World Family Policy Center
Dates
- Existence: 1999 - 2008
Administrative History
The World Family Policy Center (1999-2008) was an organization designed to strengthen the family as the basic unit of society and to guide the United Nations in moral lawmaking practices.
The World Family Policy Center (WFPC) was formed as a branch of the J. Reuben Clark Law School in 1999. This organization expounded upon a speech given by Richard G. Wilkins, the WFPC's founder and only director, at a United Nations conference in Istanbul, Turkey, in 1996. The primary goals of the WFPC were designed to strengthen the family as the basic unit of society and to guide the United Nations in moral lawmaking practices. The Center was abolished in 2008.
Citation:
BYU Organizational History Project website, via WWW, Mar. 24, 2011 (World Family Policy Center (WFPC); J. Reuben Clark Law School; established 1999; founder and director: Richard G. Wilkins; sought to strengthen family and guide United Nations in moral lawmaking; abolished 2008)Found in 1 Collection or Record:
World Family Policy Center historical records, 1994-2009
Contains CD-ROMs, conference materials, institute records, class schedules, forum notes, United Nations briefing records, and other materials. Dated 1994-2009.