
The Nobel Peace Prize: From Peace Negotiations to Human Rights
by Francis
Sejersted*
Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Commitee, 1991-1999
Alfred Nobel's Will
In 1895 Alfred Bernhard Nobel drew up a
will
according to which his wealth was to be devoted to the annual
award of five prizes "to those who, during the preceding year,
shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." That three
of the five prizes were for scientific work is a reflection, not
only of Nobel's own interest in science, but also of the
widespread belief at the time in the considerable benefits that
science would unfailingly confer on mankind, materially and
otherwise. The Literary Prize shows Nobel's profound interest in
literature, which he had cultivated from childhood. Certainly the
most surprising aspect of the will was that one of the prizes was
to be awarded for peace work. Of course this reflected Nobel's
interest in politics and the cause of peace. But it also reveals
the influence of what in modern parlance one might call his
"network", including Bjørnstjerne
Bjørnson, and of his friend, the author and peace
activist Bertha von
Suttner. Bjørnson became a member of the Peace Prize
Committee and won the Literature Prize in 1903, and von Suttner
was awarded the Peace Prize in 1905, 9 years after Nobel's death.
She was the first woman to receive the Peace Prize.
There are also some signs of what we might call a compensation
mechanism. Although the bulk of Nobel's fortune had resulted from
the production of explosives for civil uses, his inventions also
led to substantially improved military technology. The dilemma
was in the air and Nobel, a man of the highest moral standards,
was deeply concerned. At one time, possibly in an attempt to
justify his work to himself and to those around him, he developed
a doctrine of deterrence, or a theory of the balance of terror.
The argument was that his explosives could bring about peace
precisely because they made war so brutal. Whether he really
believed in this deterrent effect is not clear. However that may
be, his decision to set up a peace prize can be taken as a sign
of his genuine commitment to peace and his belief that any
deterrent must be supplemented by active work for
peace.
Why Norway?
In addition to the surprising decision to
establish a Peace Prize, the will also laid down that it was to
be awarded in Norway by a five-member committee appointed by the
Norwegian Storting (the legislative assembly). The other four
prizes were to be awarded in Sweden, Nobel's own country, and by
Swedish institutions. So why Norway? We have no definitive answer
to this question, since Nobel himself never provided any
explanation. We need to remember, however, that Norway and Sweden
were joined in a union at the time, and that Nobel himself must
have regarded the two countries as a unit, however difficult this
may have been for Norwegians to understand, engaged as they were
in their struggle for full national independence. Assuming that
Norway and Sweden were to be regarded as a unit, letting the
Norwegian Storting award the Prize was no unnatural choice. It
was known as a liberal institution, and had been profoundly
involved in the question of international arbitration and in the
work of the Interparliamentary Union, which can be seen as a
precursor of such organizations as the League of Nations and the
United Nations.
Relations between the Peace Prize Committee and the Norwegian
political establishment were originally close. Jørgen
Løvland, who chaired the committee from 1901 to 1922,
combined the position with terms both as Prime Minister (1907-08)
and as Foreign Minister (1905-07). The possibly damaging effects
of such links became clear in due course, however, and in 1937
the Storting resolved that no one must have a seat in the
Government and on the Committee at the same time. The decision
was triggered by the events of the preceding year, when the Peace
Prize was awarded to Carl von Ossietzky, the
anti-militarist who had been imprisoned in Hitler Germany.
Foreign Minister Halvdan Koht, who was then a member, wrote to
the committee asking to be relieved. Ossietsky's candidacy was
being supported by a major campaign, which was headed by –
among others – the future Peace Prize Laureate Willy Brandt, and had many
influential persons both in Europe and America behind it. Koht
himself was critical of fascism, but anticipated the difficulties
which might arise if, as the Foreign Minister of a small neutral
country near Germany, he was to act in the capacity of member of
the committee which might decide to award the prize to Ossietzky.
It has since emerged that Ossietzky was not Koht's preferred
candidate. The person who did most to bring about the decision in
Ossietzky's favour was the Labour Leader Martin Tranmæl, who
joined the committee when Koht withdrew.
Political Effects
As the 1937 decision shows, political
problems could arise if the award of the Peace Prize was seen as
an official Norwegian act. The practice of appointing prominent
members of the Storting to the committee continued nonetheless -
right up to the dramatic year 1973, when Henry Kissinger and
Le Duc Tho were
awarded the Peace Prize for their contributions to the peace
negotiations in Vietnam. Le Duc Tho declined to receive the
prize, the only occasion on which this has ever happened, and the
choice of Kissinger may have been the most severely criticised
decision in the history of the prize. The criticism must of
course be seen as a criticism of America's war in Vietnam,
Kissinger being more strongly associated with the war than with
the peace. In the wake of the award, two members withdrew from
the committee, not so much because they had voted against the
choice of Kissinger and Duc Tho as because of the way the
chairman had tackled the situation. From that year on, it has
been an unwritten rule that not even members of the Storting have
seats on the committee. This is intended to demonstrate the
committee's complete independence. Although a majority of the
members are still prominent politicians, they have all left the
political arena.
I have cited the general clause in Nobel's will saying that the
prizes should be given to those who "in the preceding year have
conferred the greatest benefit on makind." With regard to the
Peace Prize, Nobel defined this as having "done the most or the
best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or
reduction of standing armies, and for the holding and promotion
of peace congresses." The most difficult stipulation to live up
to has undoubtedly been "in the preceding year." This is now
understood to indicate the most recent contributions in the
various cultural fields to which the will refers. Where the Peace
Prize is concerned, the wording has been seen as opening up
opportunities to engage in processes which have not yet reached a
conclusion, but where there has been clear evidence of progress,
as in the democratisation process in South Africa or the peace
process in the Middle East, for which the Peace Prizes were
awarded in 1993 and 1994. The Prize awarded in 1998 to John Hume and David Trimble of Northern
Ireland can be seen in the same light. The Prize, in other words,
is not only for past achievement, although that is the most
important criterion. The committee also takes the possible
positive effects of its choices into account. Among the reasons
for adding this as a criterion is the obvious point that Nobel
wanted the Prize to have political effects. Awarding a Peace
Prize is, to put it bluntly, a political act – which is
also the reason why the choices so often stir up
controversy.
Humanitarian Work
The mention in the will of the "abolition or reduction of standing armies, and the holding and promotion of peace congresses" reflects the period in which the will was written. The approach today is to see it as pointing to general disarmament and the dissemination of the concept of peace. The most important provision, however, is contained in the term "fraternity between nations." This general and open provision has provided a basis for the wide definition of peace-related work which the committee has applied right from the start. The first Peace Prize, awarded in 1901, was accordingly shared between the Swiss founder of the Red Cross, Henry Dunant, and the French peace activist Frédéric Passy, one of the founders of the Interparliamentary Union. The inclusion of humanitarian work was promptly criticised as irrelevant to peace, inter alia by representatives of the peace movement. It has nevertheless remained an important criterion right up to the present. Several of the awards which have been most favourably received have been given precisely in honour of humanitarian work. This is true of the award to Mother Teresa in 1979 no less than of the prize given to Fridtjof Nansen in 1922 for his work as High Commissioner for Refugees under the League of Nations. The UN High Commissioner descends in a direct line from what Nansen built up. The peace Nobel envisaged when he founded the Peace Prize is the peace which is rooted in people's hearts and minds. The humanitarian aid worker is the human face seen by the individual victim of war, the manifestation of respect for that individual's human dignity, and thereby the embodiment of the best hope of peace and reconciliation. This gets to the roots of the absolutely fundamental prerequisites for peace. The decision to award the first Peace Prize for humanitarian work was one of the most important decisions in the history of the Peace Prize. Today, "humanitarian intervention" (with or without military support) is one of the most important factors in international peace work. The last century's last prize, to Médecins Sans Frontières, was also first and foremost a prize for humanitarian work.
Organized Peace Movements
The broad range of criteria applied from the start has not prevented changes over time. In the period up to the first World War, prizes to the organized peace movement predominated. That tradition has been maintained, if not on the same scale. The 1995 award to Joseph Rotblat and the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs was in that mould and, let me add, very much in the spirit of Nobel's will. That year's Laureates typically combine a striving for disarmament, especially nuclear disarmament, and efforts to find other solutions to international conflicts than war. They combined idealism and practical solutions. Another close link between that year's choice and the origins of the Peace Prize is that Pugwash is largely an organization of scientists, whose participation in the organization is rooted in a profound sense of the social and moral responsibility of science. It is precisely in this respect that Rotblat is a leading example – and a close parallel to Nobel's own concerns and ideals.
Peace Negotiations
The most controversial choices have been
active politicians or statesmen, often selected on the grounds of
a particular act, or an intervention in a particular situation,
rather than because of a lifelong effort for peace. The
controversy over the choice of Kissinger has already been
mentioned. The first Laureate in this category was President Theodore
Roosevelt. His award in 1906 was given for his "happy
intervention to terminate the bloody war recently waged between
two Great Powers, Japan and Russia" to quote the commitee's own
words. The decision was highly controversial. It was ironic, as
one American newspaper wrote, that "the wielder of the 'big
stick' should be crowned as America's great pacificator."
The inter-war years were the period in which major politicians
predominated as Laureates, beginning with Woodrow Wilson, the second
American president to win the Prize, among other things, for his
decisive efforts to establish the League of Nations. His big
disappointment in that connection was that his own country, the
United States, refused to join the League, which for that reason
was fatally weakened.
Wilson was an idealist, a man of the highest moral standards and
a true peace-lover – more so than Theodore Roosevelt,
perhaps one might add. Nevertheless, even the choice of Wilson
was controversial. He had been nominated in 1918, before the war
was over, but the committee had decided not to award a prize that
year. In 1919, after the signing of the Treaty of Versailles, his
candidacy came up for discussion again, but the committee
reserved the prize for the following year. In 1920 he was finally
given the Peace Prize for 1919. But we have learned from a
member's diary that his choice had been strongly opposed in the
committee in connection with the so-called "treachery" relating
to the Treaty of Versailles. Wilson had been obliged to
compromise, with the result that his vision of a "peace without
victory" had been undermined.
Both the Presidents won the Peace Prize for their efforts in
connection with particular peace negotiations. In Wilson's case
there was also the matter of institutional arrangements intended
to secure the peace in the long term. As mentioned, Wilson did
not succeed in realising his visions. The League of Nations did
not gain the support he had hoped for, while the peace at
Versailles effectively amounted to punishment or revenge.
Contrary to Wilson's policy, Germany was to be humiliated by
having huge compensation payments imposed on it. With hindsight,
we can see that the conflict was "resolved" in the worst possible
way. It can be argued that the conditions laid down in the
Versailles Treaty paved the way for Nazism in Germany.
The peace concluded after World War II was completely different,
as the war had been. Although it had been waged as total war, or
perhaps precisely for that reason, the peace terms were not
vindictive. A policy of reconciliation with the German nation was
combined with the isolation and prosecution of individual war
criminals. States (or perhaps better nations) were given
differing treatments. This is an example of the introduction of
principles that are new in an international context, like the
principles of human rights and individual responsibility. The
problem which this procedure after the second world war put on
the agenda, and which is more pressing today than ever, is what
is the right attitude to take to a past marked by extensive
breaches of fundamental human rights? What settlement can be
reached with a heritage of conflict and brutality? To what extent
does reconciliation depend on amnesty, on winking at crime
instead of demanding justice – assuming any justice were
possible?
Policy of Reconciliation
The Peace Prize has on some occasions been
awarded to representatives of two parties to a conflict who have
agreed to break out of the vicious circle of violence in order to
move towards peace and reconciliation. The prize awarded to
Kissinger and Duc Tho has been mentioned, and we could add those
to Menachem Begin
and Anwar Sadat in
1978, to Yasser
Arafat, Shimon
Peres and Yitzhak
Rabin in 1994, to Frederik Willem de Klerk
and Nelson Mandela
in 1993, and to John Hume and David Trimble in 1998. The problem
with these awards has been that some of the Laureates have been
partly responsible for the war, violence or repression that
preceded the decision to break out of the vicious circle.
However, only the first of the awards mentioned met with more
criticism than support (assuming this can be measured). So it
looks as if the committee's policy of honouring what can be
interpreted as real conversions to a peace strategy is
being met with understanding and support.
In processes like these, temporary setbacks have to be expected:
the time may prove not to have been ripe for reconciliation after
all, as we may be finding in the Middle East and in Northem
Ireland. In South Africa further steps have been taken, creating
a somewhat different situation. The future of South Africa will
depend among other things on the extent to which the policy
launched by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission headed by
Peace Prize Laureate Desmond Tutu (1984) gains
acceptance in the long run. Since the appointment of the Chilean
Truth Commission in 1991, there have been numerous similar
initiatives all over the world. Note that the term "justice" does
not figure in the names of these commissions. One of the lessons
we have learned is indeed how controversial the demand for
justice is, how difficult it is to deal with. The South African
commission was based on the principle that amnesty would
be given to all those who were completely open about their
actions under the preceding repressive regime. The condition was
that they confessed within a certain deadline. The situation in
the former Yugoslavia confronts us with the same problem: how far
is justice a prerequisite for reconciliation and peace, or when
does the demand for justice become a barrier to reconciliation?
Where does the line go between the wish for revenge and the
demand for justice, and how should one weigh forgiveness against
punishment? When are we ready for a truth commission, and when
for a war crimes tribunal?
The Norwegian Nobel Committee is of course familiar with these
contradictions, with the difficulties of balancing conflicting
considerations when confronted with a past marked by violence and
violations of human rights. In fact it has paid tribute both to
work for justice and to efforts to achieve peace on the basis of
forgiveness and reconciliation.
Struggle for Human Rights
It is striking that although the committee
based its work right from the start in 1901 on a broad range of
criteria for what is relevant to peace, the struggle for human
rights was for a long time not among those criteria. The first
real human rights prize went to the South African chieftain
Albert Lutuli in
1960. Since then, the list of prominent human rights campaigners
among the Laureates has become a long one: Martin Luther King (1964),
René Cassin
(1968), Seán Mac
Bride (1974), Andrei Sakharov (1975),
Adolfo Pérez
Esquivel (1980), Lech Walesa (1983),
Desmond Tutu (1984), Elie Wiesel (1986),
Dalai Lama (1989),
Aung San Suu Kyi
(1991), Rigoberta
Menchú Tum (1992), and Carlos Belo and José Ramos-Horta
(1996). Some won the prize for their non-violent struggle against
racial discrimination (Lutuli, Luther King and Tutu), and some
for their efforts to establish international human rights
organizations (Cassin, Mac Bride, Amnesty International
(1977)), but most were given the award for peaceful but effective
struggles for civil and political rights in their own countries.
Even prizes of this kind have been controversial. For one thing,
they tend to arouse displeasure in the countries affected, as we
saw in Indonesia in 1996 when Belo and Ramos-Horta from East
Timor won the Prize. Some, like Sakharov, Walesa, and Suu Kyi,
have been unable to come to Oslo to receive the Prize. But human
rights awards have also been criticised as irrelevant to peace.
Sometimes it has been claimed that they have aggravated conflicts
instead of leading to peace. And in some cases the prize has in
fact provoked conflict in the short term. The point, however, has
lain in the symbolic effect of the adoption of a courageous
stance for human rights, on the fundamental assumption that a
lasting peace must be based on respect for the human rights of
the individual.
Why the struggle for human rights was not considered a criterion
before 1960 is an interesting question. Nobel himself evidently
did not take it into consideration when writing his will in 1895.
Nor did the committee when it began its work in 1901. It included
humanitarian work, as we have seen, but not efforts aimed at
human rights. The concept of human rights was of long standing.
It had been developed and given a special form as a cornerstone
of the western world's constitutional democracies. But it had not
played any part in international politics. So why did it find a
place on the international political agenda after World War II?
Why had the struggle for human rights not been regarded as
relevant to peace before then? The main reason is sufficiently
clear. It lay in the new threat posed by the twentieth century's
totalitarian regimes, and more particularly in the experience of
total war with ethnic cleansing and other horrors, all within the
western world. This was a fundamentally new situation. History
had taken a turn that forced a reassessment of the foundations of
international order. That was how the West saw it, and it was in
the West that the agenda was drawn up. How the new principles
were applied in Nuremberg has already been mentioned.
The reassessment found its first expression in the United Nations
Charter, in which the safeguarding of human rights has a
prominent place. Close reading of the Charter, however, reveals
the problems involved in basing international politics on respect
for human rights. And those problems also help to account for the
long delay. There is a contradiction, or at least tension,
between the emphasis on non-intervention and the sovereignty of
each individual state on the one hand and regard for human rights
on the other. The latter necessarily suggests some form or other
of international control of how individual states treat their
nationals. The difficulty continues to confront us today.
For a full understanding of the problem, we need to remember how
important the principle of non-intervention had been considered
to be in the work for peace. This entailed a ban on the use of
military force against other states (except in self-defence). A
ban on wars of aggression had been incorporated in the Geneva
Protocol in 1924, but only ratified by a few countries. The path
towards anything like recognition of such a principle, even if
only among the Western democracies, has thus been long and
difficult. A typical illustration can be taken from the mid-19th
century, when Carl Johan, king of Sweden-Norway, spoke of the
"conqueror's right", implying that war creates positive law. That
was a legacy from feudal society. Although we are still labouring
under a practice of conquest, arguments resting on an alleged
"conqueror's right" are no longer accepted as valid in an
international context. And so history goes on developing: new
problems emerge as we try to solve the old ones.
The human rights obligations of states were further strengthened
in 1948 by the Declaration of Human Rights, which stated that
"the inherent dignity and the equal and inalienable rights of all
members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice
and peace in the world." From then on, human rights obligations
became an established part of international law, and they have
been steadily extended by new instruments, which have been
ratified to varying degrees. Despite this development we know of
course that there has been no lack of breaches of human rights or
of tense confrontations over their interpretation.
When the Norwegian Nobel Committee included the struggle for
human rights among the criteria for relevance to peace, it was
merely following a general trend, and indeed did so hesitantly,
seeing that it was not until 1960 that the criterion was used as
a decisive argument in connection with a Peace Prize award. It
should be recalled, however, that the committee does not issue
general statements of principle. Like a court of law, it only
deals with concrete individual cases. Principles are only
referred to in connection with particular cases.
Global Prize
A survey of the whole history of the Peace
Prize shows that the vast majority of the Laureates have been
white men of Western origin. In a more dynamic perspective,
however, one can see a development in recent decades towards a
more global prize, with regard to both geography and gender. The
globalization of the Peace Prize has paralleled its increasing
prestige, and there is probably a connection: our view of the
world has changed, it has grown smaller. However great Nobel's
vision, it was not without its limitations. At that time, the
Third World was in some respects below the white man's horizon.
Nobel's own words expose the limited perspective of even the
cosmopolitans of that era. He wrote: "It is my express wish that
in awarding the prizes no consideration whatever shall be given
to the nationality of the candidates, but that the most worthy
shall receive the prize, whether he be a Scandinavian or
not."
The question can nevertheless be asked whether or how far it is
possible to escape one's own cultural background when evaluating
the work of candidates from all over the world. Do we share the
same values with regard to peace wherever we come from? Do we
share the same ideas of human rights? And if we don't, how can a
citizen of a small western country like Norway evaluate the
nationals of other countries on their own terms? Must a Nobel
Peace Prize inevitably to some extent reflect a western world
view?
In 1988, the Norwegian Nobel Institute held a symposium on the
occasion of the 40th anniversary of the Declaration of Human
Rights. The theme was how human rights could be secured in the
future, and leading experts from many countries contributed. The
symposium came at a time which has been referred to as "the last
phase of an era of stagnation for human rights." The
international political discussion of human rights was still
marked by set arguments and sterile manoeuvring, not only between
East and West but also between North and South. But at that
point, the picture began to change so rapidly that the symposium
papers had to be revised for publication to remain abreast of
international political developments. When they finally were
published in 1993, the editors wrote in their introduction that
"the situation for the protection and promotion of human rights
has improved dramatically since the symposium took place." 1993
represented the high-water mark of optimism, and since then the
situation has changed yet again. But I see no need for undue
pessimism. The new development can be seen as a revival of the
earlier debate on to what extent human rights can be said to be
universal. Among those raising the question have been
representatives of Asian countries that have embarked on
processes of economic modernisation, like China, Singapore,
Malaysia and Indonesia. Their view was stated in the Bangkok
Declaration of 1993, which says that "while human rights are
universal in nature, they must be considered in the context of a
dynamic and evolving process of international norm-setting,
bearing in mind the significance of national and regional
peculiarities and various historical, cultural and religious
backgrounds."
Universalism and Relativism
What does this really say? Violations of
human rights, sometimes gross violations, certainly occur in
those countries, and the declaration can be read as an attempt to
water down the human rights concept so as to deprive it of any
merit as a standard for evaluation. The declaration has also been
criticised as representing only the language of power. On the
other hand, it would be right to say that the reason why the
earlier debate had reached a dead end was that it all too clearly
reflected an attempt to universalise western ways of realising
human rights ideals. In order to render the ideals universal in
nature, one must resort to interpretations, negotiation, and
adaptations to particular cases. They have to be integrated into,
different cultures. This is not to say, however, that blatant
breaches of human rights can be explained away by relativistic
arguments or references to cultural conditioning. What we must do
is to try to listen to the voices of the victims. What, for
instance, would the 200,000 Asian victims of Indonesian
repression in East Timor have had to say about the so-called
"Asian values" – had they been able to speak? The ultimate
touchstone must be whether developments are moving towards
harmonisation, towards fewer threats and less fear.
The Peace Prize Committee is in a privileged position in as much
as it does not have to solve the universalism/relativism problem
at the general level. But the problem is there. The selection of
individual prize-winners is never easy, but the focus on
particular cases does make it possible to take into consideration
the whole range of relevant factors, whether of a universalist or
culturally related kind, and to strike a balance. The Laureate
will symbolise good will and purity of heart all over the world,
but the choice must also win sympathy in his or her own cultural
environment. It is the committee's experience that it is possible
to find worthy candidates who represent universal ideals of human
rights in the most varied cultures. The choices of Aung San Suu
Kyi and Carlos Belo are strong testimony.
Moral Concept
Emphasis has been given above to the broad
definition of work for peace. But what about the concept of peace
itself? In his well-known essay "Zum ewigen Frieden", written
over 200 years ago, Immanuel Kant described a prophetic vision of
the possibility of a war of extermination which would open the
way, as he wrote, to "eternal peace in mankind's graveyard". That
is clearly not the kind of peace we seek to honour, but the
phrase does serve to spotlight the concept of peace in all its
problematic aspects. "Peace" can be taken as a technical term,
denoting the absence of war. But what are we to make in that
connection of peace based on threats and fear? It takes us back
to deterrence and the terror balance. Ought peace of that kind to
be honoured? Nobel himself, as we saw, had toyed with the idea,
but had found it contrary to his idea of a peace prize, as we see
in his specific mention of "the abolition or reduction of
standing armies." We do not know whether he had read Kant's
famous essay, but his wording is similar. Kant reminds us that
standing armies "constantly threaten other states with war simply
by virtue of the fact that they are prepared for it." His message
was that a technical peace based on a balance of terror is
fragile. Lasting peace must have other foundations. It may be
worth recalling that the period when the balance of terror was at
its height is not only referred to as a period of peace but just
as often as a period of "cold war". And it certainly does not
correspond to Nobel's conceptions of disarmament and
fraternisation. Many committee members would no doubt agree that
under certain circumstances a military threat can be an effective
way of securing peace in the short term. But that is not the kind
of peace that the Nobel Prize seeks to honour.
The point is this: the concept of peace on which both Nobel's
will and the Nobel Committee's practice are founded is a moral
concept. This is also what makes it reasonable to suppose that
Nobel himself would have supported the inclusion of the struggle
for human rights as a criterion for the Peace Prize. As I have
already mentioned, the peace to be honoured is a peace that is
rooted in hearts and minds; the work to be credited is work for
fraternisation, tolerance, trust and understanding. But it also
includes efforts to establish institutional environments which
help human beings to realise their better selves, or "to combat
the evil principle in themselves," to return to Kant's
formulation. Laureates must be more than skilled diplomats; it is
important for them also to be able to stand out as symbols of
good will. Only then can the Peace Prize contribute, in the words
of Laureate Elie Wiesel, "to turning history into a moral
endeavour."
Symbols of Goodwill
Why has the Nobel Peace Prize acquired such enormous prestige? There are many peace prizes, some of them worth large amounts of money. But none of them have so far matched the Nobel Prize in prestige. This is partly fortuitous, and also a question of the age of the Prize. But it must also be attributed to the assumption underlying what we have been discussing, which is that the broad range of criteria always includes what I have called a strong moral element. It appears to be precisely this type of prize which has the potential to attract people's attention. There also appears to be a self-reinforcing element here: widespread attention attracts still more attention. Many people, in short, feel a need for symbols that can appeal to their better instincts, or (Kant again) help them to overcome the evil principle in themselves. The choices of Peace Prize Laureates appear to have succeeded in some measure in creating symbols of this kind, whether the Laureate is a humanitarian aid worker like Mother Teresa or Fridtjof Nansen, an antimilitarist like Carl von Ossietzky, a statesman like Woodrow Wilson or Willy Brandt, or a campaigner for human rights like Nelson Mandela or Carlos Belo. I think this goes a long way towards explaining the prestige of the Prize. When all is said and done, the most important effect of the Nobel Peace Prize may be that it has succeeded in creating clear symbols which appeal to our best instincts – symbols of good will.
Translated by Peter Bilton.
* Francis Sejersted, born February 8, 1936. Received his Cand. philol. from the University of Oslo in 1965. Docent in History at the University of Oslo in 1917. Professor in Economic and Social History at the University of Oslo, 1973-1998. Director, Centre for Technology and Culture, University of Oslo, 1988-1998. Fellow, Institute for Social Research, Oslo, from 1999. Dr. hc. Linköping University, Sweden, 2000. Member of the board, Instutute for comparative cultural studies, Norway, 1974-1982. Member, Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi (The Norwegian Academy of Sciences) from 1976. Member of the board, Fondet for dansk-norsk samarbeid (The Foundation for Danish-Norwegian Cooperation), 1978-1993, chairman in 1988-1993. President, The Scandinavian Association for Economic and Social History, 1979-1982. Member, Den norske nobelkomite (The Norwegian Nobel Committee), 1982-1999, chaiman in 1991-1999.
Editor and coauthor: Vandringer (Migrations) Oslo, 1980; Vekst
gjennom krise (Growth through Depression. Studies in the History
of Technology in Norway), Oslo, 1982; Teknologi og kultur
(Technology and Culture), Oslo, 1991; Oljevirksomheten som
teknologiutviklingsprosjekt (The Oil Industry as a Project of
Technological Development) co-authored by Odd-Einar Olson, Oslo,
1997.
Published books include: Norges Bank og Høykonjukturen i
1840-årene (The Bank of Norway and the Boom in the 1840s),
Oslo, 1968; Den vanskelige frihet (The Difficult Freedom. Vol. X
in a general history of Norway covering the period 1814-1850),
Oslo, 1978; Systemtvang eller politikk (Systemic Force or
Political Strategy. On the development of the oil-industrial
complex in Norway), Oslo, 1999. Taler for fred (Speeches for
Peace), Oslo, 2000.
First published 26 April 2001
MLA style: "The Nobel Peace Prize: From Negotiations to Human Rights". Nobelprize.org. 26 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/articles/sejersted/index.html
