理事会
名誉理事長:
Tsutomu Kanai, PhD
Chairman Emeritus of Hitachi, Ltd.
Tokyo, Japan
理事長:
Bruce MacLaury, PhD
President Emeritus, The Brookings Institution
Washington, D.C.
理事:
Sherry Salway Black
Director of the artnership for Tribal Governments
National Congress of American Indians
Washington, D.C.
Anthony (Tony) Brown
Professor of Practice, Duke University
Durham, NC
Albert Fuller
President, Integrated Packaging Corporation
New Brunswick, NJ
Patrick Gross
Chairman, The Lovell Group
Washington, DC
Joseph E. Kasputys, PhD
Founder and Chairman,IHS Global Insight
Chairman, IHS Advisory Board
Maurice Lim Miller
Founder, Family Independence Initiative
Oakland, CA
Barbara Dyer
President & CEO, The Hitachi Foundation
Washington, D.C.
名誉理事:
The Honorable Charles A. Bowsher
Former Comptroller General of the United States
2012年3月現在
略歴:
Bruce MacLaury served from 1977 to 1995 as President of The Brookings Institution, a nationally known public policy research organization based in Washington, DC. Upon his retirement in September 1995, he was given the title of President-Emeritus and continues his affiliation with the institution as a Guest Scholar. On November 15, 1996, Dr. MacLaury was appointed Chairman of the Emergency Transitional Education Board of Trustees for the District of Columbia Public Schools, a volunteer position that he held until May, 1998.
Prior to his tenure at Brookings, Dr. MacLaury held positions of increasing responsibility in the Federal Reserve System. He started his professional career as an economist in the Foreign Research Division of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. While on leave from this institution, he spent a year as an economist at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris following a brief stint at the U.S. Treasury at the opening of the Kennedy Administration.
After serving as Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, he returned to the Treasury Department as Deputy Undersecretary of Monetary Affairs for the Nixon Administration from 1969 to 1971. Thereafter he became President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, thus making him a member of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Federal Reserve's senior policy-making board from 1971-1997.
Dr. MacLaury is currently a director of American Express Bank, Ltd., National Steel Corporation, and The St. Paul Companies. He previously served as director of the Dayton Hudson Corporation and the Vanguard Funds. He is also currently a trustee of the Committee for Economic Development, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and an elder of the National Presbyterian Church.
Patrick Gross is chairman of The Lovell Group, a business and technology advisory and investment firm he formed after stepping down as chairman of the executive committee of American Management Systems, Inc. (AMS). AMS is a billion dollar revenue consulting and IT services firm which he founded with four colleagues in 1970. He currently serves as Senior Advisor to the firm assisting with major client engagements and relationships. He is non-executive chairman of the board of two companies whose principal owners are private equity firms: Baker & Taylor, Inc., owned by the Carlyle Group, and Aegis Communications owned by Thayer Capital and Questor Partners.
Mr. Gross currently serves on a number of other public and private Boards of Directors including: Capital One Financial Corporation, a FORTUNE 500 and S&P 500 firm, and Computer Network Technology Corporation and Mobius Management Systems, NASDAQ companies. Mr. Gross also holds a number of other leadership positions: chairman of the research and policy committee of the Committee for Economic Development, vice chairman of the Council for Excellence in Government, and Chairman of the Intergovernmental Technology Leadership Consortium. He is also a Board member of the Aspen Institute, the All Kinds of Minds Institute, and the Georgetown University Hospital.
Al (Albert D.) Fuller is Chief Executive Officer and President of Integrated Packaging Corporation (IPC). IPC is one of the nation's largest Black owned and operated manufacturing companies and has been listed on the prestigious Black Enterprise 100 for the past eight years in a row.
Since beginning his career in the paper manufacturing industry in 1982, Mr. Fuller's long-term goal was to own a large corporation where he would hire, train and empower historically disadvantaged workers. As a magna cum laude accounting graduate of the acclaimed Florida A&M University (FAMU), School of Business and Industry, Mr. Fuller landed positions ranging from accounting to operations at some of the largest firms in the paper industry. During his tenure as a senior manager for a global packaging company, he augmented his corporate responsibilities by attending a full-time executive MBA program. The outcome was a MBA from the prestigious Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania with a concentration in strategic planning and manufacturing operations.
Mr. Fuller's first acquisition was a manufacturing plant situated in a low-income, inner city neighborhood in New Jersey. This plant was scheduled for shut down by the previous owner due to massive losses coupled with their perception that the workforce wasn't talented enough to sustain long-term success. Through Mr. Fullerfs leadership and direction this plant is now a flagship location for IPC and employs over 100 people, primarily minority, and has been profitable every year since the acquisition. IPC now includes manufacturing plants in urban areas in Detroit, MI, and Alexandria, LA, and a Point of Purchase display business in New York. IPC now employs over 200 people and will have revenues in 2004 that exceed $110 million dollars.
Maurice Lim Miller is the Founder of The Family Independence Initiative, an effort that explores whether providing resources directly to families that self-organize to improve their communities can have a more lasting effect on poverty than the service approaches used over the last forty years of the "War on Poverty". The initiative's progress has garnered national attention. Before starting this initiative, Mr. Miller was the Executive Director of Asian Neighborhood Design (A.N.D), a multi-service community development agency in San Francisco. During his 22-year tenure the agency grew to a budget of $10 million annually with a staff of over 120.
Based on his work to promote racial understanding and economic opportunities in low income communities, Mr. Miller was honored by former President Clinton and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, who invited him to sit in her Congressional box along with Rosa Parks, Sammy Sosa and other honorees during the President's 1999 State of the Union Address. Mr. Miller and his former organization have received numerous awards for their work in protecting tenant's rights, promoting racial harmony, and economic development, among a wide variety of issues. He has authored several articles and policy papers on the subject including one on tracking the progress that families make as they move to self-sufficiency. In 2010, Mr. Miller was named by President Obama to the White House Council for Community Solutions.
Tony Brown is president of the Robertson Scholars Program, a partnership between Duke University and UNC-Chapel Hill that allows selected students to craft a unique four-year experience. He is a professor at both the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy at Duke University and the Public Policy Department at UNC-Chapel Hill.
Previously, Mr. Brown was a faculty member of the Sanford Institute's Hart Leadership Program for 13 years, where he taught leadership courses in enterprising organizational change and social entrepreneurship. He is the founder and Director of the Hart Leadership Program's Enterprising Leadership Initiative, a program to stimulate and support Duke undergraduate students to create and sustain meaningful social purpose ventures. His research agenda focuses on the development of young adults as enterprising leaders and, more specifically, on the formative impact of college on the lives of successful enterprising leaders. Mr. Brown was the recipient of the Howard Johnson Distinguished Teaching Award for undergraduate teaching excellence in 1997.
Mr. Brown served as the Chairman and CEO of the Covenant Insurance Company for nearly ten years. Subsequently, he was the Vice President for External Affairs at the University of Connecticut and the Chief Operating Officer of Credit Suisse First Boston's Equity Division.
Barbara Dyer assumed the position of President & CEO of The Hitachi Foundation in the spring of 1998. Prior to joining The Hitachi Foundation, Ms. Dyer co-founded and directed The Alliance for Redesigning Government, based at the National Academy of Public Administration. The Alliance was formed to enable public innovators to link and learn from one another as they improve the quality of American governance.
Ms. Dyer served eleven years with the Council of Governors' Policy Advisors, which had been an affiliate of the National Governors' Association. As Deputy Executive Director and Director of Policy Studies, Ms. Dyer authored several books on state policy, including The Wealth of States and Strengthening Families. She was also one of the principal architects of the Policy Academy—a strategic approach to systems change in government.
After devoting several years to land, energy and resource issues as Deputy Director of the Western Conference of The Council of State Governments in the 1970's, Ms. Dyer became a Carter Administration appointee serving as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the United States Department of the Interior.
She has a BA from Clark University, and completed the Program for Senior Executives in State and Local Government at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.
Sherry Salway Black joined the staff of the National Congress of American Indians as director of the Partnership for Tribal Governance initiative in May 2009. She had previously served as a program consultant with NCAI. Ms. Black’s previous work experience includes 19 years as Senior Vice President of, and on the boards of directors for, First Nations Development Institute and First Nations Oweesta Corporation; six years with the Indian Health Service; and three years as the Executive Director of the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance.
Ms. Black currently serves on the board of directors of the Johnson Scholarship Foundation and First Peoples Fund, on the board of trustees for the National Indian Child Welfare Association and the board of advisors for Trillium Asset Management Corporation. She also serves on the advisory committee for the National Congress of American Indians’ Policy Research Center and the board of governors for the Honoring Contributions in the Governance of Tribal Nations program at Harvard University. She has recently been honored to be appointed as Director Emeritus to the Hitachi Foundation where she had served as a board member for 13 years and is currently serving as a member of the Finance Committee. Past board positions include the Council on Foundations for seven years where she served as Treasurer and on the Executive, Governance, and Membership Committees. She is also a past board of directors’ member of Trillium Asset Management Corporation, Hopi Education Endowment Fund, American Indian Business Leaders, Native Americans in Philanthropy, and Women and Philanthropy.
Ms. Black has a Masters of Business Administration degree from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. She is Oglala Lakota and is originally from South Dakota.
Dr. Joseph Kasputys founded Global Insight, Inc. in March 2001 to join together the world's premier economic information and consulting firms, consisting of Data Resources (DRI) and WEFA (formerly Wharton Economic Forecasting Associates). Over the ensuing years, he acquired and integrated eight additional companies providing economic and business information. He served as Chairman, President and CEO until the sale of Global Insight to IHS, Inc. on October 10, 2008. Dr. Kasputys now serves as Chairman of IHS Global Insight.
Dr. Kasputys also serves as Chairman of the IHS Advisory Board, which recommends innovative approaches for the development and integration of IHS business units to provide clients with better products and services. The IHS Advisory Board investigates and advises on opportunities to enter new markets, introduce new products and services, and improve the IHS competitive position, either through internal development or acquisition. In addition, Dr. Kasputys is a charter member of the Advisory Council for IHS Global Insight's Center of Excellence for Forecasting, Modeling and Computation.
In 1996, Dr. Kasputys founded Decision Economics, Inc. with noted economist Dr. Allen Sinai, where he continues as Chairman.
Dr. Kasputys was Chairman, President, and CEO of Primark Corporation from 1987 to 2000. He transformed this New York Stock Exchange company from a $1.7 billion diversified energy company into a leading global provider of financial and economic information. In September 2000, Kasputys successfully completed the merger of Primark with Thomson Financial and served as Chairman of Thomson Financial until his founding of Global Insight. Prior to Primark, Kasputys served as Executive Vice President of McGraw-Hill. From 1977 to 1984, Kasputys held positions at Data Resources, culminating in his election as President and Chief Executive Officer.
From 1972 to 1977, Dr. Kasputys served in the U.S. Department of Commerce, rising to the position of Assistant Secretary. Previously, he was Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Maritime Administration and worked in the Office of the Secretary of Defense during the Vietnam conflict. He was Deputy Director of the White House task force formed to deal with the Arab oil embargo in 1973, and subsequently participated in the founding of the U.S. Department of Energy.
Dr. Kasputys holds both master's and doctor's degrees from Harvard University, and serves as a director on a number of boards. He is the Co-Chairman of the U.S.-based Committee for Economic Development, a leading business group that develops and promotes policies to improve economic growth. From its founding in 1985 to 2005, he was a board member of The Hitachi Foundation, serving as its Chairman for his last eight years with that organization.
Distinguished service – to both public institutions and the private sector – has been the hallmark of Chuck Bowsher’s notable career.
On September 30, 1996, he completed a 15-year term of office as the Comptroller General of the United States and head of the General Accounting Office (GAO). With a congressional mandate to audit, evaluate, or investigate virtually all federal operations, GAO under his leadership became increasingly involved in some of the most important issues of the day, producing in-depth reports both at the specific request of Congress and on its own initiative. GAO issued major studies on matters ranging from health care reform and the savings and loan banking crisis to the federal budget deficit and efforts to “reinvent government.” Meanwhile, the agency continued to monitor “high-risk” governmental activities that could lead to major losses from waste, fraud, abuse, or mismanagement.
His appointment as Comptroller General by President Ronald Reagan in 1981 capped a background of experience in both government and corporate endeavors. He was associated with Arthur Andersen & Company for 25 years, except for a 4-year period between 1967 and 1971, when he served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Financial Management. His work in that role earned him Distinguished Public Service Awards from both the Department of the Navy and the Department of Defense.
Since retiring as Comptroller General, Mr. Bowsher has joined the corporate boards of American Express Bank, DeVry, Inc., SI International, and the Washington Mutual Investors Fund. He was recently appointed as a public member of the board of the National Association of Securities Dealers, which oversees the NASDAQ system and the over-the-counter securities markets. From 1997 to 2001, he was also chairman of the Public Oversight Board, an independent, private-sector body that monitors and reports of the self-regulatory programs and activities of the SEC Practice Section of the Division of CPA Firms of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Currently, Mr. Bowsher serves on the advisory board of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) and Glass Lewis & Co.
From 1997 to 2000, he served on the board of National Steel Company (now part of U.S. Steel); from 1999 to 2001, on the board of Newport News shipbuilding (now part of Northrop); and from 1999 to 2003, as treasurer and trustee of the Washington National Cathedral Foundation. In addition to these and other directorships and board activities, Mr. Bowsher is a trustee of the Center for Naval Analyses, the United States Navy Memorial Foundation, the Logistics Management Institute, the Concord Coalition, The Hitachi Foundation, and the Washington Hospital Center, and serves on the advisory boards at several universities.
Born in Elkhart, Indiana on May 30, 1931, Mr. Bowsher graduated from the University of Illinois in 1953. He served two years in the U.S. Army and received an M.B.A. degree in 1956 from the University of Chicago. He is the recipient of honorary doctorates from five universities and has received official honors from Yale University, University of Chicago, Ohio State University, and the University of Illinois.

