Citizens for Global Solutions, a grassroots membership organization
in the United States, envisions a "future in which nations work
together to abolish war, protect our rights and freedoms and solve
the problems facing humanity that no nation can solve alone" and to
"building the political will in the United States" to achieve this
vision. It is a member organization and supporter of the
World Federalist Movement. The
organization’s membership is active across the country, meeting
regularly with public officials to support a more cooperative and
multilateral U.S. foreign policy or taking action through an online
advocacy center. The organization’s education fund develops
proposals for creating, reforming and strengthening international
laws and institutions and educate Americans about global
interdependence. Its political action committee, Global Solutions
PAC, which is not affiliated with any political party, supports
candidates and public officials who are globally responsible.
Activism and advocacy
The organization currently works on issues that fall into five
general areas: U.S. global engagement, global health and
environment, peace and security, international law and justice, and
international institutions. CGS staff work with public officials
and research issues in these areas to provide members with
analyses, talking points and opportunities to take action.
Members lobby public officials through periodic
action alerts sent by email, through the
organization's online advocacy website and through participation in
local chapters or community groups. In areas with sufficient
activists, local chapters also conduct community education and
political advocacy projects, such as lobby visits,
United Nations Day events and discussion
groups.
Bimonthly, members participate in national teleconferences and
local project organizing through the Partners for Global Solutions
advocacy program.
Once a year, members are invited to an annual
conference either in Washington, D.C.
, hosted by a local chapter or in a strategically
important state.
Current campaigns and initiatives
External Links
History

Lapel pin with the logo of the United
World Federalists

A promotional License Plate Topper
proudly displayed on vehicles by members of the United World
Federalists in the 1950s
Logo of the World Federalist Association

Logo of the Campaign for UN
Reform
Citizens
for Global Solutions has its roots in a 1947 convention in Asheville
, North
Carolina
, when World
Federalists, USA merged with four similar organizations to form the
United World Federalists. Membership was
open to any American "except persons
Communist or
Fascist
oriented". It had more than 50,000 members during the late 1940s
and early 1950s, including
Albert
Einstein,
Kurt Vonnegut, Sen.
Alan Cranston,
Mortimer Adler,
E.B. White,
Oscar Hammerstein,
Cord Meyer, and the organization’s longtime
President,
Norman Cousins. Over the
course of its history, the organization recognized a number of
leading globally minded citizens for their support of the
organization's goals through the presentation of the Norman Cousins
Global Governance Award. Recipients have included
Strobe Talbott (Deputy Secretary of State
under President
Bill Clinton),
Walter Cronkite, and
Ted Turner.
With the horrors of war so recent in people’s minds – and
particularly the new, looming threat of nuclear annihilation – in
the late 1940s and early 1950s upwards of 50,000 supporters
demanded the creation of a better United Nations. But the Cold War
association of
internationalism with
communism and a shift in political nomenclature
over the decades together limited the organization's outreach,
political initiatives and membership.
The organization changed its name in 1969 to World Federalists,
U.S.A. and in the mid-1970s to the World Federalist Association.
Changes in the U.S. tax code prompted the creation in 1976 of a
sister organization, the Campaign for United Nations Reform, for
lobbying purposes. In the 1990s, with the Cold War over, the
organization (and WFM globally) began making more progress, most
notably on the issue of creating an
International Criminal
Court.
In the 1990s, the organization gained again in membership,
particularly among young professionals with a more global awareness
since the end of the Cold War. On the organization's 50th
anniversary, several of its founding members presented the Mt.
Vernon
Declaration at the celebrations in Mount
Vernon
, Virginia
. As a
generational gap existed and experience in reaching younger
audiences presented problems for the organization, several youth
leaders offered guidance and leadership in more effective outreach
to their peers, notably through the 1997
Pittsburgh Youth Statement much
of which was implemented over the following years. Of particular
note was suggestions for more contemporary and inclusive approaches
to establishing global law rather than or in addition to previous
proposals for a world
constitutional
convention.
Having worked closely for almost three decades and with significant
membership overlap, the sister organization Campaign for UN Reform
proposed a stronger strategic partnership with the World Federalist
Association in 2003. Continuing difficulty in achieving its
political, media and funding goals prompted the organization to
review its vision and mission in relation to this proposal. The
membership approved the proposed partnership in November 2003,
creating two corporations in one organization - Citizens for Global
Solutions and Citizens for Global Solutions Education Fund.
At the time of this reorganization, the World Federalist
Association regional office in Northern California decided not to
follow this new course and instead broke away, becoming in 2004 an
independent organization, the
Democratic World
Federalists.
References
- Citizens For Global Solutions:
- United World Federalists Mss
- See A Page in the Life of Student Federalists
and Friends for a comparative look at what motivated
previous generations of students to join.
External links