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The Carter Center is a non-profit organization founded in 1982 by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter . The Atlanta-based Carter Center has helped to improve the quality of life for people in more than 65 countries. In partnership with Emory University , the Center is committed to advancing human rights and alleviating unnecessary human suffering. The organization's Board of Trustees is chaired by John J. Moores . The Carter Center is located in a 35-acre park approximately two miles east of downtown Atlanta. The Jimmy Carter Library And Museum , which is adjacent to the Center, is owned and operated by the National Archives and Records Administration of the federal government. The Center and Library are known collectively as The Carter Presidential Center. The Carter Center is guided by five principles: # The Center emphasizes action and results. Based on careful research and analysis, it is prepared to take timely action on important and pressing issues. # The Center does not duplicate the effective efforts of others. # The Center addresses difficult problems and recognizes the possibility of failure as an acceptable risk. # The Center is nonpartisan and acts as a neutral in dispute resolution activities. # The Center believes that people can improve their lives when provided with the necessary skills, knowledge, and access to resources. The Carter Center collaborates with other organizations, public or private, in carrying out its mission. The Carter Center observes international Election s, works for reduction of the stigma of mental illness, strengthens national, regional, and international systems dedicated to democracy and human rights, and spearheads programs to eradicate several diseases common in Latin America and/or Africa, such as Guinea worm. CARTER CENTER ELECTION OBSERVATION The Carter Center played a key role — with the U. N. Electoral Assistance Division and the National Democratic Institute — in building consensus on a common set of international principles for Election Monitoring . Since it began monitoring elections in 1989, the Carter Center has monitored 67 elections in 26 countries , including these recent elections:
In 2002, President Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize "for his decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development". CRITICISM Regarding the Venezuelan Recall Referendum Of 2004 , according to a report by J. Michael Waller, vice president for information operations for the Center For Security Policy , a Neoconservative Think Tank :
Criticism of President Carter's book '' Palestine Peace Not Apartheid '', and Carter's subsequent response to the criticism, resulted in the resignation of several Carter Center advisory board members (although not any of the Center's governing Board of Trustees) and its first executive director.
"Former Aide Criticizes Carter Over Mideast Book: In L.A., Kenneth Stein Says 'falsehoods' in Book on Mideast Prompted His Resignation," '''' 14.2 (March 2007). Accessed February 5 , 2007 .
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