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Transnational Institute
View on WikipediaThe Transnational Institute (TNI), is an international non-profit research and advocacy think tank that was founded in 1974 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.[1] According to their website, the organization promotes a "... just, democratic and sustainable world."[2]
Key Information
History
[edit]TNI was founded in 1974 in Amsterdam by Eqbal Ahmad, who was the organization's first director. Initially it operated as an international arm of the Institute for Policy Studies.[1]
In 1976 the director of the institute (Orlando Letelier) was assassinated by the Chilean secret police as ordered by Augusto Pinochet.[3][4]
Pauline Tiffen is chair of the supervisory board of the TNI.[5]
The activist Susan George is president of the TNI.[6]
The members of the institute are involved in the civil society and the associative life of their respective countries. Based in Amsterdam, the permanent team of TNI consisted of twenty nine people in 2021.[7]
Work
[edit]The TNI publishes research papers, books and organises seminars and debates. Its members include activists, researchers, writers, scholars, journalists and documentary makers.[1] The organisation has specific interest sections called "programs". These are the fields the organisation currently focuses on.
Drugs and democracy
[edit]The program analyses worldwide trends on drugs-policies and promotes a pragmatic approach to drugs based on damage-control. It has written on countries in Latin America[8][9] and Southeast Asia.[10]
Ricardo Soberón, a lawyer, academic, writer and consultant for Peru's governmental policies on drugs, has carried out research for TNI.[11][12]
Public alternatives
[edit]The public alternatives program publishes research and organises events on the following topics
- The effects of privatisation such as water privatisation[13][14]
- Energy democracy[15]
- The return of public services[16] or re-municipalization[17] for which it has documented more than 200 cases.[18]
- Transformative Cities[19][20][21]
- Participatory democracy[22][23]
Trade and investment
[edit]Publications
- Financialisation: A Primer (2018 update) - about financialization[24]
Other programs
[edit]- Myanmar
- War & Pacification
- Colombia
- Agrarian & Environmental Justice
- Corporate Power
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Collection Summary: Transnational Institute Archives". search.socialhistory.org. International Institute of Social History.
- ^ "Introduction". 10 April 2009.
- ^ Franklin, Jonathan (8 October 2015). "Pinochet directly ordered killing on US soil of Chilean diplomat, papers reveal". The Guardian.
- ^ "Our History - Institute for Policy Studies". ips-dc.org.
- ^ Supervisory Board Transnational Institute
- ^ Susan George Transnational Institute
- ^ People Transnational Institute
- ^ "U.S. has been quietly helping Mexico with new, high-tech ways to fight opium". The Washington Post.
- ^ "Reform more radical than 'war on drugs'".
- ^ Diplomat, David Hutt, The. "A New Drug Win for Malaysia?".
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Peru replaces drug tsar Soberon". BBC News. 10 October 2018.
- ^ Amira. "Researchers - Ricardo Soberón". www.druglawreform.info.
- ^ "In pipeline, a plan to privatise water supply in cities". 22 September 2015.
- ^ Vidal, John (30 January 2015). "Water privatisation: a worldwide failure? - John Vidal". The Guardian.
- ^ "Energy democracy - ENERGY DEMOCRACY". 4 December 2016.
- ^ "More than 830 cities have brought essential services back under public control. Others should follow - CityMetric". www.citymetric.com. 26 June 2017.
- ^ "Remunicipalisation becomes an unstoppable trend - EPSU". www.epsu.org.
- ^ Meera Karunananthan. "Global water justice activists mobilize to keep water public in Switzerland". Archived from the original on October 2, 2020 – via archive.today.
- ^ "The power of a transformative city - P2P Foundation". 23 May 2018.
- ^ "Transformative Cities Initiative: a unique participatory award". openDemocracy. 29 May 2018.
- ^ "Transnational Institute:Transformative Cities".
- ^ "Our common ground: a salute to the Young Global Collective". openDemocracy. 23 January 2017.
- ^ "The battle for minds, and role of human behaviour in generating plutocracies". openDemocracy. 26 January 2017.
- ^ "Financialisation: A Primer". 13 September 2018.
External links
[edit]Transnational Institute
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Early Development (1970s)
The Transnational Institute (TNI) was established in 1974 in Amsterdam, Netherlands, as the international program of the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), a progressive think tank founded in 1963 to critique U.S. foreign policy.[1] [2] The origins trace to a 1972 meeting in Paris organized by Susan George, which sought to counter global inequities, militarism, and corporate dominance in developing nations, drawing inspiration and initial funding from philanthropist Samuel Rubin.[1] Operations commenced on November 9, 1973, under first director Eqbal Ahmad, a Pakistani scholar critical of Western imperialism, in an empty building donated by Dutch philanthropist Ed Jans; formal registration occurred with the Dutch Chamber of Commerce on March 21, 1974.[1] [2] Early activities centered on networking "activist scholars" to analyze transnational corporations and advocate for Third World perspectives amid Cold War tensions.[2] TNI's inaugural conference in 1974 examined "The Lessons from Chile" following the 1973 U.S.-backed coup against Salvador Allende, aiding Chilean exiles and highlighting corporate roles in regime change.[1] In 1975, it launched the IPS Transnational Links newsletter, distributed ten times annually, and initiated a feminist project to incorporate gender analysis into global policy critiques.[1] Susan George's 1976 book How the Other Half Dies, published under TNI auspices, documented disparities in global food distribution, attributing them to agribusiness and unequal trade structures.[2] Leadership transitioned amid turmoil: Ahmad departed in 1975, succeeded by Orlando Letelier, a Chilean diplomat exiled after the Allende overthrow, who advanced campaigns for a New International Economic Order to redistribute global wealth from industrialized nations.[1] Letelier's assassination on September 21, 1976, in Washington, D.C., by agents of Augusto Pinochet's regime—later linked to U.S. intelligence complicity in investigations—underscored TNI's alignment with anti-authoritarian causes, though critics noted Letelier's prior ties to Cuban funding through IPS channels.[1] [2] Basker Vashee, a Namibian activist, assumed directorship later in 1976, repositioning TNI as a support node for African independence struggles, including Zimbabwe's liberation war.[1] By 1977, TNI established the Transnational Information Exchange to monitor multinational operations, reflecting its foundational emphasis on empirical scrutiny of corporate power despite self-reported activist biases in its outputs.[1][2]Expansion and Program Evolution (1980s–2000s)
During the 1980s, the Transnational Institute broadened its scope beyond early anti-imperialist analyses to tackle debt crises and regional conflicts, launching the Third World Debt project in 1982 under researcher Jan Joost Teunissen, which critiqued structural adjustment policies imposed by international financial institutions.[1] This initiative expanded in 1985 amid growing global indebtedness of developing nations, culminating in the 1988 publication of Susan George's A Fate Worse than Debt, which argued that debt servicing exacerbated poverty rather than fostering development, drawing on empirical data from borrower countries.[7] Concurrently, TNI organized conferences on militarism, including a 1982 event in The Hague addressing South African destabilization in southern Africa with inputs from ministers of Zimbabwe, Mozambique, and Angola, and a 1981 disarmament conference co-hosted with the Appeal for European Nuclear Disarmament.[7] Leadership transitioned in 1986 with Ariane van Buren as director, emphasizing feminist and peace-oriented programs, such as the outgrowth of women's projects into the autonomous DOMITILA group in 1980 focused on self-determination.[7] From 1985 to 1995, TNI pursued organizational expansion by recruiting dedicated project staff for Africa, Latin America, and Asia, aiming to forge deeper ties with regional movements and counter Western corporate influence in trade and development, as evidenced by intensified collaborations with peasant organizations and a 1993 European tour of Central American leaders.[1] The Central America Project, active by 1984, mobilized signatures from 600 European politicians opposing U.S. policy toward Nicaragua under Reagan, highlighting TNI's role in transnational advocacy networks.[7] In 1990, following the Berlin Wall's fall, TNI hosted Eastern and Western European activists to discuss post-Cold War democracy, resulting in the Pluto Press publication After the Wall edited by Hilary Wainwright, which documented activist strategies for inclusive governance.[7] Entering the 1990s, program evolution shifted toward critiquing neoliberal globalization and nuclear issues, with Jochen Hippler directing from 1992 to 1994 and publishing The Next Threat on emerging security paradigms.[1] In 1995, TNI partnered with the World Information Service on Energy (WISE) to launch a project on the New Non-Proliferation Treaty, producing Beyond the Bomb to advocate for disarmament beyond state-centric treaties.[1] Trade-focused efforts intensified against WTO frameworks, contributing to the 1999 Battle of Seattle protests through analyses of corporate-driven rules that prioritized investor rights over labor and environmental standards.[1] That year, TNI marked its 25th anniversary with a Festival of Ideas, deepening work on drug policies via the Drugs & Democracy program—evident in 1999 reports with Acción Andina challenging prohibitionist approaches—and Bretton Woods institutions, alongside Burma advocacy.[7][8] By the 2000s, TNI's programs evolved to emphasize alternatives to privatization and corporate impunity, forming the Linking Alternatives Network in 2006 to connect global justice movements across regions.[1] Drug policy advocacy matured, with the Drugs & Democracy initiative producing briefings like the 2006 assessment of UNODC's World Drug Report, questioning the efficacy of supply-side controls based on production and consumption data showing minimal global impact over decades.[9] These developments reflected TNI's adaptation to post-Cold War dynamics, prioritizing grassroots-linked research over purely academic critique, though reliant on fellowship networks rather than quantified staff growth metrics.[1]Recent Milestones and 50th Anniversary (2010s–2024)
In the 2010s, the Transnational Institute intensified its advocacy against corporate impunity through the Stop Corporate Impunity campaign launched in 2010, fostering an international movement that secured governmental endorsements from Ecuador and South Africa in 2013 and led to the United Nations Human Rights Council's creation of an Inter-Governmental Working Group on transnational corporations and human rights in 2014.[10] The institute also mobilized efforts in trade and investment critiques, collecting 3.2 million signatures across Europe from 2010 to 2014 to oppose expansive investor protections in trade agreements.[10] In public services, TNI's involvement in the Reclaiming Public Water network culminated in 1.84 million signatures by 2014 supporting legislation for water as a human right and public good, which garnered backing from the European Parliament.[10][11] Further milestones included the establishment of the Global Farmers’ Forum in 2015 to amplify voices of illicit crop farmers in drug policy debates, aligning with emerging decriminalization trends in countries such as Uruguay and parts of Mexico.[10] TNI supported agrarian justice initiatives like the Land In Our Hands network formed in 2014 in Myanmar to engage farmers on land policies amid ethnic conflicts.[10] Key publications during this period, exceeding 200 works from 2011 to 2015, included Profiting from Injustice (2011) on investor-state dispute mechanisms and The Rise and Decline of Cannabis Prohibition (2014), which informed global policy discourse.[10] Entering the 2020s, TNI adopted a new strategic plan for 2021–2026, emphasizing programmatic directions in areas like climate justice, militarism, and social movements amid rising authoritarianism.[12] Its research on climate militarism, including critiques of NATO's spending targets diverting funds from climate finance, received coverage in outlets such as The Guardian and Al Jazeera in 2024.[13] The institute renewed its fellowship program in 2024, expanding to 53 associates and fellows to address emerging global challenges.[14] Marking its 50th anniversary in 2024—commemorating the 1974 founding—TNI organized a year-long series of events, essays, and podcasts reflecting on its history of turning ideas into social movements.[14] A highlight was the hybrid Ignite! Festival of Radical Ideas held on September 27, 2024, in Amsterdam, featuring speakers like economists Jason Hickel and Jayati Ghosh to discuss equity, democracy, peace, and liberation.[14][15] Additional celebrations included a Brussels edition event to honor long-term allies.[16] These activities reaffirmed TNI's commitment to internationalism and solidarity in building democratic alternatives.[17]Organizational Structure
Governance and Leadership
The Transnational Institute (TNI) operates under a governance structure emphasizing consensus-based decision-making and a non-hierarchical approach, with monthly staff consultations to foster collective input on strategic directions.[18] The supervisory board provides oversight of the management, offers advisory support, and approves annual plans and reports; it convenes at least three times per year.[18] As of 2024, the board comprises five members: Imad Sabi as chair, Ruth Kronenburg as treasurer and audit committee member, Ferrial Adam as secretary, Frenk van Enckevort, and Zohra Moosa.[18] Susan George has served as TNI's president in an honorary capacity since 2015, a role that underscores long-term strategic guidance drawn from her extensive background in global policy analysis.[18] [19] The management board is streamlined, consisting solely of the executive director, with operational leadership handled through a management team that meets weekly; this team maintains gender parity at 50% and includes roles such as programme directors, a communication coordinator, personnel officer, evaluation officer, and fundraising coordinator.[18] Fiona Dove has been executive director since 1995, reporting directly to the supervisory board and overseeing a staff of 32 members (63% women, representing 13 nationalities and 28.02 full-time equivalents as of 2024).[18] TNI's fellowship program, comprising 53 members (41 associates and 12 research fellows, with 43% women and 38% from the Global South), operates on three-year terms and contributes to research and advisory functions, though it is not part of formal decision-making governance.[18] A board of advisors exists but was not active in 2024.[18]Funding and Financial Dependencies
The Transnational Institute (TNI) relies predominantly on project-specific grants for its operations, with income sourced from governments, philanthropic foundations, and minor contributions from other public entities and internal means. In 2023, TNI reported total revenue of €7,068,505, marking a 36% increase from €5,215,640 in 2022.[20] This funding model exposes TNI to dependencies on recurring grant approvals, prompting efforts to diversify sources and build reserves; by year-end 2023, its continuity fund stood at €1,603,476, equivalent to 70% of one year's operational costs.[20] Government funding constitutes a significant portion, with the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs as the largest single contributor. In 2023, the Dutch government provided 38% of income (€2,691,540), down from 42% in 2022 and 41% in 2021, reflecting deliberate reduction in reliance on this source.[20] [2] Other public sources, including the Swedish International Development Agency and the European Union (2%, or €153,878), accounted for 14% (€977,445) collectively.[20] Historically, government grants have comprised up to 70% of revenue, as in 2021 when non-Dutch governments contributed 29%.[2] Philanthropic foundations form the second-largest category, supplying 43% (€3,007,900) in 2023, an 18% rise from prior years amid diversification pushes.[20] Key donors include the Open Society Foundations, which granted $2,951,139 across 2016–2021 (including $2,070,139 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society), and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, providing $905,000 from 2018–2021.[2] [21] Additional foundation support in recent years has come from entities like the Climate Emergency Collaboration Group, Thousand Currents ($41,000 in 2022), Tides ($100,000 in 2022), and the New Venture Fund ($200,000 in 2022).[2] TNI's own means, including interest, donations, and fees, contributed 3% (€237,742) in 2023.[20]| Funding Source Category (2023) | Percentage | Amount (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Dutch Government | 38% | 2,691,540 |
| Philanthropic Foundations | 43% | 3,007,900 |
| Other Public Sources | 14% | 977,445 |
| European Union | 2% | 153,878 |
| Own Means | 3% | 237,742 |