History

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The U.S. Institute of Peace is an independent, nonpartisan conflict management center created and signed into law by Congress in 1984 by the United States Institute of Peace Act. The Institute is established as a federally funded national institution chartered to "serve the American people and the federal government through the widest possible range of education and training, basic and applied research opportunities, and peace information services on the means to promote international peace and the resolution of conflicts among the nations and peoples of the world without recourse to violence." The campaign to establish an Institute had begun a decade earlier, when the idea of a national peace academy was first brought to the Senate floor following recommendations by a commission appointed by President Jimmy Carter and chaired by Senator Spark Matsunaga. The legislation establishing the United States Institute of Peace was formally signed into law in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan.

In 1996, the U.S. Congress, recognizing the Institute's contributions to international conflict management, authorized the Navy to transfer jurisdiction of federal land—a portion of its Potomac Annex facility on Navy Hill—as the site of the permanent headquarters of the United States Institute of Peace. USIP moved into its headquarters in March 2011.

Learn more about the history of the United States Institute of Peace

See the timeline of USIP’s evolution