IDEE - Key Persons


Eric Chenoweth

Eric Chenoweth was director of IDEE from 1985 to 1987 and has been its co-director since 1994 overseeing fundraising, publications, and special programs. From 1997-2002, he directed IDEE's Civic Bridges program in Yugoslavia, which helped civic movements to organize under the Milosevic dictatorship, and promoted civil society and democracy in other republics of former Yugoslavia. From 1981-88, Mr. Chenoweth was Executive Director of the Committee in Support of Solidarity developing its fundraising, advocacy, human rights, information, and other activities. From 1988 to 1997, he edited Uncaptive Minds, a journal of independent opinion and analysis featuring democratic activists, thinkers, and journalists in the region. From 1987 to 1991, Mr. Chenoweth worked in the International Affairs Department of the American Federation for Teachers, where he directed the Education for Democracy/International project and from 1991 to 1993 in the International Affairs Department of the AFL-CIO (1992-93) before returning to work full time for IDEE. Since 2005, Mr. Chenoweth has also worked as a consultant for the Albert Shanker Institut e, working on a variety of projects, including as principle author of the DemocracyWeb, which includes 12 chapters on basic principles of democracy and 36 country studies. Mr. Chenoweth has written widely on Eastern Europe and democracy issues and edited the Free Society Papers, developed as a tool for teaching basic concepts of democracy.

Irena Lasota

Job Titles:
  • Co - Directors
IDEE co-directors Irena Lasota (right) and Eric Chenoweth (middle) join Mihail Berov and Dimi Panitza of the Free and Democratic Bulgaria Foundation in reviewing its advocacy, publishing, and social programs in local communities. Irena Lasota has been President of IDEE since its founding in 1985 and co-director since 1994. From 1981 to 1987, she was President of the Committee in Support of Solidarity, leading one of the most comprehensive information, assistance, human rights, and international solidarity campaigns in NGO history. As president and director of the Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe for 25 years, Ms. Lasosta provided direct support to the opposition movements in Eastern Europe that brought about the 1989-91 revolutions and the fall of communism and has developed, overseen, and implemented hundreds of assistance, training, and development programs for democratic activists, human rights groups, civic organizations, independent media, trade unions, women, and youth in twenty-seven countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union as well as Cuba. Many of these programs have become models for other Western foundations and NGOs, including small grant competitions, media support programs, women's training programs, and international solidarity initiatives, most significantly the Centers for Pluralism. Ms.Lasota was Editor-at-Large for Uncaptive Minds (1988-97); the editor of Konfrontacje, a series of books on international affairs in Polish (1986-90); co-editor of El Camino del Solidaridad (1987-88); guest editor of World Affairs; author of numerous articles in Western and Eastern European publications; a freelance journalist for Radio Free Europe; an adjunct professor at Fordham University; among many other accomplishments.