Monday, September 19, 2016

NED Grants in China in 2000

According to the NED Annual Report for 2000, the following US Government funds were allocated by the US Congress and dispersed by the NED for programs in China:

The American Center for International Labor Solidarity - $192,190
To enable labor rights organizations to educate workers in China about worker and trade union rights, labor standards and democracy, and to gather and analyze information on industrial relations and the status of Chinese trade union rights for international dissemination.Back to Top

The American Center for International Labor Solidarity - $184,560
To assist democratic unions and labor rights organizations in Hong Kong working to protect worker and union rights in the South China region.

The Center for International Private Enterprise - 1997 Reprogramming - $56,000
To support a biweekly symposium on China's transition to a market economy, to reproduce and distribute symposium papers, and to produce short studies suggesting policy improvements for technical and administrative reforms.

The Center for International Private Enterprise -
$59,000
To promote the effective privatization of state enterprises by supporting research, conferences and articles encouraging public participation in economic reform processes.

The Center for International Private Enterprise - $79,500
To expand and improve a nationwide Internet network on modern economic reform and to provide economics management courses for participants from around the country.

Center for Modern China - $55,000
To support Modern China Studies, a quarterly Chinese language journal of economic and social science research concerning liberal, democratic solutions to contemporary policy questions in China.
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Democratic China Magazine - $75,000
To publish its monthly Chinese language Internet magazine on politics, society, and culture, promoting democracy and pluralism in China through articles contributed by writers from China, the U.S. and other countries.

Foundation for China in the 21st Century - $60,000
To carry out a multi-faceted program of research, publications, and seminars on inter-ethnic relations, globalization and modernization, and democracy in China.

Human Rights in China - $200,000
To support a program of human rights information gathering, reporting, publicity and advocacy; direct support for victims of political persecution; and production and circulation of materials informing Chinese citizens of their rights.

International Republican Institute - $489,716 - 1999 Reprogramming
To support electoral reform at the village level, and to support a research program, publications, and communication with Chinese officials on political prisoners, legal reform, and human rights.

International Republican Institute - $460,000
To promote electoral reform in China at the village level, legal reform at the municipal and provincial level, and legislative reform and public policy implementation at the provincial and national levels. 
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International Republican Institute - 1997 Reprogramming - $165,000
To sponsor seminars for newly elected village committee leaders and election officials on practices and transparent local governance, and to promote election monitoring through a conference for monitors and sponsorship of observation missions.

Laogai Research Foundation - $85,000
To support a research and publication program on the Chinese system forced-labor prison camp (laogai) and to investigate and document other human rights violations occurring in China.

National Democratic Institute for International Affairs -
$209,666
To support a seminar on the role of the legislature in democracies, and to assist in the development of an information clearinghouse on democratic legislative norms.

Press Freedom Guardian - $48,000
To publish a twice-monthly Chinese language newspaper providing news and analysis on democracy, human rights and the activities of the Chinese democracy movement.

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