Successor | Pacific Basin Economic Council & Pacific Trade and Development Conference |
---|---|
Established | 1925 |
Founder | Edward C. Carter |
Dissolved | 1960 |
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Purpose | To provide a forum for discussion between Pacific Rim nations. |
Headquarters | Honolulu, later New York |
Official language | English |
Key people | Jerome Davis Greene, Frederick Vanderbilt Field, Owen Lattimore, William L. Holland, |
Publication | Far Eastern Survey Imparel Pacific Affairs |
Affiliations | Rockefeller Foundation, Carnegie Foundation |
The Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR) was an international NGO established in 1925 to provide a forum for discussion of problems and relations between nations of the Pacific Rim. The International Secretariat, the center of most IPR activity over the years, consisted of professional staff members who recommended policy to the Pacific Council and administered the international program. The various national councils were responsible for national, regional and local programming. Most participants were members of the business and academic communities in their respective countries. Funding came largely from businesses and philanthropies, especially the Rockefeller Foundation. IPR international headquarters were in Honolulu until the early 1930s when they were moved to New York and the American Council emerged as the dominant national council.[1][2]
IPR was founded in the spirit of Wilsonianism, an awareness of the United States' new role as a world power after World War I, and a belief that liberal democracy should be promoted throughout the world. To promote greater knowledge of issues, the IPR supported conferences, research projects and publications, and after 1932 published a quarterly journal Pacific Affairs.
After World War II, charges that the IPR was infiltrated with Communists led to Congressional hearings and loss of tax exempt status. The investigation of the IPR was the first major investigation initiated by the subcommittee. Many IPR members had liberal left orientations typical of internationalists of the 1930s, some ten IPR associates were shown to have been Communists, others were sympathetic to the Soviet Union, and the anti-imperialist tone of the leadership aroused resentment from some of the colonial powers, but the more dramatic charges, such as that the IPR was responsible for the fall of China, have not been generally accepted.