Jody Williams

Facts

Jody Williams

Photo: Annie Leibovitz. Nobel Foundation archive

Jody Williams
Nobel Peace Prize 1997

Born: 9 October 1950, Rutland, VT, USA

Residence at the time of the award: Putney, VT, USA

Prize motivation: “for their work for the banning and clearing of anti-personnel mines”

Prize share: 1/2

Peace Activist and a Driving Force in the Campaign against Landmines

When Jody Williams was studying international politics in the 1980s, she became involved in aid work in war-torn El Salvador. Landmines were a constant threat to the civilian population, and she was given responsibility for providing artificial limbs for children who had lost arms and legs.

From 1991 on, Jody Williams was a driving force in the launching of an international campaign against landmines. By 1997, thanks to her strength and organizational talent, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) had 1,000 organizations from 60 countries on its list of members.

The Ottawa Convention, which was signed by 120 states and entered into force in 1999, will always be associated with the names of Jody Williams and the ICBL. It banned the use, production, sale and stock-piling of anti-personnel mines. In addition it contained provisions concerning mine clearance and the obligation to provide humanitarian assistance.

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