In this groundbreaking and controversial critique of the selections of
Nobel Peace Prize winners, an eminent Norwegian lawyer and peace
activist calls for its return to legal and moral compliance with the
will of Alfred Nobel who wished to support disarmament to prevent war.
The Nobel Peace Prize is the world's most coveted award, galvanizing
the world's attention for 110 years. In recent decades, it has also
become the world's most reviled award, as heads of militarized states
and out-and-out warmongers and terrorists have been showered with
peace prizes. Delving into previously unpublished primary sources,
Fredrik Heffermehl reveals the history of the inner workings of the
Norwegian Nobel Committee as it has come under increasing political,
geopolitical, and commercial pressures to make inappropriate awards.
As a Norwegian lawyer, Heffermehl makes the case that the Norwegian
politicians entrusted with the Nobel peace awards have brushed aside
the legal requirements in Scandinavian estate law using the prize to
promote their own political and personal interests instead of the
peace ideas Alfred Nobel had in mind. Evaluating each of the 119 Nobel
Peace Prizes awarded between 1901 and 2009, the author tracks the
ever-widening divergence of the committee's selections from Nobel's
intentions and concludes that all but one of the last ten prizes are
illegitimate under the law.
Les mer
What Nobel Really Wanted
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798216123545
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter