Management and staff As of December 2021, CIDOB's management team is made up of Antoni Segura (president), Pol Morillas (director), Anna Estrada (executive coordinator), and María José Rodríguez (head of economic and financial management and administration). The workforce is completed with a team of researchers, project managers, area officers, and coordinators (projects, publications, information, communication, and press), in addition to the administration and general services staff. A network of associate researchers collaborates with the centre.
Board of trustees The foundation's board is made up of both institutional and individual trustees, whose financial contributions represent most of the centre's annual budget. The institutional trustees are: •
Generalitat of Catalonia •
City Council of Barcelona •
Provincial Deputation of Barcelona •
Barcelona metropolitan area •
Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation • Inter-university Council of Catalonia
Consulting committees In addition, a scientific committee and an economic committee assist the centre in formulating its policy guidelines.
Funding According to the centre's website, CIDOB approved in 2020 a balanced budget for 2021, with both incomes and expenses equalling €2.68 million. The trustees' contribution (structural funding) amounts to 54%, while funding for participation in EU-sponsored projects or other ownership accounts for 41%. CIDOB has received international funding from institutions such as
UNDP,
Union for the Mediterranean,
EU-LAC Foundation,
Open Society Foundations, Stiftung Mercator, OCP Foundation,
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, and
Bertelsmann Stiftung, as well as private funders such as
Fundación Bancaria La Caixa.
Properties For years, CIDOB's offices were divided between two historic buildings—nearby but not adjoining—on calle Elisabets in Barcelona's
Raval district, very close to
La Rambla and
Plaça de Catalunya: Casa de la Misericòrdia (Elisabets, 12) and Casa dels Infants Orfes (Elisabets, 24). The Casa de la Misericòrdia houses the centre's main offices, including the official head office, archives, and library, as well as Sala Maragall, the hall used for events. Originally, the building, which includes the old church, formed part of the School of
St William of Aquitaine, founded by the
Augustine Order in 1587, and later on it was used as a municipal primary school. During the
Napoleonic invasion, the house was used as a secret headquarters by the local resistance against French occupation. In 1910, it became the seat of the Institute of Culture and People's Library for Women; later still, in 1940, the building hosted the Institute for Theatre, as well as being home to the Adrià Gual Chair. It began being used by CIDOB in 1988. The Casa dels Infants Orfes also dates back to the 16th century. It was built as the seat of the institution founded by Guillem dez Pou in 1370 to provide a foster home for orphans in the Diocese of Barcelona. It has an adjacent chapel, commissioned by Claudi Cosal in 1680 and redesigned in 1785. Among the building's later uses, it was a school run by the
Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul (1848) and a convent for the
Carmelites of Charity (1875). The chapel lost all its religious furnishings and fittings during the
Spanish Civil War. Currently, the Open Society Initiative for Europe (OSIFE, European chapter of the Open Society Foundations) is headquartered at this house. ==Activities==