Dear colleagues,
I hope you are all managing and taking good care of yourselves and your community in these times. I also wanted to apologize for cross posting. I did want to invite you to the Center for Nonprofit and NGO Studies (NNGO’s) first talk in the Community Engaged Research series:
Understanding USAID’s legacy and alternatives
Thursday, October 16, 2:00-3:30 p.m. Central
Zoom: go.niu.edu/USAID
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID), closed officially as of September 2, 2025, had a complicated and at times contradictory legacy.
Created during the height of the Cold War, President Kennedy imagined USAID as a vital tool in the U.S. foreign policy toolkit. Since its creation, USAID became the United States’ and the world’s primary distributor of foreign development and humanitarian aid, with an annual budget of over 60 billion dollars in 2024.
Along with its stakeholders overseas, USAID was the first agency targeted by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in February 2025. DOGE’s cuts to the agency reduced USAID to a skeletal staff and suddenly ended life-saving services such as maternal health and anti-retro viral treatments, impacting millions across the globe. While many have decried the end of USAID, its legacy is complex. Experience and research across the Global South, for instance, has shown that USAID’s mandate to promote U.S. interests has led to negative consequences: increasing inequalities, empowering particular constituencies that have deepened and prolonged conflict, and engaging in regime change.
This panel, spanning continents and experiences of practitioners and researchers, offers a timely reflection on this mixed legacy, tracking current impacts, and identifying alternatives.
Panelists:
Million Belay, General Coordinator (Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa)
Yolette Etienne, retired NGO executive (Oxfam / Action Aid)
Jane Henrici, George Washington University
Daniel Oberko, Public Services International
Joeva Rock, Stony Brook University
Moderated by Mark Schuller, NNGO Director
Co-sponsored by Anthropology and the Changing Systems of Power, Stony Brook University
Risk and Disaster Topical Interest Group, Society for Applied Anthropology

Thanks all.
Sending good energy,
Mark Schuller, Director
Center for Nonprofit and NGO Studies
Professor, Department of Anthropology
Northern Illinois University
DeKalb, IL 60115
https://www.niu.edu/clas/nonprofit/index.shtml
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Among National Liberal Arts Colleges:
#1 Most Innovative (6 years in a row)
#2 Top Performer on Social Mobility
Among all U.S. Higher Education Institutions:
#3 for First-Year Experiences
#4 for Learning Communities
#9 Study Abroad
Hi Martha,
Thank you for sharing this piece with us. It is a moving gesture of solidarity.
Yes, indeed the discussion is on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iK9BTiaQ1G0&t=273s
Thanks again.
Have a wonderful day and week,
Mark Schuller, Director
Center for Nonprofit and NGO Studies
Professor, Department of Anthropology
Northern Illinois University
DeKalb, IL 60115
https://www.niu.edu/clas/nonprofit/index.shtml
Follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, or Instagram
Personal websites:
http://www.humanityslaststand.org
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/hrsjanthro/CA%2BRuZnW2FcL3DCBL5RsdCh1rF4%3DsPQMqbfYKR%2BML4%2BhNmL47Xg%40mail.gmail.com.
Among National Liberal Arts Colleges:
#1 Most Innovative (6 years in a row)
#2 Top Performer on Social Mobility
Among all U.S. Higher Education Institutions:
#3 for First-Year Experiences
#4 for Learning Communities
#9 Study Abroad