HUDSON INSTITUTE

The 'Hudson Institute' is a right-leaning U.S. think tank, founded in 1961 in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, by the futurist Herman Kahn and other colleagues from the RAND Corporation. The Institute promotes public policy change in accordance with its stated values of a "commitment to free markets and individual responsibility, confidence in the power of technology to assist progress, respect for the importance of culture and religion in human affairs, and determination to preserve America's national security." It is the organization about which the phrase "think tank" was originally coined.
The institute moved to Indianapolis, Indiana in 1984, and in 2004 to Washington, DC. The current president is Herbert London.
The Institute is registered in the United States as a non-profit organization.[1]

Contents
Policy positions
Funding
Hudson Institute Leadership
Notable trustees, fellows and advisors
References
External links

Policy positions


The Hudson Institute's experts try to work toward a broad view of society and change, looking for the interplay between culture, demography, technology, markets, and political leadership.
In the 1970s, Hudson’s scholars advocated a turn away from the "no-growth" policies of the Club of Rome; in the early 1990s, it advised the newly-liberated Baltic nations on becoming market economies; it assisted in drafting the Wisconsin welfare reform law that became the model for national welfare reform in the mid-1990s.
The Institute has taken positions critical of environmentalism. Dennis Avery, as Director of the Hudson's Center for Global Food Issues, has written in opposition to those who favor the adoption of organic agricultural methods.
The Hudson Institute is developing programs to propose the political and economic transformation of Muslim nations.

Funding


The Hudson Institute is supported by donations from companies and individuals. Corporate contributors include Eli Lilly and Company, Monsanto, DuPont, Dow-Elanco, Sandoz, Ciba-Geigy, ConAgra, Cargill, and Procter & Gamble.[1]
Fundraising efforts use testimonials from what the Institute calls its "family of generous supporters and friends", among them, Henry Kissinger, who provides a testimonial:
:"Hudson Institute is today one of America's foremost policy research centers, in the forefront of study and debate on important domestic and international policy issues, known and respected around the globe, a leader in innovative thinking and creative solutions to the challenges of the present and the future."[2]
Some question the institute's position on many issues. An example is their view of food production and the large sums they receive from food companies.

Hudson Institute Leadership



Herbert London (President)

Kenneth R. Weinstein (CEO)

Deborah L. Hoopes (Vice President & Chief Financial Officer)

Grace Paine Terzian (Vice President for Communications)

Notable trustees, fellows and advisors


In 1990 fellow Bruce Chapman founded another think tank, the Discovery Institute.
Politicians who have been affilitated with Hudson include former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle and Governor of Indiana Mitch Daniels.
Other members include:

Zeyno Baran

Anne Bayefsky

Conrad Black

Robert Bork

Rudy Boschwitz

Pierre S. du Pont, IV (emeritus)

Joseph Epstein

Joseph M. Giglio[3] (Vice Chairman, Board of Trustees)

Alexander Haig (emeritus)

Bernadine P. Healy, M.D. (emeritus)

Roy Innis

Donald Kagan (emeritus)

I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby

Betsy McCaughey

Robert H. McKinney[4]

John O'Sullivan

William Odom

Richard Perle

Max Singer[5] (Co-founder, president until 1973, currently senior fellow and trustee)

Irwin Stelzer

Walter P. Stern[6] (Chairman of the Board of Trustees; Board Member; Executive Committee Member)

Allan R. Tessler[7] (Vice Chairman, Board of Trustees)

Richard Weitz

Ambassador Curtin Winsor, Jr.[8] (Board Member)

References


1. Stauber, John and Sheldon Rampton. ''Trust Us, We’re Experts - How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future''. Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 1-58542-139-1.

External links



Hudson Institute

SourceWatch entry - Center for Media and Democracy

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