The Carter Center is a 501(c)(3), not-for-profit, nongovernmental organization founded in 1982 in Atlanta, GA, by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, in partnership with Emory University. The Center has helped to improve millions of lives in more than 80 countries by waging peace, fighting disease, and building hope. The Carter Center is guided by a fundamental commitment to human rights and the alleviation of human suffering. It seeks to prevent and resolve conflicts, enhance freedom and democracy, and improve health. The Carter Center collaborates with other organizations, public and private, in carrying out its mission around the world. Current information about the Center’s many programs and activities are available at The Carter Center . DEMOCRACY PROGRAM The Carter Center has stood as democracy’s guardian, observing over 125 elections across 40 countries and three Native American nations while pioneering the techniques that set today’s global standards. Our work spans five essential areas: Election Observation: Documenting truth through impartial monitoring when it matters most. Digital Democracy Defense: Protecting against online threats that undermine democratic processes. Democratic Standards & Governance: Creating and maintaining global frameworks for electoral integrity. Participatory Rights: Ensuring historically excluded voices shape their nations’ futures. Building Public Trust: Educating citizens about the processes and safeguards in their election systems to bolster confidence in the outcome. SUMMARY: The Program Director leads the strategy, development, and implementation of The Carter Center’s Democracy Program initiatives. Working alongside the Human Rights, Conflict Resolution, and Rule of Law Programs, the Democracy Program advances the Center’s mission of Waging Peace, Fighting Disease, and Building Hope. The Director provides strategic vision, expert analysis, and overall leadership for a broad portfolio of programmatic activities, while supervising and supporting staff across multiple workstreams. The Director works collaboratively with internal departments—including Finance, Development, Communications, Human Resources, International Support, Country Offices, and Monitoring & Evaluation—to ensure program operations comply with organizational policies and procedures. Externally, the Director engages with national and international partners, civil society organizations, government officials, and diplomatic stakeholders to advance program goals. The role may also oversee applied research, manage publications, convene expert meetings, and direct other key project responsibilities. This position will require periodic global travel to areas of program implementation which currently include Democratic Republic of Congo, Guyana, Sudan, Peru, Colombia, Middle East, Zambia, and re-entry into the United States. This position reports to the Vice President, Peace Programs. Due to travel locations, Hostile Environment Awareness Training (HEAT) will be required.