Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 56— - UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE › § 4604
The Institute may act like a nonprofit company under the District of Columbia Nonprofit Corporation Act, but it cannot use the part at section 5(o) of that Act. It can set up programs and appoint scholars and leaders for up to two years, including a Jennings Randolph Program for peace work, a Jeannette Rankin Research Program to study causes of war and ways to make peace (using U.S. government and classified materials when allowed), and the Spark M. Matsunaga Scholars Program to give scholarships to outstanding secondary and undergraduate students. The Institute can make partnerships with other groups, run training, education, and research programs, publish and share useful materials, keep a clearinghouse for information (including classified material that is properly protected), and ask federal agencies for information under section 552 of title 5. Staff and board members who see classified material must get security clearances from the Department of Defense and the Department of State. The Institute can give one or more annual awards for extraordinary contributions to peace, present the Spark M. Matsunaga Medal of Peace, and give up to $25,000 in cash to any recipient. The Secretary of the Treasury will have the medal made in bronze and will work with the Board and the Commission of Fine Arts on the design and size, with Treasury costs paid from funds under section 4609(a)(1). An expert advisory panel will help pick award winners, and the Institute must tell certain Senate and House committees about how it chooses winners. The Institute may make grants and contracts with public and nonprofit schools, libraries, unions, and agencies (and must give at least one-fourth of its yearly appropriations to such nonprofit or public institutions). It may accept government grants and gifts, but it cannot take money or gifts from foreign governments, their agencies, international organizations, or entities more than 50% owned by foreign nationals. It also may not take private gifts or grants except to buy or maintain a permanent headquarters or to provide program-related hospitality (including for the medal). The Institute can charge fees, hire people, form advisory groups, sue or be sued, use a corporate seal, do lawful acts needed for its mission, and get reimbursable administrative help from the General Services Administration. It must not try to influence the passage or defeat of laws in Congress, state or local bodies, or the United Nations, though staff may testify if formally asked by a legislative body or committee.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 4604
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73