Allen Andersson
Allen Andersson describes himself as a mathematician by training,
an engineer by trade, an entrepreneur by vocation, and now
a plutocrat by circumstance. A decade ago, his telecommunications
start-up invented the software basis for internet telephony,
and he began to finance projects designed to bring Central
America into the First World. He is the principal owner of
WaveCrest Laboratories, Amylin Pharmaceuticals, and a portfolio
of smaller science-based companies, as well as the president
of Paperboy Ventures. He is also president of The Riecken
Foundation, whose first project is the construction and incubation
of one thousand community libraries and internet centers in
Central America. Follow-on projects include agriculture reform,
anti-corruption programs, progressive schooling, and transparent
business practices.
Joseph Eldridge
Reverend Joseph Eldridge is university chaplain and adjunct
faculty member in the School of International Service at American
University. Eldridge has spent more than twenty-five years
working in the public policy arena as an advocate and analyst
on international human rights and humanitarian issues. He
has published a number of op-eds and book chapters and has
been interviewed for “60 Minutes” by Mike Wallace
and by Bill Moyers for a special of “God and Politics.”
In 1991 he established the Washington office of the Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights; during the mid-1980s he worked
in Honduras consulting on human rights and development issues;
and after a three year sojourn in Chile in the early 1970s
he founded the Washington Office on Latin America and served
as its first director. He has an M.A. from American University
and a Masters in Divinity from Southern Methodist University.
Mike Farrell
Co-chair of the California Committee of Human Rights Watch,
Mike Farrell is also spokesperson for CONCERN/America, an
international refugee aid and development organization, chair
of Death Penalty Focus and, occasionally, a Goodwill Ambassador
for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Known
to millions of the world’s viewers as “B.J. Hunnicutt”
of television’s historic “M*A*S*H” series
and to fewer as the producer of Universal Pictures’
hit “Patch Adams,” he most recently starred in
NBC-TV’s “Providence.” A refugee aid and
human rights activist for over 20 years, Farrell has taken
part in aid missions and human rights delegations to El Salvador,
Nicaragua and Honduras, among numerous others, and represented
one such delegation in testimony before the U.S. Congress.
An opponent of the death penalty and an advocate of prison
reform, Farrell has visited prisons and has been involved
in death penalty cases across the U.S. and in many foreign
lands.
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend served as Lieutenant Governor of
Maryland from January 18, 1995 to January 15, 2003. Upon taking
office in 1995, Townsend made a national name for herself
as an advocate of victims’ rights and an innovator in
the fight against crime. She served as chair of the Maryland
Cabinet Council on Criminal and Juvenile Justice, and in that
capacity, developed the first statewide initiative in the
nation that targets crime hotspots. As lieutenant governor,
she was also at the forefront on issues such as quality education
and healthcare. Before becoming Lt. Governor, Townsend served
as Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the U.S. Department
of Justice, during which time she worked to establish community
policing programs across the country. She is the founder of
the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award, the former chair
of the board of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation,
and serves on the board of directors of the John F. Kennedy
Library Foundation.
CIP Board Members
Lowell Blankfort
President of Blankfort Unlimited Inc., a firm specializing
in media consulting, article and column writing. In addition
Lowell has done special articles, mostly on foreign countries,
from in-depth series on political hot spots like Afganistan,
Iraq and Cuba to colorful travel articles on primitive backwaters
like Benin, Outer Mongolia and Papua New Guinea. Lowell has
interviewed many heads of state and of governments, including
Fidel Castro in Cuba, Kim Dae Jung in Korea, Li Peng and Li
Xiannian in China, Paul Kagame in Rwanda, Keith Mitchell in
Granada, Joaquin Balaguer in the Dominican Republic, Rodrigo
Carazo in Costa Rica, in addition to two Nobel Peace Prize
winners – Kim Dae Jung and Shirin Ebadi, in Iran. He
has won a series of awards including the Best Editorial in
the United States from the National Newspaper Association,
Civic Recognition Award, City of Chula Vista, for outstanding
service to the community and Headliner of the Year San Diego
Press Club, for nationwide recognition for editorial writing
among others.
Thomas Cooper
Thomas Cooper, founder and CEO of Gulfstream International
Airlines, has been significantly involved for numerous years
in the airline industry, specifically in the development of
charter air service between Cuba and the United States. A
graduate of Embry Riddle Aeronautical University where he
earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Management, Mr. Cooper
has an Airline Transport rating, Flight Engineer License,
and a Flight Instructor’s License. In 1976, he established
Air Florida Commuter, which focused on connecting passengers
from Miami with various locations in the Caribbean, and in
1989 founded Gulfstream International, an airline that today
operates a fleet of 32 jet-prop aircraft. Gulfstream currently
operates two daily flights between Miami and Havana. Mr. Cooper
is also the CEO of the Gulfstream Training Academy, one of
the nation’s leading professional pilot training companies.
Jeffery Horowitz
Mr. Horowitz founded Urbanists International in September
of a non-profit organization offering urban design, planning,
and economic development assistance to developing countries.
As an architectural designer, he has directed a wide variety
of large-scale urban projects with the firms of Skidmore,
Owings, and Merrill, and Kaplan, McLaughlin & Diaz. His
projects include commercial centers and high-rise office towers
across the U.S. and in Paris, Barcelona, Brussels, Milan,
Jakarta, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Mr. Horowitz received his
Master of Architecture degree from the Harvard University
Graduate School of Design, where he founded The Harvard Architecture
Review. At the time, Mr. Horowitz was also appointed a Harvard
teaching fellow, a Graham Foundation Scholar, and was the
recipient of Harvard’s Appleton Award for architectural
scholarship. From 1991-1996 he served as chairman of the Planning
Commission of Berkeley, California. Mr. Horowitz currently
serves as chairman of the board of trustees for the Head-Royce
School in Oakland, California. Mr. Horowitz directs the Rosengarten/Horowitz
Fund, a non-profit family foundation focused on local and
international humanitarian causes.
Conrad Martin
Conrad Martin served in the Peace Corps from 1981 to 1983
as a Forage Agronomist on the island of Barbados and currently
is the executive director of the Stewart R. Mott Charitable
Trust. He is also executive director of the Fund for Constitutional
Government, a tax-exempt publicly supported foundation created
to eliminate corruption in government. The Fund sponsors the
Project on Government Oversight (POGO), the Government Accountability
Project (GAP), and the Electronic Privacy Information Center
(EPIC), as well as an Investigation Journalism Project. Additionally,
Mr. Martin chairs the Board of Directors of HALT, Americans
for Legal Reform and the Government Accountability Project,
and also serves on the boards of the National Committee for
Responsive Philanthropy, the Peace and National Security Funders
Group, PeacePAC and the Interhemispheric Resource Center.