
Education & Youth
Looking Past the Poverty: Life in Roma Ghettos
The Roma are the largest—at around 12 million people—and most disadvantaged ethnic minority in Europe. Throughout the continent they face severe discrimination, are deprived of education and employment, and often live in extreme poverty. This is easily seen if you visit one of the isolated settlements typically situated on the outskirts of otherwise normal cities and towns in Europe. But these problems are not the only thing that characterizes the Roma. Above, a soccer field at the Roma settlement in “Budulovskej Street” in Moldava nad Bodvou, eastern Slovakia.
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Rights & Justice
“I Am Kuwaiti”
Some 15 million people around the world are denied citizenship—they are stateless. Without nationality, they find themselves unable to vote, hold public office, or travel. In some cases, whole minority populations are refused access to even basic services like housing, health care, and education. Kuwait’s stateless bidoon are not permitted to enroll in government schools or universities, and they face harsh restrictions when applying for most formal sector jobs. In this photo, bidoon men sit at a diwaniya, an evening salon for discussion and debate. Like many young men, they are unemployed and without prospects.
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Governance & Accountability
Burma in Transition
With the relaxation of censorship, newsstands have sprung up all over Burma, including this one near 49th Street in downtown Yangon, Burma on December 13, 2012. Still, challenges remain. Some newly uncensored publications have reported the possible hacking of journalists’ email accounts by the government. The government denies the allegations.
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Health
Improved Health Begins with Rights
Bassi Nelson is a transgender former sex worker who is now a paralegal for the Women’s Legal Centre and SWEAT (Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Taskforce). He provides legal advice by phone to sex workers who have been arrested or harassed by police. Nyanga, Cape Town, South Africa.
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Media & Information
Open Eyes
Can photography help describe what words alone cannot? We asked photographers for images that represent open society to them: images of diversity, of events symbolic of optimism and triumph, of openness and freedom. Above, a student rejoices at an elementary school. Chicago, Illinois, United States.
Read more »Improve Lives.
We help protect and improve the lives of people in marginalized communities.
Issues
Regions
Grants
Foster Change.
Through grantmaking and advocacy, we support efforts to create a more just world.
Think Broadly.
As we work to advance open society values, we learn and share our expertise.
Open Society Voices
An assessment of how Washington’s response to national security disclosures by Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden compares with procedures and penalties outside the United States.
Parents of children with autism in Tajikistan have little access to information about how to support their children’s development, and they face significant discrimination. The organization IRODA is working to change that.
Events
This documentary explores the story of an innocent man who is exonerated after 25 years in prison for the murder of his wife.
This exhibition features a selection of photographs from the Chachipe Map photography contest organized by the Open Society Foundations and OSA Archivum.
Work Locally.
Our network of programs and regional foundations addresses key issues.
Open Society People
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Senior Legal Officer, National Security and CounterterrorismOpen Society Foundations–New York, Open Society Justice Initiative -
Director, At Home in Europe ProjectOpen Society Foundation–London, Open Society Initiative for Europe -
DirectorOpen Society Institute–Budapest, Roma Initiatives Office
Programs
The Human Rights Initiative helps ensure that people can exercise their rights and seek redress for violations by supporting the strength and vitality of the global human rights movement.
The Nepal and Bhutan Initiative advances accountability and justice, the rights of marginalized groups, freedom of expression and independent media, and access to education.
The Arts and Culture Program carries out its mission principally by working to strengthen the autonomous cultural sector as an essential element of civil society.
