The Giving Directory

Human Rights & Justice

The Carter Center

Works to advance human rights and alleviate human suffering through disease prevention and democracy building.

Founded 1982 44 years of work
Focus Global
Rating 94/100 Charity Navigator

Charity Navigator rates The Carter Center 94/100 — reflecting strong financial discipline, transparency, and program delivery against industry benchmarks.

What this charity does

Human-rights charities combine investigative research, legal advocacy, litigation, lobbying, and public-awareness campaigns. The biggest organizations operate globally with country-specific teams who document violations through interviews, satellite imagery, and forensic analysis, then translate that evidence into legal challenges, UN advocacy, sanctions campaigns, and media coverage. Funding supports field investigators, attorneys, lobbyists, communications staff, and emergency assistance for individuals at risk.

Why it matters

Evaluate human-rights organizations by their recent track record: documented investigations published, convictions overturned, policies changed, and individuals freed. Look at the breadth of geographic coverage and willingness to criticize governments of all political stripes. Charity Navigator's accountability and transparency scores are useful here. Be cautious of single-issue groups that don't show concrete wins.

Common programs in this space

The Carter Center works within human rights & justice. These are the kinds of programs typically run in this space — visit their site for current specifics.

  • Investigative documentation of human-rights violations worldwide
  • Legal representation for political prisoners and wrongfully accused individuals
  • UN and government advocacy for stronger human-rights protections
  • Urgent assistance to individuals facing imminent threats (relocation, legal aid)
  • Public-awareness campaigns to mobilize political will for reform

How to support beyond a one-time gift

  • + Unrestricted gifts are essential — human-rights work often needs flexibility to respond to unexpected crises
  • + Set up a recurring monthly gift to support sustained advocacy campaigns that span years
  • + Take action through the charity's campaign portals — letter-writing and political pressure amplify donor support
  • + Donate stock or other appreciated assets for tax efficiency
  • + Leave a planned gift — human-rights work requires multi-generational commitment

Verify before you give

A few minutes of independent verification pays off — especially for larger gifts. These resources let you confirm the details on The Carter Center:

Frequently asked

Is The Carter Center a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit?
The Carter Center operates as a registered nonprofit organization. You can verify their current 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status using the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search tool. We recommend confirming directly on the IRS website before making any large donation.
What percentage of donations to The Carter Center goes to programs?
Program-expense ratios change year to year and are published in The Carter Center's annual Form 990 filing. You can read the most recent filings on ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer or Candid (formerly GuideStar). Charity Navigator has rated The Carter Center at 94/100, reflecting its overall financial health and accountability.
How does The Carter Center measure its impact?
The Carter Center publishes impact reporting through its annual report, program-specific updates on its website, and the rating analysis from Charity Navigator. Evaluate human-rights organizations by their recent track record: documented investigations published, convictions overturned, policies changed, and individuals freed. Look at the breadth of geographic coverage and willingness to criticize governments of all political stripes. Charity Navigator's accountability and transparency scores are useful here. Be cautious of single-issue groups that don't show concrete wins.
What's the most effective way to donate to The Carter Center?
Most charities — including The Carter Center — get the most use out of unrestricted, recurring monthly donations. Recurring gifts let the organization plan staffing and program commitments. You can also donate appreciated stock to avoid capital-gains tax, leave a planned gift in your will, or take advantage of employer-matching programs.
How can I support The Carter Center without donating money?
Unrestricted gifts are essential — human-rights work often needs flexibility to respond to unexpected crises Set up a recurring monthly gift to support sustained advocacy campaigns that span years Take action through the charity's campaign portals — letter-writing and political pressure amplify donor support Visit the official website at cartercenter.org for current volunteer and advocacy opportunities.