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Special Olympics - 2009 Idaho Games

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Timothy Shriver

As CEO and Chairman of Special Olympics International, Tim Shriver is carrying on the work of his mother, helping to transform Special Olympics into a movement that focuses on acceptance, inclusion and respect for individuals with intellectual disabilities in all corners of the globe.

As Chairman and CEO of Special Olympics, Timothy Shriver continues his mother's legacy.

A Global Movement
Special Olympics International serves 3.1 million Special Olympics athletes and their families in 175 countries. 

In his 14 years at the helm of Special Olympics, Timothy Shriver launched the organization’s most ambitious growth agenda leading to the recruitment of more than two million new athletes around the world.  Shriver has also created exciting new Special Olympics initiatives in athlete leadership, cross-cultural research, health, education, and family support.  Among them, Special Olympics Healthy Athletes® has become the world’s largest public health screening and education program for people with intellectual disabilities, and Special Olympics Get Into It®, together with Unified Sports®, promotes inclusion and acceptance around the world.  In addition, he has worked to garner more legislative attention and government support for issues of concern to the Special Olympics community, testifying before Congress on numerous occasions.   

As part of his passion for promoting the gifts of the forgotten, Shriver has harnessed the power of Hollywood to share the stories of inspiration and change, co-producing DreamWorks Studios’ 1997 release, “Amistad,” and Disney Studios’ 2000 release, “The Loretta Claiborne Story.”  He is Executive Producer of  “The Ringer,” a Farrelly Brothers’ film, and he has produced or co-produced shows for ABC, TNT, and NBC networks, and made broadcast appearances on The Today Show, CNN, MTV, and Nickelodeon’s World of Difference.

Before joining Special Olympics, Shriver was and remains a leading educator focusing on the social and emotional factors in learning. Shriver earned his undergraduate degree from Yale University, a Master's degree in Religion and Religious Education from Catholic University, and a Doctorate in Education from the University of Connecticut. He is the recipient of numerous honors, including honorary degrees from Loyola University, New England College, and Albertus Magnus College; the Medal of the City of Athens, Greece; the Order de Manuel Amador Guerrera of the Republic of Panama; the 1995 Connecticut Citizen of the Year; the Surgeon General’s Medallion; and the 2007 Lions Humanitarian Award.  He has authored articles in many leading publications including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Commonweal.  

Shriver is a member of the Board of the Education Commission of the States’ Compact for Learning and Citizenship, and the Council on Foreign Relations.

He and his wife, Linda Potter, reside in the Washington, D.C. area with their five children.

Tim Shriver is the son of Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the Founder of the Special Olympics movement.

Special Olympics Global Movement in Figures:

  • 3.1 million Athletes worldwide
  • 180 National Programmes worldwide
  • 200 million people with intellectual disability in the world
  • 30,000 competitions year round
  • 300,000 coaches worldwide
  • 750,000 volunteers worldwide