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THE KOREA SOCIETY is a private, nonprofit,
nonpartisan, 501(c)(3) organization with individual and corporate members that
is dedicated solely to the promotion of greater awareness, understanding and
cooperation between the people of the United States and Korea. In pursuit of its mission, the
Society arranges programs that facilitate discussion, exchanges and research on
topics of vital interest to both countries in the areas of public policy,
business, education, intercultural relations and the arts. Funding for these
programs is derived from contributions, endowments, grants, membership dues and
program fees. From its base in New York City, the Society serves audiences
across the country through its own outreach efforts and by forging strategic
alliances with counterpart organizations in other cities throughout the United States as well as in Korea.
The Korea Society traces its
roots to 1957 when a group of prominent Americans, under the leadership of
General James A. Van Fleet, who commanded the U.S. armed forces in the final
phase of the Korean War, established the first nonprofit organization in the
United States dedicated to the promotion of friendly relations between the
people of the United States and Korea "through mutual understanding and
appreciation of their respective cultures, aims, ideals, arts, sciences and
industries." As it exists today, The Korea Society is the successor to
several interconnected organizations pursuing aspects of these objectives which
were established through the joint efforts of Americans and Koreans over the
ensuing decades, most notably, the New York-based U.S.-Korea Society and the
Washington, DC-based U.S.-Korea Foundation. In June 1993, these two
organizations were merged to form The Korea Society.
Today the leadership of The Korea
Society is in the hands of Evans J.R. Revere, a distinguished former foreign
service officer who serves as president and chief executive officer, and Donald P. Gregg, a former U.S. ambassador to Korea, who serves in the capacity of
chairman of the board. They are supported by a board of directors drawn from
the fields of business, the professions, academia and public affairs and an
advisory council whose members are leading public figures in Korea and the U.S.
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