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RECIPIENT GRANTS

Monterey Institute of International Studies

Monterey, CA

Media Transparency Profile

Total Grants to Monterey Institute of International Studies
Total $ Granted: $ 972,967
For Years: 2002 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995
# Grants: 10

Grants to Monterey Institute of International Studies

Click date for grant details.

Date Amount Purpose Funder
12-31-2002 100,000 Russian Cruise Missiles Exports: Domestic Roots and Global Impact
Timothy McCarthy and Dennis Gormley will commission research that will examine the strategic implications of Russia's continued proliferation of cruise missiles. They will develop policy recommendations that outline U.S. responses to reduce the cruise missile threat. The project's findings will appear in two monographs.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-2000 100,000 The Threat of "Nuclear Regionalism" in Russia
James Clay Moltz will lead an effort to examine whether the control of the Russian central government over nuclear materials is eroding and whether this requires revision of U.S.-Russia cooperative threat reduction programs developed to prevent the theft of nuclear materials. The project's findings will be published in a series of case study reports, a monograph, and briefings for policy makers.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1999 100,000 The Threat of “Nuclear Regionalism” in Russia
James Clay Moltz will conduct and commission field research to examine whether the control of the Russian central government over nuclear materials is eroding and whether U.S. policies should be altered to improve the effectiveness of U.S. and Russian programs designed to prevent the theft of nuclear materials. They will analyze the political and economic dynamics in regions where critical nuclear facilities are located and convene workshops in Washington and Moscow.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1998 100,000 Assessment of Nunn-Lugar Programs as Tools to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation
William Potter will commission research and analysis and produce a series of reports, assessing the results of the Nunn-Lugar cooperative threat reduction program. He will organize working groups and fieldwork in Russia and other former Soviet states on key issues related to the proliferation of technology, materials, and expertise for the production of weapons of mass destruction.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1998 134,200 The Former Soviet Union’s Biological and Toxin Warfare Program: Assessing its Proliferation Potential
Raymond Zilinskas will research and write a series of reports and a book on the Soviet and Russian biological and toxin warfare program. He will analyze the potential threat of the legacies of these programs as a source of technology and expertise for biological and toxin weapons proliferation.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1997 88,767 The Former Soviet Union's Biological and Toxin Warfare Program: Assessing Its Proliferation Potential
This grant supports research on the Soviet and Russian biological and toxin warfare program. Raymond Zilinskas will conduct research andlysis to determine the potential threat that its legacy poses as a source of technology and expertise for weapons proliferation. The final products will be a series of reports and a book.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1997 25,000 Former Soviet Biological Weapons Facilities in Kazakhstan: Past, Present, and the Future
This grant supports research on the former Soviet Union's biological weapons facilities in Kazakhstan. Jonathan Tucker will commission research that examine the current status of facilities throughout the region and evaluate prospects for economic conversion and environmental management of these facilities. The research will be published in Russian- and English-language reports that will include recommendations for the conversion of biological weapons facilities.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1997 175,000 Assessment of Nunn-Lugar Programs as Tools to Combat Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation
This grant supports an analysis of the effectiveness of the Nunn-Lugar cooperative threat reduction program, which was designed to reduce the proliferation threat posed by the stockpiles and production facilities of weapons of mass destruction in the former Soviet Union. William Potter will convene working groups to study the program, summarize lessons learned, and present policy recommendations forimproving the program.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1996 75,000 Proliferation Challenges and Nonproliferation Opportunites in the Commonwealth of Independent States
This grant supports research, analysis, and training programs on proliferation issues concerning the states of the former Soviet Union. The project will conduct training seminars to educate nonproliferation analysts and officials from the non-Russian states of the former Soviet Union. It will also produce monographs on such issues as illicit nuclear trade, the changing role of state-sanctionednuclear exports from Russia, and the role of independent nuclear regulatory bodies in the former Soviet Union.
Smith Richardson Foundation
12-31-1995 75,000 Proliferation Challenges and Nonproliferation Opportunites in the Commonwealth of Independent States
This grant supports research, analysis, and training programs on proliferation issues concerning the states of the former Soviet Union. The project will conduct training seminars to educate nonproliferation analysts and officials from the non-Russian states of the former Soviet Union. It will also produce monographs on such issues as illicit nuclear trade, the changing role of state-sanctionednuclear exports from Russia, and the role of independent nuclear regulatory bodies in the former Soviet Union.
Smith Richardson Foundation

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