Title
Table of Contents
Historical Note
Scope and Content Note
Board of Directors
Committees
Subject File
Quarterly Reports
Case Histories
Photographs
War in Europe
Publications/ Publicity
Miles For Millions
Donor Countries
Program Countries
Volume
I: Records of Foster Parents Plan International, 1939-1994
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RECORDS OF
FOSTER PARENTS PLAN INTERNATIONAL, INC.
1937-1982
VOLUME II
MSG# 117
HISTORICAL NOTE
PLAN International describes itself as a
"private, voluntary child-sponsorship organization that serves children in ...
developing countries." Through its various programs, PLAN provides direct benefits to
more than 650,000 children, their families and their communities.
PLAN was founded in 1937 in England as the
Foster Parents Scheme for Children in Spain by English journalist John Langdon-Davies. He
and Eric Muggeridge, an English social worker, conceived the idea of providing financial
support and hostels for children orphaned or made refugees by the Spanish
Civil War.
The organization changed its name to Foster
Parents Plan for Spanish Children in the summer of 1939 and was chartered as a New York
corporation to avail itself of fundraising opportunities in the United States. The
organization continued to evacuate Spanish orphaned and refugee children from Spain, first
to France and later to England. The organization again changed its name in the fall of
1935, this time to Foster Parents Plan for War Children, Inc., and continued its work of
providing aid and assistance to children whose lives were disrupted by the Spanish Civil
War and World War II.
When World War II ended in 1945, the
organization extended already existing programs in France, England, and Italy and expanded
into the war-ravaged countries of Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, China, Greece, the
Netherlands, and West Germany. In addition to enrolling children orphaned or made
refugees by the war, PLAN began to enroll an increasing number of children who lived with
their families with the goal of keeping those families together.
As European economies began to recover in
the post-war years and individual countries became able to assume responsibility for their
own needy children, PLAN began to phase out its European operations and looked to lend
assistance to undeveloped countries where the needs of children were the result of causes
other than war. To reflect this change in focus, the organization changed its name once
again from Foster Parents Plan for War Children, Inc. to Foster Parents Plan
International, Inc. and began to establish field offices and programs in Latin America,
South America, Africa, and Asia.
The first South American field office was
established in Bogota, Colombia in 1962. The Bogota program was rapidly followed by
programs throughout South America and Latin America in the 1960s. Programs in Africa and
Asia followed in the 1970s and 1980s. Some programs were also terminated during this
period, either due to improving economic conditions as in Hong Kong or deteriorating
political conditions as in Ethiopia, Nicaragua, Liberia, and Vietnam.
As PLAN expanded it also changed its focus
from a child welfare organization to a community development organization. Though PLAN
continued to emphasize the welfare of individual children, it did so in the context of a
community development approach that seeks to strengthen families and communities in order
that they may better support their children's needs.
With the change in emphasis came a change
in organizational structure. By the early 1970s, it had become apparent that PLAN's
relatively informal administrative structure was no longer adequate to meet the needs of a
rapidly growing organization. This realization resulted in the establishment of PLAN
International in 1973 as the administrative arm of Foster Parents Plan International, Inc.
with its headquarters in Warwick, Rhode Island. The International Executive Director,
responsible to the International Board of Directors, was to manage the operations of
PLAN with the assistance and support of a senior management group. The national organizations
in Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and
the United States enjoyed relative autonomy in raising funds from individual foster
parents and corporations. These funds were then funneled through International
Headquarters to the various field offices.
PLAN continued to grow throughout the
1970s and 1980s and its organizational structure continued to evolve as well. In
response to complaints from field directors that PLAN management had become too
centralized and unresponsive to the needs of the field offices, International Headquarters
began to decentralize its management structure. Beginning in 1987, PLAN established a
series of regional offices in order to move the operational decision making process as
close as possible to the programs and field offices. By 1992, the process was completed
and six regional offices oversaw the management of program activities in the field offices
responsible to them.
The evolution of PLAN's administrative
structure continued into the 1990s. After twenty years in Rhode Island, the International
Executive Board, at the recommendation of new International Executive Director Max van
der Schalk, agreed to move its International Headquarters to England. The move, approved
in 1993, was completed in late 1994.
The return to England in a sense brought
PLAN full circle. It was two Englishmen, John Langdon-Davies and Eric Muggeridge, who
began the effort to assist children displaced by the Spanish Civil War. Though
Langdon-Davies and Muggeridge might not recognize an organization that raises funds in
eight industrialized nations to support programs in thirty underdeveloped countries in
Latin America, South America, Asia, and Africa, they would still recognize its driving
force: assisting children to make a better life for themselves, their families, and their
communities. |