2003
The prize was awarded to:
SHIRIN
EBADI
for her efforts for democracy and human
rights
2002
The prize was awarded to:
JIMMY
CARTER JR.,
former President of the United States of America,
for his decades of untiring effort to find
peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy
and human rights, and to promote economic and social development
2001
The prize was awarded to:
UNITED
NATIONS, New York, NY, USA
KOFI
ANNAN, United Nations Secretary
General
2000
The prize was awarded to:
KIM DAE JUNG
for his work for democracy and human rights in South Korea and
in East Asia in general, and for peace and reconciliation with North
Korea in particular.
1999
The prize was awarded to:
DOCTORS WITHOUT
BORDERS (MÉDECINS SANS
FRONTIÈRES), Brussels, Belgium.
1998
The prize was awarded jointly to:
JOHN HUME
and DAVID
TRIMBLE for their efforts to
find a peaceful solution to the conflict in Northern Ireland.
1997
The prize was awarded jointly to:
INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN
TO BAN LANDMINES
(ICBL) and
JODY WILLIAMS
for their work for the banning and clearing of anti-personnel mines.
1996
The prize was awarded jointly to:
CARLOS FELIPE
XIMENES BELO
and JOSE
RAMOS-HORTA
for their work towards a just and peaceful solution to the conflict
in East Timor.
1995
The prize was awarded jointly to:
JOSEPH ROTBLAT
and to the PUGWASH
CONFERENCES ON SCIENCE
AND WORLD AFFAIRS
for their efforts to diminish the part played by
nuclear arms in international politics and in the longer run to
eliminate such arms.
1994
The
prize was awarded joinly to:
YASSER ARAFAT
, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the PLO, President of the
Palestinian National Authority.
SHIMON PERES
, Foreign Minister of Israel.
YITZHAK RABIN
, Prime Minister of Israel.
for their efforts to create peace in the
Middle East.
1993
The
prize was awarded jointly to:
NELSON MANDELA
Leader of the ANC.
FREDRIK WILLEM
DE KLERK
President of the Republic of South Africa.
1992
RIGOBERTA MENCHU
TUM, Guatemala. Campaigner for
human rights, especially for indigenous peoples.
1991
AUNG SAN SUU
KYI, Burma. Oppositional leader,
human rights advocate.
1990
MIKHAIL SERGEYEVICH
GORBACHEV , President of the
USSR, helped to bring the Cold War to an end.
1989
THE 14TH DALAI
LAMA (TENZIN GYATSO)
, Tibet. Religious and political leader of the Tibetan
people.
1988
THE UNITED NATIONS
PEACE-KEEPING FORCES
New York, NY, U.S.A.
1987
OSCAR ARIAS SANCHEZ
, Costa Rica, President of Costa Rica, initiator of peace
negotiations in Central America.
1986
ELIE WIESEL
, U.S.A., Chairman of 'The President's Commission on the Holocaust'.
Author, humanitarian.
1985
INTERNATIONAL PHYSICIANS
FOR THE PREVENTION
OF NUCLEAR WAR
Boston, MA, U.S.A.
1984
DESMOND MPILO
TUTU , South Africa, Bishop of
Johannesburg, former Secretary General South African Council of
Churches (S.A.C.C.). for his work against apartheid.
1983
LECH WALESA
, Poland. Founder of Solidarity, campaigner for human rights.
1982
The prize was awarded jointly to:
ALVA MYRDAL
, former Cabinet Minister, diplomat, delegate to United Nations
General Assembly on Disarmament, writer.
ALFONSO GARCÍA
ROBLES , diplomat, delegate to
the United Nations General Assembly on Disarmament, former Secretary
for Foreign Affairs .
1981
OFFICE OF THE
UNITED NATIONS HIGH
COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES
Geneva, Switzerland.
1980
ADOLFO PEREZ ESQUIVEL
, Argentina, architect, sculptor and human rights leader.
1979
MOTHER TERESA
, India, Leader of the Order of the Missionaries of
Charity.
1978
The prize was divided equally between:
MOHAMED ANWAR
AL-SADAT
, President of the Arab Republic of Egypt.
MENACHEM BEGIN
, Prime Minister of Israel.
for jointly negotiating peace between Egypt
and Israel.
1977
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
London, Great Britain. A worldwide organization for the
protection of the rights of prisoners of conscience.
1976
BETTY WILLIAMS
and MAIREAD
CORRIGAN Founders of the
Northern Ireland Peace Movement (later renamed Community of Peace
People).
1975
ANDREI DMITRIEVICH
SAKHAROV , Soviet nuclear
physicist. Campaigner for human rights.
1974
The prize was divided equally between:
SEÁN MAC BRIDE
, President of the International Peace Bureau, Geneva, and the
Commission of Namibia, United Nations, New York.
EISAKU SATO
, Prime Minister of Japan.
1973
The prize was awarded jointly to:
HENRY A. KISSINGER
, Secretary of State, State Department, Washington.
LE DUC THO
, Democratic Republic of Viet Nam. (Declined the
prize.)
for jointly negotiating the Vietnam peace
accord in 1973.
1972
The prize money for 1972 was allocated to
the Main Fund.
1971
WILLY BRANDT
, Federal Republic of Germany, Chancellor of the Federal Republic of
Germany, initiator of West Germany's Ostpolitik, embodying
a new attitude towards Eastern Europe and East Germany.
1970
NORMAN BORLAUG
, Led research at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement
Center, Mexico City.
1969
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR
ORGANIZATION (I.L.O.) Geneva.
1968
RENÉ CASSIN
, President of the European Court for Human Rights .
1967-1966
The prize money was allocated to the Main Fund
(1/3) and to the Special Fund (2/3) of this prize section.
1965
UNITED NATIONS
CHILDREN'S FUND
(UNICEF) New York, founded by U.N. in 1946. An
international aid organization.
1964
MARTIN LUTHER
KING JR.
, leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, campaigner
for civil rights.
1963
The prize was divided equally between
COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL
DE LA CROIX-ROUGE
(INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE
OF THE REDCROSS)
Geneva, founded 1863.
LIGUE DES SOCIÉTÉS
DE LA CROIX-ROUGE
(LEAGUE OF RED
CROSS SOCIETIES)
Geneva.
1962
LINUS CARL PAULING
, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA. Campaigner
especially for an end to nuclear weapons tests.
1961
DAG HJALMAR AGNE
CARL HAMMARSKJÖLD
, Secretary General of the United Nations (awarded the Prize
posthumously).
1960
ALBERT JOHN LUTULI
, President of the South Africal liberation movement, the African
National Congress.
1959
PHILIP J. NOEL-BAKER
, Great Britain, Member of Parliament, life long ardent worker for
international peace and co-operation .
1958
GEORGES HENRI
PIRE , Belgium, Father of the
Dominican Order, Leader of the relief organization for refugees,
l'Europe du Coeur au Service du Monde.
1957
LESTER BOWLES
PEARSON , former Secretary of
State for External Affairs of Canada, President 7th Session of the
United Nations General Assembly .
1956-1955
The prize money was allocated to the Main Fund
(1/3) and to the Special Fund (2/3) of this prize section.
1954
OFFICE OF THE UNITED
NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER
FOR REFUGEES
Geneva, an international relief organization, founded by U.N. in
1951.
1953
GEORGE CATLETT
MARSHALL , General, President
American Red Cross, ex-Secretary of State and of Defense, Delegate
to the U.N., Originator of the Marshall Plan.
1952
ALBERT SCHWEITZER
, Missionary surgeon, Founder Lambaréné Hospital in République du
Gabon.
1951
LÉON JOUHAUX
, France, President of the trade union C.G.T. Force Ouvrière.
President of the International Committee of the European Council,
Vice President of the International Confederation of Free Trade
Unions, Vice President of the World Federation of Trade Unions,
member of the ILO Council, delegate to the UN.
1950
RALPH BUNCHE
, Professor Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Director of the UN
Division of Trusteeship, Acting Mediator in Palestine 1948.
1949
LORD JOHN BOYD
ORR OF BRECHIN
, Physician, Alimentary Politician, prominent organizer and Director
General Food and Agricultural Organization, President National Peace
Council and World Union of Peace Organizations.
1948
The prize money was allocated to the Main
Fund (1/3) and to the Special Fund (2/3) of this prize section.
1947
The prize was awarded jointly to:
THE FRIENDS SERVICE
COUNCIL (The Quakers), London.
Founded in 1647.
THE AMERICAN FRIENDS
SERVICE COMMITTEE (The
Quakers), Washington. The society's first official
meeting was held in 1672.
1946
The prize was divided equally between:
EMILY GREENE BALCH,
former Professor of History and Sociology, Honorary International
President Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
JOHN RALEIGH MOTT
Chairman of the first International Missionary Council, President of
the World Alliance of Young Men's Christian Associations .
1945
CORDELL HULL
Former Secretary of State. One of the initiators of the United
Nations.
1944
COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL
DE LA CROIX-ROUGE
(INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE
OF THE RED
CROSS)
1943-1939
The prize money was allocated to the Main Fund
(1/3) and to the Special Fund (2/3) of this prize section.
1938
OFFICE INTERNATIONAL
NANSEN POUR LES
RÉFUGIÉS (NANSEN INTERNATIONAL
OFFICE FOR REFUGEES)
an international relief organization in Geneva started
by Fridtjof Nansen in 1921.
1937
CECIL OF CHELWOOD,
VISCOUNT, (LORD EDGAR
ALGERNON ROBERT GASCOYNE
CECIL) , Writer, Former Lord
Privy Seal. Founder and President of the International Peace
Campaign.
1936
CARLOS SAAVEDRA
LAMAS Foreign Minister.
President of the Société des Nations (League of Nations), Meditator
in a conflict between Paraguay and Bolivia in 1935.
1935
CARL VON OSSIETZKY
Journalist (with Die Weltbühne, among others), pacifist.
1934
ARTHUR HENDERSON
Former Foreign Secretary. Chairman of the League of Nations
Disarmament Conference 1932-1934.
1933
SIR NORMAN ANGELL
(RALPH LANE)
Writer. Member of the Commission Exécutive de la Société des Nations
(Executive Committee of the League of Nations) and the National
Peace Council. Author of the book The Great Illusion, among
others.
1932
The prize money for 1932 was allocated to
the Special Fund of this prize section.
1931
The prize was divided equally between:
JANE ADDAMS
Sociologist. International President of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom.
NICHOLAS MURRAY
BUTLER President of Columbia
University. Promoter of the Briand-Kellogg Pact.
1930
LARS OLOF NATHAN
(JONATHAN) SÖDERBLOM
Archbishop. Leader of the ecumenical movement.
1929
FRANK BILLINGS
KELLOGG Former Secretary of
State, Negotiated the Briand-Kellogg Pact.
1928
The prize money for 1928 was allocated to
the Special Fund of this prize section.
1927
The prize was divided equally between:
FERDINAND BUISSON
Former Professor at the Sorbonne University, Paris. Founder and
President of the Ligue des Droits de l'Homme (League for Human
Rights).
LUDWIG QUIDDE
Historian. Professor at Berlin University. Member of Germany's
constituent assembly 1919. Delegate to numerous peace conferences.
1926
The prize was awarded jointly to:
ARISTIDE BRIAND
Foreign Minister. Negotiator of the Locarno Treaty and the
Briand-Kellogg Pact.
GUSTAV STRESEMANN
Former Lord High Chancellor (Reichs-kanzler). Foreign Minister.
Negotiator of the Locarno Treaty.
1925
The prize was awarded jointly to:
SIR AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN
Foreign Minister. Negotiator of the Locarno Treaty.
CHARLES GATES
DAWES Vice-President of the
United States of America. Chairman of the Allied Reparation
Commission. Originator of the Dawes Plan .
1924-1923
The prize money for 1924-1923 was allocated to
the Special Fund of this prize section.
1922
FRIDTJOF NANSEN
, Norway. Scientist. Explorer. Norwegian Delegate to Société des
Nations (League of Nations). Originator of the Nansen passports (for
refugees).
1921
The prize was divided equally between:
KARL HJALMAR BRANTING
Prime Minister. Swedish Delegate to the Conseil de la Société des
Nations (Council of the League of Nations).
CHRISTIAN LOUS
LANGE Secretary General of the
Inter-Parliamentary Union, Brussels.
1920
LÉON VICTOR AUGUSTE
BOURGEOIS, France. Former
Secretary of State. President of the Parliament (Sénat). President
of the Conseil de la Société des Nations (Council of the League of
Nations) .
1919
THOMAS WOODROW
WILSON, President of the United
States of America. Founder of the Société des Nations (League of
Nations)
1918
The prize money for 1918 was allocated to
the Special Fund of this prize section.
1917
COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL
DE LA CROIX
ROUGE (INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE
OF THE REDCROSS)
, Geneva.
1916-1914
The prize money for 1916-1914 was allocated to
the Special Fund of this prize section.
1913
HENRI LA FONTAINE,
Belgium. Member of the Belgian Parliament (Sénateur). President of
the Permanent International Peace Bureau, Berne.
1912
ELIHU ROOT
Former Secretary of State. Initiator of several arbitration
agreements.
1911
The prize was divided equally between:
TOBIAS MICHAEL
CAREL ASSER,
the Netherlands. Cabinet Minister. Member of the Privy Council.
Initiator of the International Conferences of Private Law at the
Hague.
ALFRED HERMANN
FRIED, Austria. Journalist.
Founder of the peace journal Die Waffen Nieder (later
renamed Die Friedenswarte).
1910
BUREAU INTERNATIONAL
PERMANENT DE LA
PAIX (PERMANENT INTERNATIONAL
PEACE BUREAU)
, Bern.
1909
The prize was divided equally between:
AUGUSTE MARIE
FRANÇOIS BEERNAERT,
Belgium. Former Prime Minister. Member of the Belgian Parliament.
Member of the Cour Internationale d'Arbitrage (International Court
of Arbitration) at the Hague.
PAUL HENRIBENJAMIN
BALLUET D'ESTOURNELLES
DE CONSTANT, BARON
DE CONSTANT DE
REBECQUE, France. Member of the
French Parliament (Sénateur). Founder and President of the French
parliamentary group for international arbitration (Groupe
parlementaire de l'arbitrage international). Founder of the Comité
de défense des intérêtsnationaux et de conciliation internationale
(Committee for the Defense of National Interests and International
Conciliation).
1908
The prize was divided equally between:
KLAS PONTUS ARNOLDSON,
Sweden. Writer. Former Member fo the Swedish Parliament. Founder of
the Swedish Peace and Arbitration League.
FREDRIK BAJER,
Denmark. Member of the Danish Parliament. Honorary President of the
Permanent International Peace Bureau, Berne.
1907
The prize was divided equally between:
ERNESTO TEODORO
MONETA, Italy. President of the
Lombard League of Peace.
LOUIS RENAULT,
France. Professor International Law, Sorbonne University, Paris.
1906
THEODORE ROOSEVELT,
USA. President of the United States of America. Drew up the 1905
peace treaty between Russia and Japan.
1905
BARONESS BERTHA
SOPHIE FELICITA VON
SUTTNER née
COUNTESS
KINSKY von CHINIC und
TETTAU, Austria. Writer. Hon.
President of the Permanent International Peace Bureau, Berne. Author
of Die Waffen Nieder (Lay Down Your Arms).
1904
INSTITUT DE DROIT
INTERNATIONAL (INSTITUTE
OF INTERNATIONAL LAW)
, Gent, Belgium. A scientific society.
1903
SIR WILLIAM RANDAL
CREMER, Great Britain. Member of
the British Parliament. Secretary of the International Arbitration
League .
1902
The prize was divided equally between:
ÉLIE DUCOMMUN,
Switzerland. Honorary Secretary of the Permanent International Peace
Bureau, Berne.
CHARLES ALBERT
GOBAT, Switzerland. Secretary
General of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Berne. Honorary Secretary
of the Permanent International Peace Bureau, Berne.
1901
The prize was divided equally between:
JEAN HENRI DUNANT,
Switzerland. Founder of the International Committee of the Red
Cross, Geneva; Initiator of the Geneva Convention (Convention de
Genève).
FRÉDÉRIC PASSY,
France. Founder and President of the first French peace society
(since 1889 it has been called the Société Francaise pour
l'arbitrage entre nations).
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