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         Institute Of International Law:     more books (100)
  1. The territorial sea (Publications of the American Institute of International Law) by Antonio Sánchez de Bustamante y Sirvén, 1982
  2. Institutes of International Law, Volumes 1-24 by Richard Wildman, 2010-01-12
  3. Institutes of International Law: Public and Private, As Settled by the Supreme Court of the United States, and by Our Republic : With References to Judicial Decisions by Daniel Gardner, 2010-03-09
  4. Turkey and some problems of international law, (University of Istanbul. Publications of the Institute of International Law and International Affairs, no. 8) by Yilmaz Altug, 1958
  5. The Recommendations of Habana Concerning International Organization: Adopted by the American Institute of International Law at Habana, January 23, 1917 by James Brown Scott, 2010-03-16
  6. Resolutions of the Institute of International Law Dealing With the Law of Nations, With an Historical Introduction and Explanatory Notes by Institute of International Law, 2010-03-27
  7. Institutes of International Law (1-2) by Richard Wildman, 2010-03
  8. Allocation of law enforcement authority in the international system: Proceedings of an International Symposium of the Kiel Institute of International Law, ... Recht an der Universitat Kiel) by Universitat Kiel, 1995
  9. Institutes of International Law, Volumes 1-2 by Richard Wildman, 2010-03-10
  10. A Commentary on the Declaration of the Rights of Nations Adopted by the American Institute of International Law by Francisco José Urrutia, 2010-07-24
  11. Resolutions Of The Institute Of International Law Dealing With The Law Of Nations: With A Historical Introduction And Explanatory Notes (1916)
  12. The American Institute of International Law: Its Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Nations (1916 ) by American Institute of International Law, 2009-10-21
  13. Resolutions of the Institute of International Law Dealing With the Law of Nations: With an Historical Introduction and Explanatory Notes
  14. The American Institute of International Law by James Brown Scott, 2010-02-12

1. Institute Of International Law - Nobel Lecture
institute of international law – nobel Lecture. An Adress*, August24 1912. The Work of the institute of international law. On behalf
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1904/international-law-lecture.html
An Adress , August 24 1912
The Work of the Institute of International Law
On behalf of the Institute of International Law, whose president I have the honor to be, I would first of all like to express our deep gratitude to His Majesty for honoring this opening of the twenty-seventh session of the Institute with his presence. I also beg to be allowed to convey our sincere thanks to the Minister of Foreign Affairs for assuming the chairmanship of this session, and to the members of the diplomatic corps, to the Norwegian authorities, and to their ladies who have come here at our invitation. We see this large and distinguished gathering as a sign of sympathy not only for the Institute but also, and perhaps above all, for the ideas which it seeks to promote. Practically no existing movement enjoys such popularity and has such a wide following as the movement for peace in international relations. The undertakings inspired by this aim are numerous and of varied nature. In many civilized countries, societies have been formed to propagate the idea of pacifism among the people of the world, and great international meetings are held at frequent intervals. The parliaments of the majority of nations have founded an Interparliamentary Union

2. Institute Of International Law - Nobel Symposia
institute of international law – nobel Symposia. institute of internationallaw History of Organization nobel Lecture nobel Symposia. 1903, 1905.
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1904/international-law-symp.html
Video
At the Nobel Centennial Symposia
Comment
(9 min.) Webcasting: Frekvens Produktion AB
Internet Infrastructure Partner: Cisco Systems In order to see the video you need Real Player The Nobel Peace Prize 1904
Speech
Institute of International Law ...
Nobel Symposia
The 1904 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
...
Peace
Find a Laureate: Last modified November 27, 2002 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

3. Institute Of International Law Winner Of The 1904 Nobel Prize In Peace
institute Of international law, a nobel Peace Laureate, at the nobel Prize InternetArchive. INSTITUT DE DROIT international (institute OF international law).
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/1904a.html
I NSTITUT D E D ROIT I NTERNATIONAL (I NSTITUTE O F I NTERNATIONAL L AW)
1904 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
    Scientific society.
Background
    Founded: 1873
    Location: Ghent
Featured Internet Links

    Search WWW Search The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace Chemistry ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

4. Index Of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES. Name, Year Awarded. Addams,Jane, 1931. Hume, John, 1998. institute Of international law, 1904.
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES
Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

5. International Law, Institute Of
of the civilized world. In 1904 the institute of international Lawwas awarded the nobel Prize for Peace. The institute's founder
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/732_79.html
International Law, Institute of,
international organization founded in Ghent, Belgium, in 1873 to develop and implement international law as a codified science responsible for the legal morality and integrity of the civilized world. In 1904 the Institute of International Law was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace The institute's founder, the Baron Rolin-Jacquemyns, felt that such a body was necessary for the establishment and acceptance of the concept of international lawa concept that was only beginning to form at this time and that was not universally accepted in legal circles. Rolin-Jacquemyns was elected as the group's first secretary-general at the initial meeting in Ghent; representatives from 9 countries were present, and 24 other countries sent notice of their agreement to join. Among the organization's achievements were its contributions to the development of international treaties for protection of the Suez Canal and its work on the proposals of the Hague Conference. In the late 20th century the institute focused its efforts on international human rights. The institute maintains its standards as a scientific body of law, and all members are chosen from within the international legal community.

6. Nobel Prize Winners For Peace
1903, Cremer, Sir Randal, UK. 1904, institute of international law, (founded 1873).1905, Suttner, Bertha, Freifrau von, AustriaHungary. 1906, Roosevelt, Theodore,US.
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/table/peace.html
Year Article Country* Dunant, Henri Switzerland France Switzerland Gobat, Charles-Albert Switzerland Cremer, Sir Randal U.K. Institute of International Law (founded 1873) Suttner, Bertha, Freifrau von Austria-Hungary Roosevelt, Theodore U.S Moneta, Ernesto Teodoro Italy Renault, Louis France Arnoldson, Klas Pontus Sweden Bajer, Fredrik Denmark Belgium Estournelles de Constant, Paul-H.-B. d' France International Peace Bureau (founded 1891) Asser, Tobias Michael Carel The Netherlands Fried, Alfred Hermann Austria-Hungary Root, Elihu U.S. Lafontaine, Henri-Marie Belgium International Committee of the Red Cross (founded 1863) Wilson, Woodrow U.S. France Branting, Karl Hjalmar Sweden Lange, Christian Lous Norway Nansen, Fridtjof Norway Chamberlain, Sir Austen U.K. Dawes, Charles G. U.S. Briand, Aristide France Stresemann, Gustav Germany France Quidde, Ludwig Germany Kellogg, Frank B. U.S. Sweden Addams, Jane U.S. Butler, Nicholas Murray U.S. Angell, Sir Norman U.K. Henderson, Arthur U.K. Ossietzky, Carl von Germany Saavedra Lamas, Carlos Argentina Cecil (of Chelwood), Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 1st Viscount

7. The Norwegian Nobel Institute
The Norwegian nobel institute Library, opened to the public in 1905, covers thefollowing fields political history from 1800, peace, international law, and
http://www.nobel.no/eng_ins_lib.html

Home

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Committee
Committee and members
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Alfred Nobel and his will
Laureates
Speeches and Lectures
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History and mission
Fellowship-
program Library ... Staff The Norwegian Nobel Institute Library Address: Drammensveien 19, NO-0255 Oslo, Norway Phone : Fax : E-mail library@nobel.no Search the library's database Opening hours: Sept.15 - May 14 : 8:00 A.M. - 3:45 P.M. May 15 - Sept.14 : 8:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. Saturdays closed. Home Other Nobel Prizes The Norwegian Nobel Institute Drammensveien 19, NO-0255 OSLO +47 22 12 93 00 tel +47 22 12 93 10 fax The Official Web Site of the Norwegian Nobel Institute

8. ILO's Nobel Peace Prize Lectures - International Institute For Labour Studies
international institute for Labour Studies. ILO's nobel Peace Prize Lectures CentralEuropean University the conceptual framework of employment law which suggest
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/inst/papers/sopolecs/deakin.htm
International Institute for Labour Studies ILO's Nobel Peace Prize Lectures
Central European University, Budapest, 27-30 November 2001
Simon Deakin
Robert Monks Professor of Corporate Governance,
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Renewing Labour Market Institutions
SYNOPSIS Lecture 1: The futures of the contract of employment Lecture 2: The reorganization of work: regulatory responses Lecture 3: Corporate governance: a post-stakeholder world? Lecture 4: The work-life balance: reconceptualising career pathways and capabilities ... Lecture 5: Globalisation and regulatory competition: re-inventing the rules of the game Lecture 1: The futures of the contract of employment The contract of employment heads the list of those labour market institutions whose continued usefulness is called into question by what appear to be fundamental changes in the world of work. However, given the multiple tasks of classification, regulation and redistribution which it has historically been called on to perform, it is the durability of the contract of employment, rather than its supposed ineffectiveness, which requires explanation. From an evolutionary perspective, the employment contract is best understood as a governance mechanism which links together work organisation with labour supply in such a way as to make it possible to manage long-term economic risks. This first lecture set out a number of possible futures for the employment contract as a mechanism for risk management, and identified 'mutations' within the conceptual framework of employment law which suggest possible directions of change.

9. IPB HOME PAGE
We, the undersigned nobel Peace Laureates gathered for the centennial of the nobelPrizes, express our joy institute of international law 1904 international
http://www.ipb.org/web/seccion.php?tipus=About-NobelPeacePrize

10. Norwegian Nobel Institute, The
The Norwegian nobel Committee, and to be an independent research institute on subjectswithin modern international history, international law, foreign policy
http://www.nifu.no/instkat/enginst/institutes/nobelinst.html

11. Nobel Peace Laureates Centennial Appeal
We, the undersigned nobel Peace Laureates gathered for the centennial of the nobelPrizes, express our joy at this institute of international law 1904.
http://www.wagingpeace.org/articles/02.01/020102nobelappeal.htm
Nobel Peace Laureates Centennial Appeal We, the undersigned Nobel Peace Laureates gathered for the centennial of the Nobel Prizes, express our joy at this year's award to the United Nations and its Secretary General, Kofi Annan. We hope that our message of peace and justice will reach the hearts and minds of those in and out of government who have the power to make a better world. We look forward to a world in which we the peoples, working in cooperation with governments, with full respect for international law, will enable the UN to fulfil its mission to save this and succeeding generations from the scourge of war. We call for the prompt establishment of the International Criminal Court and full implementation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including economic, social, and cultural as well as civil and political rights. We offer our support for the unrelenting, patient, and non-violent pursuit of peace wherever conflicts may rage today or tomorrow, such as the Middle East, Colombia, or the Great Lakes of Africa.

12. Institute For Global Legal Studies Inauguration -- Washington University School
of law, was nominated last year for the nobel Peace Prize. mission in Sarajevo, andthe Director of the international Human Rights law institute at DePaul
http://law.wustl.edu/igls/iglsinn.html
W ASHINGTON U NIVERSITY S CHOOL OF L AW
Institute for Global Legal Studies
GRAND INAUGURAL EVENT FOR NOVEMBER 17-18, 2000
O n November 17-18, 2000, the Institute for Global Legal Studies officially opened its doors. The inaugural event was a colloquium entitled "The United Nations and the Protection of Human Rights." In the light of U.N. peace keeping operations, the international criminal court, the controversies over U.N. dues, and the continuing debates on international human rights, this subject is of obvious and immediate import. J udge Patricia Wald, formerly Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and now a Judge on the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, opened the event with the annual Tyrrell Williams lecture on Friday afternoon, November 17. The title of her address was "The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Comes of Age: New Law and Old Rights." T he Saturday session featured a number of other luminaries: J ustice Richard Goldstone, now a member of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, was the first Chief Prosecutor of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. He spoke on the challenges faced by the Tribunals and the prosecutor.

13. The New York Review Of Books: AN OPEN LETTER FROM NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES On The F
As nobel laureates we applaud Aung San Suu Kyi's adherence to the principle of nonviolenceand human rights. institute for international law, 1904 American
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2147
@import "/css/default.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books The New York Review of Books
September 22, 1994
Letter
AN OPEN LETTER FROM NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES On the Fifth Anniversary of Aung San Suu Kyi's ARREST Arrest
By Carole Samdup
To the Editors The International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development has coordinated a joint letter signed by 14 Nobel Peace Laureates in support of Burmese Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. The fifth anniversary of Suu Kyi's arrest was July 20. The letter is part of a world-wide effort to bring attention to Suu Kyi's continued detention and the efforts to develop democracy in that country. Carole Samdup
International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development
Montreal, Canada To the State Law and Order Restoration Council of Burma For five years Nobel Peace Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has been held in detention without trial in violation of her fundamental rights. As well, she has been unable to fulfill her mandate as the elected leader of the Burmese people. We, the undersigned Nobel Peace Laureates, on the occasion of this sad anniversary, wish to once again express our deep concern over her arrest and the denial of her fundamental rights of free speech and political association. We condemn the State Law and Order Restoration Council's (SLORC) suppression of her rights and those of other political prisoners illegally detained in Burma.

14. Nobel Peace Prizes
nobel Peace Prizes. E. Ducommun (Switzerland) A. Gobat (Switzerland) 1903 Sir WRCremer (United Kingdom) 1904 institute of international law, Geneva 1905
http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_frieden_e.html
Nobel Peace Prizes
(List, not checked)
H. Dunant (Switzerland)
F. Passy (France)
E. Ducommun (Switzerland)
A. Gobat (Switzerland)
Sir W. R. Cremer (United Kingdom)
Institute of International Law, Geneva
Bertha v. Suttner (Austria)
Th. Roosevelt (USA)
E. T. Moneta (Italy)
L. Renault (France)
K. P. Arnoldson (Sweden)
F. Bajer (Denmark)
A.M.E. Beernaert (Belgium)
Baron P. H. B. d'Estournelles de Constant (France)
International Bureau of Peace, Bern
T. M. C. Asser (Netherlands)
A. H. Fried (Austria)
E. Root (USA)
H. La Fontaine (Belgium)
International Committee of the Red Cross
W. Wilson (USA)
L. Bourgeois (France)
K. H. Branting (Sweden)
Chr. L. Lange (Norway)
F. Nansen (Norway)
Sir A. Chamberlain (United Kingdom)
Ch. G. Dawes (USA)
A. Briand (France)
G. Stresemann (Germany)
F. Buisson (France)
L. Quidde (Germany)
F. B. Kellog (USA)
(Sweden)
Jane Addams (USA)
N.M. Butler (USA)
Sir N. Angell (United Kingdom)
A. Henderson (United Kingdom)
C. v. Ossietzky (Germany)
C. de Saavedra Lamas (Argentina)
Lord Cecil of Chelwood (United Kingdom)
International Nansen Office for Refugees, Geneva

15. Peace Research Index - Europe
Feminist aspects of peace research, X. international law and peaceful order (internationalOrganizations), human rights, X. X. The Norwegian nobel institute. nobel.
http://www.bonn.iz-soz.de/afb/pri/pri25.htm
Title Contents
Europe
  • Norway
    Norway
    Prof. Dr. Birgit Brock-Utne
    PFI Institute for Educational Research
    University of Oslo P.B. 1092 Blindern
    0317 OSLO 3
    NORWAY
    Head of institution : Prof. Anton Hoem Telephone: +47 (22) 855395
    Fax: +47 (22) 854250 E-mail:
    birgit.brock-utne@ped.uio.no Scientific expertise:
    Women and peace / Peace education / Recolonization of Africa Research details:
    Peace theory / International relations / Basic research Global threats (economic and ecological issues) Causes and origins of war East-West-relations (security, economics, culture) Security policy (arms control, disarmament, alternative concepts, civilian defence) Arms and development, arms export Conversion of armaments and sites North-South relations (security, economics, migration, environment) X Dynamics of conflict and development in countries of the South Intra-social and ethnic conflicts (national identities) Psychological peace research Feminist aspects of peace research X International law and peaceful order (International Organizations), human rights

16. The International Institute Of Humanitarian Law - 25 Years Of Humanitarian Dialo
1970 at the Villa nobel, San Remo, Italy, commended the proposal of the promotingcommittee 1 to set up an international institute of Humanitarian law.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList147/467934BDD0651ADCC1256B660059
About the ICRC ICRC Activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... 1995 - No. 307 International Review of the Red Cross no 307, 469-475 by Jovica Patrnogic The International Institute of Humanitarian Law - 25 years of humanitarian dialogue
Professor Jovica Patrnogic is Honorary President of the International Institute of Humanitarian Law
The International Congress on Human Rights as the Basis of International Humanitarian Law , held in September 1970 at the Villa Nobel, San Remo, Italy, commended the proposal of the "promoting committee"[1] to set up an International Institute of Humanitarian Law. Twenty-five years have elapsed since that event, and today the following questions can be asked: What is the purpose of an Institute of Humanitarian Law? What has the Institute achieved? What is the future of the Institute?
The International Congress on Human Rights as the Basis of International Humanitarian Law was attended by outstanding scholars from many parts of the world and, on 26 September 1970, it set up the International Institute of Humanitarian Law. The proceedings of the Congress comprise a very valuable collection of contributions by eminent specialists in humanitarian matters, and particularly international law. The San Remo Declaration issued at the Congress is still as relevant as ever, and indeed some of its recommendations have already been implemented. The Statute of the newly created Institute became the framework for some remarkable achievements.
This wide range of expertise and experience is a characteristic feature of the Institute, which provides an opportunity for dialogue between the people concerned; this dialogue, in turn, has become the Institute's main working method and has enabled it to achieve the results which its members promote and disseminate throughout the world.

17. The International Institute Of Humanitarian Law (San Remo) And Its International
It was there that Alfred nobel spent the last years of his life until his death becamethe headquarters of the international institute of Humanitarian law.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList162/5CE2BC69547BDD50C1256B66005A
About the ICRC ICRC Activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... 1997 - No. 319 International Review of the Red Cross no 319, p.451-454 by Giorgio Blais The International Institute of Humanitarian Law (San Remo) and its international military courses on the law of armed conflict Giorgio Blais , Major-General in the Italian Army, is the Director of Military Studies of the International Institute of Humanitarian Law, San Remo, Italy.
There are few institutions in the world which are able to assemble officers from all the countries of the globe, who wear their own uniforms and live and work together for two weeks. One of these is the International Institute of Humanitarian Law in San Remo, Italy.
This non-governmental organization was set up in 1970 for the purpose of promoting the dissemination and development of international humanitarian law. The choice of the Italian seaside resort of San Remo was not accidental. It was there that Alfred Nobel spent the last years of his life, and he left all his property to the humanitarian cause. The villa he occupied until his death became the headquarters of the International Institute of Humanitarian Law.
More than 20 years have passed since then and many things have changed in the organization of the military courses at the Institute, but the principle remains the same: to give participating officers the opportunity to learn in an international context how to behave in operational situations, taking into account the humanitarian rules of armed conflict. In this way the Institute fulfils the task of assisting governments with the implementation at the national level of obligations relating to humanitarian law.

18. ALFRED NOBEL AND THE NOBEL PRIZES
Executive members of the Permanent international Peace Bureau Present university professorsof law, political science The main task of the nobel institute is to
http://www.mssc.edu/international/mccaleb/chapter3.htm
III. Alfred Nobel And The Nobel Prizes Alfred Nobel is the man who invented dynamite. He is better known today, however, as the man who established some of the most prestigious prizes in the world. Born in 1833 in Stockholm, Sweden, Nobel from his youth had a dream of inventing an explosive so devastating it would deter humans from making war. Instead, his invention made war easier. Though he was a Swede by birth, he was very much an international man, being educated in St. Petersburg, Russia, where his family moved when he was a child. In St. Petersburg, he studied with private tutors, particularly showing interest in chemistry and languages. He mastered Swedish, Russian, English, French, and German. At the age of 17 he began two years of educational travel throughout Germany, France, Italy and to the United States. Then at the age of 19 he became a chemist, working with his father in St. Petersburg. The family returned to Sweden and in 1863 he was a chemist in his father's explosives factory at Heleneborg near Stockholm. In 1864 Nobel received a patent covering detonating charges and percussion caps. Called "The Nobel Igniter," it was to be called at a later time "the greatest discovery ever made in both the principle and practice of explosives." His 1866 invention of dynamite revolutionized mining, road building and tunnel blasting. In 1875 a later improvement was patented as blasting gelatine. In 1887 he patented ballistite, the first of the nitroglycerine smokeless powders. This was to serve as the basis for cordite which was eventually to change the use of firearms.

19. IDI-History
In 1904 the institute of international law was awarded the nobel Peace Prize inrecognition of its action in favour of arbitration among States, a peaceful
http://www.idi-iil.org/idiE/navig_history.html
H I S T O R Y
Origins
The Institute of International Law was founded on 8 September 1873 at the Ghent Town Hall in Belgium. Eleven international lawyers of renown had decided to join together to create an institution independent of any governmental influence which would be able both to contribute to the development of international law and act so that it might be implemented. Statutes (Article One). In principle, the Institute meets every two years. Between Sessions Scientific Commissions study themes chosen by the plenary Assembly. The latter receives the work of the Commissions , examines them attentively and if appropriate adopts Resolutions of a normative character. These Resolutions are then brought to the attention of governmental authorities, international organizations as well as the scientific community. In this way, the Institute seeks to highlight the characteristics of the lex lata in order to promote its respect. Sometimes it make determinations de lege ferenda in order to contribute to the development of international law.

20. Encyclopædia Conglomeration: Nobel Peace Prize Recipients
national bank of Sweden endowed The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences inMemory of Alfred nobel, to be 1904, institute of international law, Belgium,
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/3125/ec/nobel_peace_prize.html
Nobel Peace Prize Recipients Some of the nationalities of these individuals may be off. Year Recipient Nationality Comments Jean Duant / Frederic Passy Sweden / France Elie Ducommon / Charles Gobat Sweden / Sweden William Cremer United Kingdom Institute of International Law Belgium Bertha von Suttner Austria Teddy Roosevelt Ernesto Moneta / Louis Renault Italy / France Klas Arnoldson / Fredrik Bajer Sweden / Denmark Auguste Beernaert / Paul Estournelles de Constant Belgium / France International Peace Bureau Sweden Tobias Asser / Alfred Fried Netherlands / Austria Elihu Root US Henri Lafontaine Belgium Not Awarded Not Awarded Not Awarded International Red Cross Committee Not Awarded Woodrow Wilson Leon Bourgeois France Hjalmer Branting / Christian Lange Sweden / Norway Fridtjof Nansen Norway Not Awarded Not Awarded Austen Chamberlin / Charles Dawes United Kingdom / US Aristide Briand / Gustav Stresemann France / Germany Ferdinand Buisson / Ludwig Quidde France / Germany Not Awarded Frank Kellogg US Lars Soderblom Sweden Jane Addams / Nicholas Butler US Not Awarded Norman Angell United Kingdom Arthur Henderson United Kingdom Carl von Ossietzky GER Carlos Lamas Argentina Edgar Cecil United Kingdom Nansen International Office for Refugees Norway Joseph Stalin USSR I never knew that!

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