Logo

Logo

India-based LIFE, 3 others share ‘Alternative Nobel’

India-based Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment, or LIFE, uses the law and legal processes to empower often vulnerable communities and help them stand up against powerful interests, the foundation, one of the winners, said.

India-based LIFE, 3 others share ‘Alternative Nobel’

"Alternative Nobel" official website

The Right Livelihood Award – known as the “Alternative Nobel” – was awarded Wednesday to three activists and an organization working across the globe to empower communities in areas ranging from child protection to environmental defense.

The Swedish Right Livelihood Foundation, which awards the prize, said that “in the face of the worsening climate crisis, powerful governmental and corporate interests, and even a terrorist threat, the 2021 Laureates prove that solidarity is key to a better future for all.”

Advertisement

The winners include Marthe Wandou, a gender and peace activist who has worked to prevent sexual violence against girls since the 1990s in the Lake Chad area of Cameroon, and to care for its victims.

Advertisement

The foundation also honored Russian environmental campaigner Vladimir Slivyak, for helping to ignite grassroots opposition to the coal and nuclear industries in the country. He co-founded Ecodefense, which it described as one of Russia’s leading environmental organizations.

Indigenous rights campaigner Freda Huson of the Wet’suwet’en people in Canada receives her award “for her fearless dedication to reclaiming her people’s culture and defending their land against disastrous pipeline projects.”

Finally, the India-based Legal Initiative for Forest and Environment, or LIFE, uses the law and legal processes to empower often vulnerable communities and help them stand up against powerful interests and have a voice in the decision-making process, the foundation said.

In a statement, Ole von Uexkull, head of the Right Livelihood, said the four laureates “are courageous mobilisers who show what peoples’ movements can achieve.”

Created in 1980, the annual Right Livelihood Award honors efforts that the prize founder, Swedish-German philanthropist Jakob von Uexkull, felt were being ignored by the Nobel prizes.

The winners will each receive prize money of 1 million kronor ($115, 520) and will be honored during a virtual award ceremony on 1 December.

The foundation said that a record number of 206 nominees from 89 countries were considered in 2021. Recipients of the Right Livelihood Award in recent years have included Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, U.S. civil rights lawyer Bryan Stevenson and imprisoned Iranian lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh.

Advertisement