New America | |
Type: | Think tank |
Headquarters: | 740 15th Street NW, Ste 900 |
Location: | Washington, D.C. |
Leader Title: | Chair |
Leader Name: | Helene D. Gayle |
Leader Title2: | CEO |
Leader Name2: | Anne-Marie Slaughter |
Revenue: | $39,313,077[1] |
Revenue Year: | 2017 |
Expenses: | $36,069,449 |
Expenses Year: | 2017 |
New America, formerly the New America Foundation, is a liberal think tank in the United States founded in 1999.[2] [3] [4] It focuses on a range of public policy issues, including national security studies, technology, asset building, health, gender, energy, education, and the economy. The organization is based in Washington, D.C., and Oakland, California.[5] Anne-Marie Slaughter is the chief executive officer (CEO) of the think tank.[6]
New America was founded in 1999 by Ted Halstead, Sherle Schwenninger, Michael Lind, and Walter Russell Mead as the New America Foundation.[7] The organization is headquartered in Washington, D.C., United States, and also has an office in Oakland, California.[8]
Ted Halstead served as New America's founding President and CEO from 1999 to 2007.[9] Steve Coll served as New America's second President,[10] before being succeeded by Anne-Marie Slaughter in 2013.[11]
On June 27, 2017, Barry C. Lynn, the director of the anti-monopoly Open Markets program at New America, issued a statement, criticizing Google, one of the organization's main sponsors. On August 30, 2017, it became known that Lynn was fired, and the Open Markets program was closed.[12] [13] According to The New York Times newspaper, New America did it to please Google.[14] In response to the decision to fire Lynn and his team, twenty-five former and current employees of the think tank signed a letter expressing concern about the extent to which sponsors are influencing New America's work.[15]
Reportedly, Google made New America take this action because the researchers, including prominent young competition law scholar Lina Khan,[16] had lauded the EU's antitrust ruling against Google.[17] New America's president Anne-Marie Slaughter denied the allegations of improper influence by Google.[18]
The foundation's Economic Growth Program, directed by New America co-founders Sherle Schwenninger and Michael Lind, aims to take a policy look at America and the world's economic problems. In 2011, the program commissioned a paper "The Way Forward: Moving From the Post-Bubble, Post-Bust Economy to Renewed Growth and Competitiveness"[19] which warned of the severe economic problems America would face if continued on its current path.
Maya MacGuineas, who has worked at the Brookings Institution as well as on Wall Street, led the committee and now leads Fix the Debt. After advising politicians from both parties, she serves as a trusted mediator on budget talks between Democrats and Republicans.[20] In addition, in April 2010 the committee's policy director, Marc Goldwein, joined President Obama's bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform.[21]
In 2002 Newsweeks Howard Fineman called New America a "hive of state-of-the-art policy entrepreneurship".[22] New America has been characterized as "liberal" by the Pacific Standard online magazine,[23] "left-leaning" by The Washington Post,[24] and "left-of-center" by the Capital Research Center organization.
The Open Technology Institute (OTI) is the technology program of the New America Foundation. OTI formulates policy and regulatory reforms to support open architectures and open-source innovations and facilitates the development and implementation of open technologies and communications networks.
See main article: Commotion Wireless. Commotion is an open source "device-as-infrastructure" communication platform that integrates users' existing cell phones, Wi-Fi-enabled computers, and other wireless-capable devices to create community- and metro-scale, peer-to-peer communications networks.[25] The project builds on existing mesh wireless technologies and gained widespread attention when, in 2011, the U.S. State Department announced funding for Commotion to lower barriers for building distributed communications networks. The project has been described as the "Internet in a Suitcase" by The New York Times.[26]
See main article: Red Hook Wi-Fi.
Founded in 2011 through a collaboration with OTI and Commotion Wireless, Red Hook Wi-Fi is a mesh network which services residents of Red Hook, Brooklyn, in New York City. The Wi-Fi network reached prominence in 2012, when Hurricane Sandy shut down many internet and communication systems throughout the city, but Red Hook remained connected through its mesh network.[27] [28]
The Center on Education and Labor at New America (CELNA) is a New America Foundation research program. CELNA focuses on workforce development, education, and labor policy with a focus on youth and registered apprenticeships, labor policy, community colleges,[29] credentials, skills, STEM education, and the future of work.[30]
As of 2017, the New America had net assets of $26,788,098. Top donors to the organization in 2021 included the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, and United States Department of State.[31] Funding details as of 2018:[32]
As of 2020:[33]