Atlas Network
Atlas Network is a nonprofit organization founded in 1981 by British entrepreneur Antony Fisher, headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, that builds and supports a worldwide alliance of independent think tanks dedicated to advancing free-market principles, individual liberty, and limited government intervention.[1][2][3] Its mission centers on increasing global prosperity by empowering partner organizations to identify and dismantle barriers to economic and personal freedom through policy research, advocacy, and education.[4][5] Operating as a 501(c)(3) entity without government funding or endowment, Atlas Network provides grants, training programs, and networking opportunities to nearly 500 independent nonprofits across 96 countries, fostering the development of institutions modeled after successful examples like the Institute of Economic Affairs.[6][4][7] Key activities include competitive grantmaking to innovative projects, such as the Smart Bets program for ambitious liberty-advancing ideas, and specialized initiatives like liberty advancement labs that equip emerging leaders with strategic tools for policy change.[8][9] The network has notably expanded libertarian and classical liberal influence in regions like Latin America, where partners have contributed to policy shifts toward deregulation and market-oriented reforms under leaders such as Argentina's Javier Milei.[10] In empirical terms, Atlas-supported think tanks have played roles in opposing expansive government programs, including foreign aid critiques highlighting inefficiencies and corruption.[11] Despite its achievements in scaling pro-freedom institutions—growing from a handful of affiliates to hundreds since inception—Atlas Network has encountered controversies, including documented historical alliances with the tobacco industry in the 1990s to promote free-market arguments against regulation, as revealed in industry documents analyzed in peer-reviewed research.[12][13] Critics, often from environmental and progressive outlets, have accused it of amplifying climate skepticism and opposing protest movements through partner activities, though such claims frequently emanate from sources with ideological opposition to market-liberal policies.[14][15] These tensions underscore the organization's causal role in challenging statist paradigms, prioritizing evidence-based advocacy over consensus narratives.History
Founding and Early Development
The Atlas Economic Research Foundation, later rebranded as Atlas Network, was founded on July 14, 1981, and incorporated in the state of Delaware by British entrepreneur Sir Antony Fisher.[16] Fisher, who had established the Institute of Economic Affairs in London in 1955 inspired by Friedrich Hayek's The Road to Serfdom, aimed to foster a global network of independent think tanks advancing free-market principles and limited government.[17] Initially, the organization served as a hub connecting a small group of think tanks that Fisher had personally helped to create, including early affiliates like the Fraser Institute in Canada (founded 1974).[18] In its formative years during the 1980s, Atlas focused on providing practical support to emerging policy institutes, including assistance with fundraising, organizational development, and the dissemination of liberty-oriented research.[19] This included applying business-like strategies to think tank operations, drawing from Fisher's experience as a successful entrepreneur in the poultry industry and his belief in decentralized, idea-driven advocacy over centralized planning.[20] By emphasizing self-reliance and local adaptation of universal principles, Atlas began facilitating collaborations that extended beyond North America and Europe, laying the groundwork for international expansion.[16] Fisher's leadership continued until his death in 1988, shortly after being knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his contributions to economic thought.[21] Under his guidance, Atlas had grown to support an initial network of around a dozen institutions, prioritizing empirical policy research and training programs to counter prevailing interventionist paradigms in academia and government.[22] This early phase established Atlas as a catalyst for intellectual entrepreneurship, influencing policy debates in multiple countries through partner organizations rather than direct lobbying.[23]Expansion and Institutional Growth
In the decade following its 1981 founding, Atlas Network prioritized the development of a decentralized model for supporting independent think tanks, emphasizing grants for startup costs, management training, and idea-sharing forums rather than direct policy advocacy. This approach facilitated early institutional expansion, with initiatives like the 1987 Jamaica workshop on leveraging computers for global think tank connectivity marking a shift toward technological and collaborative infrastructure.[16] By the early 2000s, the network had cultivated partnerships across multiple regions, focusing on regions with emerging market reforms, such as Eastern Europe post-Cold War and Latin America amid liberalization efforts. Significant growth accelerated in the mid-2000s, reaching think tank allies in 100 countries by 2008 through expanded grant programs and annual meetings that standardized best practices in organizational capacity-building.[20] In 2013, the organization adopted "Atlas Network" as its trade name—while retaining "Atlas Economic Research Foundation" legally—to underscore its evolution into a hub for over 400 affiliated entities by that period, reflecting a matured emphasis on peer-to-peer networking over unilateral funding.[24] This rebranding coincided with increased institutional sophistication, including formalized criteria for partner selection based on commitment to individual liberty principles and measurable policy impact. By December 31, 2019, Atlas Network had grown to 502 independent partner think tanks operating in 99 countries, supported by $5,654,872 in grants distributed to initiatives in 91 countries, demonstrating sustained fiscal commitment to scaling operations amid rising demand for free-market expertise.[25] The network crossed the 500-partner threshold by early 2020, a milestone attributed to targeted expansions in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, and has maintained over 500 partners as of 2024, with ongoing efforts to enhance partner resilience through specialized training in fundraising and media engagement.[23][5] This trajectory underscores a deliberate institutional strategy of multiplication over centralization, yielding a distributed architecture resilient to regional political variances.Recent Milestones and Adaptations
In 2024, Atlas Network disbursed $11,176,556 across 331 grants to 536 partner organizations operating in 103 countries, facilitating 270 policy victories in 29 countries.[5] Notable achievements included the Lebanese Institute for Market Studies' campaign to eliminate subsidies on over 300 food items and medications, saving the government approximately $6 billion annually while earning the 2024 Templeton Freedom Award.[5] In Nepal, the Samriddhi Foundation's advocacy legalized ridesharing as a formal service industry, enabling an estimated 50,000 jobs.[5] Domestically, the Pacific Legal Foundation secured a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Tyler v. Hennepin County (2023), prohibiting excessive fines via home equity theft and prompting reforms in 14 states.[5] Atlas Network's partners also advanced educational initiatives, such as the Bendukidze Free Market Center's distribution of 50,000 economics textbooks in Ukraine amid ongoing conflict, and the launch of an Economic Education Accelerator featuring a national Economics Olympiad involving 9,500 students.[5] During the COVID-19 pandemic, network affiliates in Canada, the United States, Mexico, Spain, and Burundi successfully opposed measures perceived as authoritarian overreaches, including excessive lockdowns and emergency powers expansions.[26] Strategically, Atlas Network adapted by emphasizing empirical impact measurement, requiring partners to demonstrate real-world outcomes from supported policies rather than mere advocacy outputs. Under the 2024 "EMPOWER" theme, it enhanced its Coach, Compete, Celebrate! framework with virtual training programs through the Atlas Network Academy and competitive grant mechanisms like Smart Bets to foster innovation.[5] Looking ahead, the organization is preparing partners for technological shifts, including AI integration, new media strategies, and evolving evaluation models to maintain relevance in advocacy. The 2025 Atlas Conference, marking the network's 25th annual gathering, underscored these adaptations by focusing on accelerated value creation and global competition among affiliates.[27]Leadership and Governance
Foundational Figures
Sir Antony Fisher (1915–1988), a British entrepreneur and pioneer of free-market think tanks, established the Atlas Economic Research Foundation—later renamed Atlas Network—in 1981 to foster and connect independent organizations promoting individual liberty, free enterprise, and limited government worldwide.[24] Influenced by F.A. Hayek's The Road to Serfdom, Fisher had previously founded the Institute of Economic Affairs in London in 1955, the first modern think tank dedicated to market-oriented policy research, after consulting Hayek on postwar Britain's socialist trajectory.[3] By the late 1970s, having supported the creation of over two dozen similar institutes across North America, Europe, and beyond, Fisher envisioned Atlas as a meta-organization to provide shared resources, training, and strategic coordination, enabling these entities to counter collectivist policies without direct political advocacy.[2] Alejandro Chafuen, an Argentine-American economist and philosopher, joined Atlas in its early years and assumed the role of president and CEO in 1991, serving until 2018 and transforming it from a nascent network into a global alliance supporting over 500 partner think tanks by emphasizing professionalization, fundraising, and ideological consistency rooted in classical liberalism.[28] Under Chafuen's leadership, Atlas prioritized empirical policy research and capacity-building in developing regions, drawing on his background in ethics and economics— including translations of Spanish Scholastic works on free markets—to reinforce the organization's commitment to first-principles defenses of property rights and voluntary exchange against statist alternatives.[29] Chafuen's tenure solidified Atlas's operational model, securing early funding from philanthropists like John Templeton and corporations such as General Electric, which enabled expansion while maintaining non-partisan, evidence-based advocacy.[30] These figures' contributions emphasized institutional independence and intellectual rigor, with Fisher providing the visionary architecture and Chafuen the executive framework, though Atlas's growth has drawn scrutiny from critics alleging donor influence on policy outputs, a claim unsubstantiated by direct evidence of agenda distortion in peer-reviewed analyses of its affiliates' work.[31]Current Executive Team
The executive team at Atlas Network comprises senior leaders responsible for strategic oversight, international operations, and innovation in advancing free-market think tanks globally. Chief Executive Officer Brad Lips directs the organization's mission to bolster a network of over 500 partner institutions across more than 100 countries, drawing on his prior experience as CEO of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation and founder of the Kauffman Foundation's China program.[32] As of October 2025, Lips continues to emphasize decentralized, locally led reforms amid challenges like regulatory scrutiny in donor landscapes.[33] President Matt Warner manages operational execution and partnership development, leveraging expertise from his tenure in policy advocacy and nonprofit scaling.[34] Executive Vice President for International Programs Dr. Tom G. Palmer, who also holds the George M. Yeager Chair for Advancing Liberty, coordinates global training and grant activities, informed by his authorship of works on libertarian philosophy and prior roles at the Cato Institute.[34] Chief Innovation Officer Dr. Lyall Swim drives internal systems and programmatic advancements, including digital tools for partner capacity-building, based on his background in economics and organizational development.[35] This leadership structure supports Atlas Network's emphasis on evidence-based policy dissemination without direct involvement in partisan activities.[34]Board and Oversight Mechanisms
The Board of Directors of Atlas Network serves as the primary governance body, providing strategic oversight, approving major initiatives, and ensuring fiduciary responsibility for the organization's operations as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit.[5] The board reviews and authorizes grant allocations, partnerships, and programmatic expansions, while maintaining independence from government funding sources to preserve mission integrity focused on advancing individual liberty and free markets.[36] Meetings occur periodically to assess performance against objectives, with emphasis on accountability in disbursing donor contributions to over 500 partner think tanks across 103 countries.[5] Montgomery Brown has chaired the board since November 2023, succeeding prior leadership including Debbi Gibbs, who held the position earlier and contributed to events like the 2023 Freedom Dinner.[5][37] Brown, affiliated with Atlas since 2019, guides oversight of executive decisions by CEO Brad Lips and President Matt Warner, emphasizing scalable impact in policy advocacy and training programs.[5][34] As of December 31, 2024, the board comprises the following members, drawn from backgrounds in philanthropy, business, and policy institutions:- Montgomery Brown (Chair)
- Lawson Bader
- Thomas Beach
- Robert Boyd
- Jerzy Czubak
- Linda Edwards
- Richard Greenberg
- Dan Grossman
- Jean-Claude Gruffat
- John Kramer
- Gerry Ohrstrom
- Laura Ann Spencer
Ideology and Mission
Philosophical Underpinnings
The Atlas Network's philosophical foundations rest on classical liberal principles, prioritizing individual liberty, private property rights, voluntary exchange, and the rule of law as preconditions for prosperity and peace. These tenets hold that human flourishing emerges from decentralized decision-making by individuals pursuing their own ends, rather than centralized state direction, which is seen as prone to inefficiency and coercion due to knowledge problems and incentive misalignments. The organization's vision explicitly seeks "a free, prosperous, and peaceful world where the principles of individual liberty, property rights, limited government, and free markets are all secured by the rule of law," positing that secure property rights enable innovation and investment, while free markets allocate resources efficiently through price signals reflecting dispersed knowledge.[40][41] This worldview traces to founder Antony Fisher's post-World War II conviction, shaped by observations of socialist policies' failures in Britain, that intellectual advocacy for market liberalism could avert totalitarianism's spread. Fisher, who established the Institute of Economic Affairs in 1955 as a model for non-partisan policy research, extended this approach globally via Atlas in 1981 to cultivate think tanks advancing evidence-based critiques of interventionism. Influenced by economists like Friedrich Hayek, whose warnings in The Road to Serfdom (1944) about planning's erosive effects on freedom underscored the need for institutional safeguards against arbitrary power, Atlas emphasizes empirical outcomes: nations with stronger rule of law and market freedoms correlate with higher growth and poverty reduction, as tracked by indices like the Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom of the World report, which documents causal links between liberalization and improved living standards since the 1980s.[42][43] Atlas rejects collectivist paradigms that subordinate individuals to group outcomes, arguing instead for causal realism in policy: interventions distort incentives, breeding dependency and rent-seeking, whereas competitive markets foster accountability and adaptation. This underpins their support for "pro-freedom" partners tailoring these universals to local contexts, avoiding one-size-fits-all statism in favor of bottom-up experimentation grounded in human action's voluntaristic nature.[44]Core Policy Objectives
The Atlas Network's core policy objectives revolve around advancing individual liberty, property rights, limited government, and free markets as foundational principles for achieving a free, prosperous, and peaceful global society. These objectives guide the organization's support for partner think tanks that advocate for policies reducing government intervention in economic and personal spheres, such as deregulation to unleash entrepreneurial activity and fiscal restraint to prevent excessive public spending.[41][45] The emphasis on property rights extends to reforms protecting private ownership and contract enforcement, countering expropriation risks in various jurisdictions through rule-of-law initiatives.[46] In practice, these objectives manifest in targeted policy advocacy areas, including economic liberalization to promote trade and investment, monetary policies favoring stable currencies over inflationary controls, and institutional reforms prioritizing voluntary exchange over coercive redistribution. Atlas Network partners pursue these through evidence-based research and campaigns, such as challenging subsidies that distort markets or advocating judicial independence to safeguard liberties.[47] The organization's nonpartisan approach avoids endorsing specific political parties, instead focusing on outcome-oriented reforms measurable by indices of economic freedom.[48] Critics have noted that while these objectives align with classical liberal frameworks, their implementation in diverse contexts can encounter resistance from entrenched interests favoring interventionist policies; however, Atlas Network maintains that empirical evidence from freer economies supports their efficacy in lifting prosperity.[5] By 2023, these efforts had contributed to policy shifts in over 100 countries via partner-led projects, including liberalization of labor markets and reductions in regulatory barriers.[45]Activities and Programs
Training Initiatives
The Atlas Network Academy serves as the primary vehicle for the organization's training initiatives, delivering online and in-person programs designed to enhance the operational capabilities of free-market think tanks and civil society organizations worldwide. Established to share best practices derived from experienced partners, such as the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, the Academy provides flexible certification tracks and courses aimed at scaling organizational impact through skill-building in core areas.[49][50] Certifications offered include Think Tank Foundations, which covers fundamentals of establishing and managing policy institutes; Marketing and Communications, focusing on effective messaging and outreach; Fundraising, emphasizing donor prospecting and revenue strategies; and Leadership Development, targeted at executive growth. Additional specialized courses, such as Think Tank 360, Marketing Fundamentals, and Fundraising Theory and Practice, are available online and often provided in multiple languages to accommodate global partners.[49][51][50] Many resources, including webinars on topics like grassroots activism, research and policy best practices, and think tank startups, are offered free to participants, broadening access beyond formal partners. These initiatives align with Atlas Network's "Coach, Compete, Celebrate!" strategy, which prioritizes capacity-building training to equip organizations with tools, mentorship, and peer networks for advancing liberty-oriented policies. As of 2025, the Academy continues to expand its catalog, supporting over 500 partner think tanks in applying evidence-based approaches to local challenges.[52][46][49]Grantmaking and Support
Atlas Network's grantmaking primarily supports its partner think tanks and policy organizations through competitive funding aimed at advancing free-market reforms, individual liberty, and solutions to poverty via limited government approaches. Grants are awarded to projects that demonstrate measurable impact, such as policy advocacy, public education, and capacity-building initiatives, with a focus on aligning with donor intentions for promoting human dignity and economic freedom.[8] In 2023, the network disbursed $7,635,431 across 246 grants to partners operating in various countries, while in 2024, it provided more than $11 million in grants supporting organizations in 94 countries.[45][6] Eligibility for most grants is restricted to Atlas Network partners, though non-partners may apply for organizational capacity grants to develop capabilities aligned with the network's mission. Organizations can submit a maximum of two applications per grant cycle, with deadlines on February 1, June 1, and October 1; decisions are typically issued within one to two months following each deadline.[8] Applications are processed through an online portal, requiring detailed proposals that outline outputs, outcomes, and alignment with specific funding topics like public policy advocacy or engaging hearts and minds via education.[8] Key grant funds include the Human Dignity Fund, which finances partners' dignity-based antipoverty projects—such as those emphasizing property rights, legal equality, and limited government—with suggested awards ranging from $20,000 to $60,000, though other amounts are possible if grantees leverage additional fundraising.[53] The Open Category Fund addresses innovative ideas not covered by predefined topics, providing flexible support scaled to project scope, regional needs, and expected impact on liberty and prosperity.[54] Grantees are required to submit regular reports on progress, and successful projects often integrate with broader network support, such as cohort participation or regional networking, to amplify outcomes.[8] While grantmaking constitutes a core mechanism for financial support, Atlas Network emphasizes that not all partners receive funding; the majority benefit from non-monetary resources like strategic guidance and peer collaboration, ensuring grants target high-potential, results-oriented efforts rather than routine operations.[55] This selective approach prioritizes scalability and local adaptation, with grants often tied to verifiable policy victories or institutional strengthening in challenging environments.[11]Awards and Recognition Programs
Atlas Network operates a suite of awards programs designed to honor partner think tanks, individuals, and initiatives that demonstrate measurable impact in advancing free-market reforms, policy victories, and public understanding of liberty. These programs, administered through the organization's awards division, provide financial prizes, public recognition, and networking opportunities at events such as regional forums and the annual Liberty Forum & Freedom Dinner in New York City.[56][57] The Templeton Freedom Award serves as Atlas Network's premier recognition, named after investor and philanthropist Sir John Templeton and focused on innovative, evidence-based achievements in promoting freedom. Eligible applicants, typically Atlas partner organizations, must submit evidence of policy influence by November 30 for the following year's cycle, with the 2026 deadline set for that date. In 2025, the program expanded to a total prize pool of $1.23 million, including an annual $410,000 commitment from the Templeton Religion Trust to support top finalists across categories like economic freedom and institutional reform. The grand prize winner receives the highest honor, while finalists share additional grants totaling up to $410,000, evaluated based on quantifiable outcomes such as enacted legislation or shifted public opinion metrics. Past recipients include the Lebanese Institute for Market Studies in 2024 for its advocacy leading to economic liberalization efforts.[56][58][59] Complementing the Templeton award, the Regional Liberty Awards spotlight high-performing think tanks within geographic areas, awarding up to $20,000 in prizes to winners and finalists for contributions to liberty promotion, such as research influencing deregulation or entrepreneurship programs. Honorees are celebrated at dedicated Regional Liberty Forums in regions including Asia, Africa, Latin America, and North America. For instance, the State Policy Network received the 2025 North America Liberty Award for its coordination of state-level policy advocacy networks, while 2025 finalists in Asia and Africa were announced for efforts in economic education and human rights-aligned reforms. These awards emphasize regional adaptation of universal free-enterprise principles, with selections based on peer nominations and impact assessments.[57][60][61] Additional specialized recognitions include the Smith Student Outreach Award, which honors programs effectively engaging university students in free-market ideas through campus events and curricula, and the Lights, Camera, Liberty Film Festival Award, celebrating documentary and short films that highlight liberty-themed narratives for broader audiences. For individual contributions, the Sir Antony Fisher Achievement Award acknowledges lifetime dedication to think tank leadership and free-society advancement, with Dan Grossman named the 2025 recipient for his role in scaling Atlas-affiliated operations. These programs collectively incentivize excellence among over 500 partner organizations, prioritizing verifiable results over ideological rhetoric.[56]Publications and Knowledge Dissemination
Atlas Network disseminates knowledge on free-market principles, individual liberty, and policy reforms through a range of publications, including books, monographs, magazines, and newsletters, aimed at policymakers, scholars, and the public. These materials emphasize empirical evidence, philosophical foundations, and case studies from its global partner network to advocate for limited government, rule of law, private property, and entrepreneurship.[62][63] The organization publishes books that explore the intellectual and data-driven underpinnings of prosperity and freedom. For instance, Development with Dignity, a recent release by authors Matt Warner and Tom G. Palmer, argues that human flourishing stems from recognizing individuals as autonomous agents, fostering innovation through dignity and self-governance rather than top-down interventions; it provides interdisciplinary analysis and practical recommendations for NGOs, donors, and institutions.[64] Another example is The Freedom Movement, a monograph detailing Atlas Network's global efforts to advance liberty by strengthening independent think tanks, with insights into strategies for protecting economic and personal freedoms.[65] Freedom's Champion Quarterly, Atlas Network's magazine, features in-depth articles on policy successes, partner initiatives, and critiques of government overreach, such as issues addressing Venezuela's economic challenges and the role of civil society in promoting free markets. Published periodically since at least 2016, it aligns with the organization's mission to highlight real-world applications of liberty-oriented reforms, including rule of law and market-driven solutions.[63][66] Complementing these, the Uplift newsletter delivers regular email updates on events, awards like the Templeton Freedom Award, and partner achievements, ensuring timely dissemination of news and resources to subscribers worldwide.[48][67] Publications are often available in multiple languages to reach diverse audiences, supporting knowledge transfer to non-English speaking regions.[68] Through these channels, Atlas Network prioritizes evidence-based advocacy over ideological assertion, drawing on partner-generated data and historical precedents to influence public discourse.[62]Partner Network
Structure and Scale
The Atlas Network's partner network is structured as a decentralized alliance of independent, nonprofit organizations, primarily think tanks and policy institutes, that operate autonomously while adhering to shared principles of individual liberty, free markets, and limited government.[24] Partners are not subsidiaries or branches of Atlas but maintain full operational independence, with Atlas providing non-binding support through training, grants, and networking opportunities rather than exerting control or setting agendas.[4] To qualify, organizations must demonstrate a commitment to these ideals, employ full-time staff, and apply through an online portal without any membership fee, ensuring a merit-based expansion focused on ideological alignment and capacity.[4] In scale, the network encompasses over 500 partner organizations across more than 100 countries as of 2023, reflecting steady growth from 502 partners in 99 countries reported in 2019.[24] [45] [25] This global footprint spans every major region, with notable concentrations in North and South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, enabling localized advocacy while fostering cross-border collaboration on policy issues.[45] The network's expansion has included 41 new partners in 2023 alone, underscoring its role in scaling free-market intellectual infrastructure worldwide.[45]Regional Networks and Examples
Atlas Network maintains a decentralized structure of independent partner think tanks across major world regions, fostering localized advocacy for free-market policies through training, grants, and regional forums. As of recent reports, these partnerships span over 500 organizations in more than 100 countries, with dedicated initiatives like the Center for African Prosperity and the Center for Latin America coordinating region-specific efforts to address local challenges such as property rights, regulatory reform, and economic liberty.[69][70][47] In Africa, Atlas supports think tanks emphasizing rule of law and entrepreneurship amid high poverty rates and governance issues; for instance, Liberty Sparks in Tanzania operates the "Wezesha Biashara" project to streamline business regulations, earning top recognition at the 2021 Africa Liberty Forum. Students for Liberty Africa, active in youth education on libertarian principles, received the 2023 Africa Liberty Award for expanding campus networks across the continent.[70][71] Asia's partners focus on innovation and countering state overreach in diverse economies; Preneur Lab in Bangladesh, for example, develops entrepreneurial training programs and has competed in Atlas's Smart Bets grants for scalable liberty-advancing ideas as of 2025. Regional events like the Asia Liberty Forum facilitate peer learning among these groups.[9][24] In Europe, partnerships aid policy debates on deregulation and fiscal restraint; the Institute of Economic Affairs in the United Kingdom, a long-standing affiliate, has influenced Brexit-era economic analyses and hosts joint events. Latin American affiliates, numbering over 100 in 19 countries, tackle authoritarianism and bureaucracy, convening at the annual Latin America Liberty Forum to share strategies on issues from Venezuela's crises to Chile's pension reforms.[72][47][73] The Middle East and North Africa region features collaborators like the Arab Center for Advocacy of Liberty Rights, pursuing grants for advocacy against regulatory barriers, while North American efforts, including U.S.-based groups, emphasize inclusive prosperity through justice system reforms. Annual Regional Liberty Awards, offering up to $20,000 per winner, highlight exemplary regional impacts across these areas.[57][9][74]Financials
Revenue Sources and Donors
Atlas Network, operating as a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization, generates the vast majority of its revenue through private philanthropic contributions, including foundation grants and individual donations, which fund its global network-building, grantmaking, and training initiatives. In fiscal year 2023, total revenue amounted to $28.8 million, with expenses at $22.1 million and total assets of $23.6 million; contributions constituted the primary source, consistent with prior years where program service revenue and investment income played minor roles.[39] The organization's audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023, further detail revenue recognition from unrestricted support, temporarily restricted grants, and in-kind contributions such as donated professional services valued at approximately $230,000.[75] While Atlas Network maintains that its funding enables independent advocacy for prosperity through limited government and free markets, public records reveal reliance on grants from foundations aligned with libertarian and conservative principles. Notable donors include the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation, which provided $595,369 to support Atlas's operations and partner programs.[31] [1] Similarly, the Chase Foundation of Virginia granted $588,820, and the Donors Capital Fund— a donor-advised fund facilitating anonymous conservative philanthropy—contributed $459,000.[31] Additional significant support has come from DonorsTrust, another donor-advised fund linked to right-leaning donors, which directed nearly $3.9 million to Atlas Network in 2020 amid pandemic-related activities, though such funds often obscure ultimate contributors via privacy protections.[76] IRS Form 990 filings, required annually, aggregate these contributions but redact individual donor identities above $5,000 thresholds in public disclosures, limiting transparency on exact allocations; however, the organization's Charity Navigator rating of 4/4 stars reflects efficient use of funds, with 88% directed to programs in recent evaluations.[77] [78] Critics from progressive outlets, such as those tracking Koch influence, argue this donor profile enables coordinated policy advocacy, but Atlas emphasizes that grants are competitively awarded and partners operate autonomously.[1]Budget Allocation and Transparency
Atlas Network allocates the majority of its budget to program services, which encompass grantmaking, training initiatives, and support for partner organizations promoting free-market policies. In its fiscal year ending December 31, 2023, the organization reported total expenses of $22,107,858, with $19,250,325 (approximately 87%) directed toward program services, $1,013,240 (about 4.6%) to management and general administration, and $1,844,293 (roughly 8.3%) to fundraising activities.[78] Program expenses include substantial grant disbursements, totaling over $7.5 million across domestic and international recipients, such as $6,516,726 in grants to foreign organizations and additional awards to U.S.-based entities like the Foundation for Economic Education ($250,000) and the Institute for Humane Studies ($200,000).[78]| Expense Category | Amount (2023) | Percentage of Total Expenses |
|---|---|---|
| Program Services | $19,250,325 | 87% |
| Management & General | $1,013,240 | 4.6% |
| Fundraising | $1,844,293 | 8.3% |
| Total | $22,107,858 | 100% |