Guiding Principles
The Carter Center is guided by five principles:
- Does not duplicate the effective efforts of others.
- Emphasizes action and results. Based on careful research and analysis, it is prepared to take timely action on important and pressing issues.
- Acts as a neutral party.
- Addresses difficult problems and recognizes the possibility of failure as an acceptable risk.
- To help people with their rights.
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Famous quotes related to guiding principles:
“For the child whose impulsiveness is indulged, who retains his primitive-discharge mechanisms, is not only an ill-behaved child but a child whose intellectual development is slowed down. No matter how well he is endowed intellectually, if direct action and immediate gratification are the guiding principles of his behavior, there will be less incentive to develop the higher mental processes, to reason, to employ the imagination creatively. . . .”
—Selma H. Fraiberg (20th century)