Soros' Open Society Foundations say they remain focused on human rights
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[December 10, 2024] By
THALIA BEATY
NEW YORK (AP) — Despite years of internal turmoil and changes, Open
Society Foundations wants those in the human rights sector to know their
movements will still receive support from the organization, its
president Binaifer Nowrojee said Tuesday.
The foundations, founded by billionaire investor George Soros and now
led by one of his sons, Alex Soros, have historically been one of the
largest funders of human rights groups. But since 2021, they closed some
of their programs and reduced their staff as part of a major internal
reorganization.
In the process, many grantees and others in the human rights movement
have waited anxiously to see where the chips would fall.
“A reimagination has taken place under the leadership of the new board
chair at Open Society Foundations,” Nowrojee said, referring to Alex
Soros.
“One of the reasons that we wanted to really reiterate in a large way,
with balloons, et cetera, that we are still committed to human rights,
is because of this fear that’s permeated with the changes that somehow
Open Society Foundations is no longer going to be working on rights or
equity or justice,” she said in advance of Human Rights Day, which the
United Nations observes on Dec. 10.
Nowrojee offered few new details about OSF's specific funding
priorities, though earlier this year, the foundations committed $400
million toward green jobs and economic development.
Another new program focuses on protecting environmental defenders that
will work in a few countries, like Colombia and the Democratic Republic
of Congo and end after five years, said Sharan Srinvias, a director of
programs at OSF.
“We did a survey of what other donors are supporting and in general, we
saw that this is where the gap is,” he said of people who come under
attack for defending land, water or other resources. “Especially
bilateral donors find it much easier to support global organizations,
who in turn are able to support prominent rights defenders in capital
cities who are well known.”
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One benefit of the limited time horizon, Srinvias said, is his team will
mostly make grants of three or five years — longer than OSF's typical
grants — and offer grantees more flexibility. It will also have some
funds to respond to emergencies for human rights defenders all over the
world.
In 2020, OSF was the largest global human rights funder, giving out the
most money overall and making the largest number of grants. That's
according to the Human Rights Funders Network, a membership organization
of grantmakers that tracks philanthropic funding for human rights
groups.
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“When major funders adjust their priorities, it can have a ripple
effect. Their decisions can dramatically impact the human rights
movements they once supported, especially in regions where they’ve been
a long-time champion,” HRFN wrote in its most recent Advancing Human
Rights report from September.
To add to the atmosphere of uncertainty, another major human rights
funder, Wellspring Philanthropic Fund, announced earlier this year that
it would end its work by 2028.
OSF's board aims to employ 600 people in total around the world,
Nowrojee said, which is down from a reported 800 in 2021.
Some of the changes OSF made in the last three years include winding
down its global public health program and significantly diminishing its
programs in the European Union. It spun off its area of work focused on
Roma communities into a new organization and issued final grants to many
of its partners.
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“You never want philanthropy to just be doing the same thing. You want
philanthropy to be getting out of stuff,” Nowrojee said. “And so there’s
large areas of work where huge achievements were made, which we have
retreated from, not because we don’t think that there’s value in them,
but the movements themselves have strengthened.”
People who worked for OSF's public health program and some of their
grantees have spoken about its impacts over almost three decades through
an oral history project led by University of Southern California
Institute on Inequalities in Global Health and funded by OSF.
Jonathan Cohen, who led the OSF public health program and now holds
positions at USC, told an interviewer with the oral history project
about a decision in 2020 by OSF's leadership to take funding from its
programs and reallocate it to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“That claw-back in April should have been a sign, I think, to all of us
that we were not long for this world,” Cohen said, of the public health
program. "But of course, you don’t accept that. You fight. You resist.
You try to keep your program, which is what we did until we couldn’t.”
Among the movements that OSF had supported under its public health
program was the the Network of Sex Work Projects, a global coalition of
sex worker groups. It formed in 1992 in part in response to the killing
of sex workers who had HIV, said Ruth Morgan Thomas, who was NSWP's
global coordinator for many years, as part of the oral history project.
She said she was saddened to see the closure of OSF's public health
work.
“I hope as it reemerges and its global strategy reemerges, it will
retain its stance and support for promoting the realization of sex
workers’ rights and inclusion in our societies,” she said.
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