratic renewal and citizen empowerment. Raskin's philosophical writings, such as The Common Good: Its Politics, Policies, and Philosophy (1986), promoted policies centered on collective welfare over , critiquing corporate dominance and advocating for redistributive measures to mitigate inequality while preserving against state overreach. He viewed expansive as essential to , urging active public involvement to counter bureaucratic and economic elitism that stifled advancements.

Controversies and Criticisms

Ideological Associations

Marcus Raskin identified with progressive and ideologies, focusing on radical democratic principles and opposition to and corporate power. His work emphasized "resurgent " as a means to empower against authoritarian tendencies in , drawing from philosophical critiques of technocratic . Through co-founding the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) in 1963, Raskin aligned with institutions advocating non-Marxist social reconstruction to replace and with . IPS, under his influence, pursued progressive critiques, including anti-war advocacy that extended solidarity to North Vietnamese communists opposing U.S. intervention. Critics, particularly from conservative perspectives, have associated Raskin and IPS with radical leftist networks due to engagements with Soviet officials, such as Georgi Arbatov of the USSR's Institute of the USA and Canada, during Cold War-era conferences hosted by the think tank. These interactions, including a 1980s IPS event cited by Soviet representatives as fostering U.S.-Soviet progressive ties, fueled accusations of ideological sympathy toward communist regimes, though Raskin maintained the focus was on and policy rather than endorsement. Such associations contributed to perceptions of IPS as part of an "anti-American left," blending domestic with internationalist critiques often aligned against U.S. priorities.

Policy Influence and Critiques

Raskin's influence on policy emerged through his early government service and subsequent work at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), which he co-founded in 1963 with Richard Barnet. During the Kennedy administration, he served as assistant to the director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, where he drafted memos critiquing military escalation, though he resigned in 1962 over disagreements on Vietnam policy. At IPS, Raskin directed research on national security, producing reports that challenged the military-industrial complex and advocated for reduced defense spending, influencing congressional liberals and the anti-war movement; for instance, IPS fellows contributed to analyses of draft resistance and civil rights tied to war opposition. His advocacy extended to , where he co-authored pieces proposing diplomatic alternatives to intervention, such as negotiations involving neutralist forces, which informed progressive critiques but had limited direct adoption amid escalation. IPS under Raskin also played a role in the by hosting and facilitating discussions that amplified public awareness of policy deceptions, contributing to shifting congressional and public sentiment against the war by the early 1970s. Through testimony and writings, Raskin helped shape Democratic Party platforms on restraint and domestic reallocations from to social programs, as seen in his collaboration with Rep. Robert Kastenmeier to organize liberal House voting blocs in the . Critiques of Raskin's positions centered on their perceived radicalism and risks to , particularly from conservative analysts. In the 1961 Liberal Papers, co-authored with others, Raskin advocated unilateral U.S. and NATO's dissolution, views decried as endangering alliances and deterrence against Soviet threats. His 1968 New Party platform called for dismantling the U.S. , which critics argued would invite and weaken democratic defenses. IPS's associations, including Raskin's contacts with North Vietnamese representatives in , drew accusations of aligning with adversaries, with the think tank labeled as promoting "creative disorder" to overthrow rather than reform it. Such policies were faulted for prioritizing ideological transformation over pragmatic , potentially exacerbating global , though Raskin's defenders maintained they exposed systemic driving inequality.

Personal Life

Marriage and Family

Raskin was first married to Barbara Raskin (née Bellman), a and novelist, in 1957; the couple later divorced. With Barbara, he had at least two children, including , born December 13, 1962, who later became a U.S. Congressman representing Maryland's 8th district. He remarried Lynn Randels on May 4, 1985. Raskin was the father of four children in total: , Erika Raskin Littlewood, Noah Annin, and Eden McArtor. His son Jamie delivered a at Raskin's memorial, noting his father's delight in children and emphasis on their potential.

Later Years and Death

Raskin continued his association with the Institute for Policy Studies as a distinguished fellow, mentoring activists and scholars on issues of , economic justice, and into the . He published compilations of his essays and lectures, including Masters of Mankind: Essays and Lectures, 1969–2013 in 2013, which critiqued U.S. and the state. His later writings emphasized the philosophical underpinnings of policy reform, linking empowerment to democratic renewal. Raskin died on December 24, 2017, at his home in , at the age of 83. The cause was a heart-related ailment, as confirmed by his son, Representative .

Legacy and Assessment

Positive Impacts


Marcus Raskin's co-founding of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) in 1963 with Richard Barnet created a key platform for progressive policy analysis, hosting scholars and producing reports that challenged mainstream foreign and domestic policies during the Cold War era. The think tank's work, under his influence, supported peace activism, including the dissemination of the Pentagon Papers in 1971, which informed public debates on U.S. military engagements.
Raskin's authorship of The Vietnam Reader in 1965, co-edited with Bernard Fall, equipped anti-war teach-ins across the , amplifying opposition to the and contributing to shifts in that pressured policy changes. As chair of the Sane Freeze campaign in the 1980s, he advanced efforts, fostering coalitions that influenced congressional discussions on . His direction of the 1978 publication The Federal Budget and Social Reconstruction, requested by 56 members of , provided analytical frameworks for reallocating resources toward social programs. In 2003, Raskin conceptualized the Cities for Peace project, which coordinated resolutions from hundreds of city councils opposing the , demonstrating effective grassroots mobilization against military interventions. Through IPS, he organized the Progressive Alliance, uniting 16 labor unions and over 100 groups to advocate for economic and social reforms. His over 20 books and mentorship of activists and scholars promoted concepts like dismantling the "national security state" and empowering for nonviolent reconstruction, shaping progressive thought on and empathy-driven ethics.

Critical Evaluations

Critics from conservative institutions have portrayed Marcus Raskin's work and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), which he co-founded in 1963, as fundamentally anti-American, advocating for the dismantling of U.S. global influence and exhibiting sympathies toward communist regimes. The Heritage Foundation's 1977 analysis described IPS as an organization committed to "radical social change" that rejected the foundational principles of American society and government, positioning itself to foster revolutionary transformation through policies like unilateral , the abolition of , and diplomatic recognition of communist states such as . Raskin personally contributed to these stances by meeting Hanoi representatives in and authoring works that critiqued U.S. military engagement while promoting . Raskin's advocacy extended to domestic subversion during the era, including public counseling on , which led to his federal indictment on charges (though he was acquitted). Conservative critiques, such as those from the , highlight IPS's pattern of praising authoritarian leftist leaders—including , , and —while asymmetrically condemning U.S. actions and attributing escalations to American rather than Soviet . Raskin himself articulated this perspective in the , arguing that "America must be made safe for the world" by renouncing its empire and capitalist structures, a view seen by detractors as prioritizing ideological purity over . Allegations of direct Soviet influence have persisted, with researchers like S. Steven Powell in Covert Cadre: Inside the Institute for (1987) documenting IPS associations with identified KGB officers and Soviet intelligence operations. Raskin facilitated 1980s conferences involving Soviet officials aimed at undermining President Reagan's anti-communist policies, prompting warnings from 12 U.S. senators and 70 members to Secretary of State about IPS's potential as a conduit for Soviet intelligence gathering. The institute's hosting of convicted Soviet spy —including launching "Alger Hiss lectures" in 2002—further fueled claims of ideological alignment with espionage and communist apologism, as noted by analysts like Brian Crozier in . These evaluations contrast sharply with progressive assessments that frame Raskin's efforts as principled dissent, underscoring a broader partisan divide in interpreting his legacy.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.