Invisible Children, Inc. , founded in 2004, is an organization to increase awareness of the activities of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Central Africa, and its leader, Joseph Kony. +more
When the organization was founded, the LRA was active in Uganda. The rebel group left Uganda in 2006 and continues to operate in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, and South Sudan. +more
The group has received both praise and criticism for its methods. While the organization's films have won several awards, its use of funds, projection of facts, and support of the SPLA and the Uganda People's Defence Force have come into question as these two groups have been known to commit similar atrocities to those blamed on the LRA. +more
Invisible Children underwent restructuring in late 2014. Foreign Policy in 2017 reported that Invisible Children had become closely connected with military operations, including intelligence gathering.
Background
In 1985, Ugandan dictator Apolo Milton Obote (28 December 1925 - 10 October 2005) was overthrown by his own military commanders. Although he was from the Lango ethnic group, the soldiers who made up his army were primarily from the Acholi region, in northern Uganda. +more
Several resistance groups emerged and most were put down, but the LRA survived. In the early 2000s, media attention was drawn to the region when thousands of children affected by the LRA activities took refuge in Gulu, Uganda. +more
The attention the conditions in Uganda received revealed that over the previous 20 years the LRA was abducting children and using them as kadogo (child soldiers), a practice in which the Museveni government had also engaged. In 2005, an arrest warrant was issued for Joseph Kony by the International Criminal Court "for crimes against humanity and war crimes".
After failed peace negotiations with the Ugandan government in 2006, the LRA left Uganda retreating to southern Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Central African Republic, where they continued to "wreak havoc". In May 2010, +more
History
With the intent to film a documentary about the War in Darfur, college students Jason Russell, Bobby Bailey, and Laren Poole traveled to Africa in 2003. Russell had recently graduated from film school at the University of Southern California, and after witnessing gunmen shoot at the truck in front of him while driving in northern Uganda, he discovered Joseph Kony and the Lord's Resistance Army. +more
The young men set out on a mission to expose what they had witnessed in Uganda, screening their film at hundreds of high schools, colleges, and churches throughout the United States. In 2004 the group founded Invisible Children, Inc. +more
In April 2007, the group organized an event called "Displace Me", in which 67,000 activists throughout the United States slept in the streets in makeshift cardboard villages, hoping to raise awareness about those displaced by the Ugandan government. Later in 2007, American rock band Fall Out Boy filmed a music video for the song "I'm Like a Lawyer with the Way I'm Always Trying to Get You Off (Me & You)" in Uganda after hearing of the organization's cause. +more
Although the LRA left Uganda in 2006 after failed peace negotiations with the government, in March 2012, Invisible Children, Inc. continued to create new awareness programs. +more
In March 2012, Invisible Children began an internet video campaign called Kony 2012, the premise of which was to heighten awareness of the actions of Kony and the LRA in order to put further pressure on the U. S. +more
Criticism
In an article analyzing why the Obama administration sent US troops to Central Africa in October, 2011, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) criticized groups like Invisible Children for "manipulat[ing] facts for strategic purposes, exaggerating the scale of LRA abductions and murders". Resolve, one of Invisible Children's partner organizations, addressed the CFR's accusation as a "serious charge. +more
The CFR article went on to say that organizations such as Invisible Children "rarely refer to the Ugandan atrocities or those of Sudan's People's Liberation Army. " These ideas were echoed in the Huffington Post by Michael Deibert, author of Democratic Republic of Congo: Between Hope and Despair. +more
The organization has been criticized for oversimplifying a complex and multi-faceted issue. Of major concern is that US troops are already deployed in an operation that should be secret. +more
Scrutiny of the distribution of the organization's funds have also emerged, specifically due to information reported by charity watch group Charity Navigator. Charity Navigator currently has Invisible Children rated three out of four stars overall (two out of four in the category of "financial" and four out of four in the category of "accountability and transparency"). +more
Another focus for criticism of the organization has been a photograph of the three founders holding weapons and posing with armed members of the SPLA. Invisible Children responded on their website with founder Jason Russell explaining that it was a joke photo taken at the 2008 Juba peace talks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that would have been "funny to bring back to our friends and family". +more
A documentary made by Jean-Baptiste Renaud, aired on Arte, claimed multiple issues concerning the aims and methods of Invisible Children. It was alleged that the NGO cooperated with the Army of Uganda by monitoring rebel movements and collecting reconnaissance from remote villages via radio. +more
Awards
In 2007, Progressive Source Awards, awarded Invisible Children's TRI podcast as the Best Fundraising * In 2008, Invisible Children was awarded the Human Security Award. * In 2008, Invisible Children was awarded the People's Voice Webby Award. +more
Filmography
The organization's founding was catalyzed by Invisible Children, the documentary that the founders filmed and edited in 2003.
Film | Release | Director(s) | Bracelet Color |
---|---|---|---|
Invisible Children: The Rough Cut | 2004 | Bobby Bailey | N/A |
Innocent: The Story of a Night Commuter | 2005 | N/A | White |
Grace: The Story of a Child Mother | 2006 | Danica Russell, Vanessa Contopulos, Noelle Jouglet, Katie Bradel | Green |
Emmy: The Story of an Orphan | 2006 | Bobby Bailey | Red |
Sunday: The Story of a Displaced Child | 2007 | Bobby Bailey | Black |
Go | 2008 | Laren Poole | N/A |
Roseline: The Story of an AIDS Victim | 2008 | Jason Russell | Blue |
Together We Are Free | 2009 | Jason Russell | N/A |
The Rescue | 2009 | Jason Russell | Grey |
Tony | 2010 | Jason Russell | Brown |
Kony 2012 | 2012 | Jason Russell | N/A |
501(c)(3) organizations
Invisible Children
Non-profit organizations based in San Diego
Organizations established in 2004
2004 establishments in California
Organizations for child soldiers
Latest activity









