Hi everyone — I’m Joan Rohlfing, president and COO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative. We’re a nonprofit, nonpartisan global security organization focused on reducing nuclear and biological threats imperiling humanity. In an era when the likelihood of use of weapons of mass destruction by individuals, terrorist organizations, and states is growing, we work to drive systemic change by galvanizing large-scale institutional adoption of innovative global security practices and programs. We’ve been doing it successfully for 20 years now.
What threats are most urgent? What can we do to stop them? I'm ready to answer those questions and more on Thursday, December 9, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. EST. (You can ask me something during that window or anytime before.)
This AMA is a follow-on to a talk I gave about nuclear threats in October, at the Effective Altruism Global 2021 conference in London. I discussed my strong belief that it is possible to make a difference in this arena, and I described what I believe we can do — and must do — together to build a safer world. I look forward to continuing that conversation this week!
A little more about me: Before joining NTI, I held senior positions in the U.S. Department of Energy and worked as an advisor to the U.S. Ambassador to India in the wake of nuclear tests in India and Pakistan. Earlier in my career, I oversaw nuclear weapons policy and acquisition programs at the Department of Defense and the Armed Services Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. My thinking on nuclear security has been shaped by 35 years working in this field, and I’ve worked on this from all angles — from a military, a diplomatic, a political, a technical, and an academic perspective.
I look forward to your questions — ask me anything!
Thanks for doing this!
Incidentally, I came across a comment of yours while doing research on patient philanthropy,
"The MacArthur Foundation, which was the largest single foundation funding nuclear security efforts — looking into paths for nuclear disarmament and so on — cut its funding from the area,” he told me. “That resulted in something like a halving of philanthropic funding for nuclear security.”
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"It's a big blow for the field," said Joan Rohlfing, president and COO of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a non-profit organization dedicated to stemming the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction that has been one of the largest recipients of MacArthur’s grants. “It is moving in the opposite direction of the needs of the community right now.” ‘A big blow’: Washington’s arms controllers brace for loss of their biggest backer
Can you elaborate on the reasons and what this means for the field? Could we somehow petition the MacArthur Foundation to undo this?
Thanks for this question. I want to begin by saying how enormously appreciative we are for MacArthur’s support over the years.
The MacArthur Foundation announced at the beginning of 2021 that they were ending their funding for the nuclear field after more than 40 years of support for civil society groups doing important nuclear risk reduction work. By MacArthur’s own estimate, their nuclear funding represented around 45% of philanthropic funding for civil society groups working on nuclear issues (principally in the US). The nuclear fi... (read more)