grey slant background

Brookings Institution, Foreign Policy Studies Program

Washington, D.C.

Grants

2018 (3 years 6 months)
$1,125,000

The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, DC, whose mission is to conduct in-depth research that leads to new ideas for solving problems facing society at the local, national, and global level. This project addresses nuclear security and nonproliferation challenges in the 21st century, including great power competition between the United States, Russia, and China, mitigating the proliferation risks from states like North Korea and Iran, and building bipartisan domestic consensus in the United States for nuclear arms control, deterrence, and strategic stability. It aims to provide innovative policy options to address these challenges.

2016 (2 years 7 months)
$550,000

The Brookings Institution is a private nonprofit organization devoted to independent research and innovative policy solutions. This project addresses two challenges related to the Iran nuclear deal, or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The first stream of research develops a strategy for eliminating or at least minimizing the JCPOA's “out-year” risks. The second stream of research assesses the domestic and regional context for the deal and proposes strategies for the U.S. government and other relevant actors intended to bolster the agreement’s long-term viability and the efficacy of its nonproliferation objectives. 

2012 (1 year)
$35,000

The grant will support research and convening activities in the run-up to the May 2012 G8 and NATO summits.

2006 (3 years)
$600,000

In support of a program of research and convening activities in the United States, China, Japan, and India to maintain peace and security in Asia (over two years).

2004 (2 years)
$600,000

In support of a Science and Technology Fellow and a project on the legitimacy of force as a means of restraining weapons proliferation (over two years).

2002 (3 years)
$450,000

To support the project The Future of Arms Control (over three years).

2001 (1 year 6 months)
$150,000

To research the broader foreign policy and security implications of the terrorist attacks on U.S. policy toward the Islamic world, with a particular interest in examining the causes of Islamist extremism and opposition to the U.S.

1998 (2 years)
$736,000

To support research on arms control and the resolution of conflict (over two years).

1996 (2 years)
$150,000

To support the work of the representative of the U.N. Secretary-General on internally displaced persons (over two years).

1996 (1 year)
$52,000

To support a study on how to achieve deep reductions in strategic nuclear forces.

1988 (1 year 2 months)
$58,500

For "Ballistic Missile Production in the Third World."

1988 (1 year 2 months)
$60,000

To support the Visiting Scholars Program and research on the contribution of American leadership to international relations.

1987 (1 year)
$450,000

To support fellowships in the East Asian and Middle East programs and visiting Soviet economists (over three years).

1986 (1 year 1 month)
$60,000

For "Presidential Policymaking Regarding the Arab-Israeli Conflict," by Harold Saunders.

1985 (1 year)
$25,000

For a study of the security implications of bio-technology.

1984 (1 year)
$1,950,000

To support effective and sustained collaboration among researchers from different fields on problems of international security and for an experiment in systematically focused research on neglected dimensions of security (over five years).