Dr. Jean Mayer Global Citizenship Award/Series

2000-2001


K. Anthony Appiah
Professor of Afro-American Studies and Philosophy, Harvard University; Co-author, Color Conscious: The Political Morality of Race (winner of the Ralph J. Bunche Award); Author, In My Father's House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture (winner of the Herskovits Prize); Co-Editor, The Dictionary of Global Culture and Perseus Africana Encyclopedia (forthcoming); Co- Editor, Transition Magazine; Former President, Society for African Philosophy in North America; Associate Director, Black Periodical Literature Project; Board Member, W.E. DuBois Institute.

For your imaginative and inspired scholarship; for your vision of a passionate and inclusive democracy; and for fulfilling the crucial role of public philosopher in the essential discourse on race, justice, and principled citizenship


Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela
Clinical Psychologist; Member of the Human Rights Violations Committee and the Coordinator and Chair of the Western Cape Public Hearings, Truth and Reconciliation Commission, South Africa; Author, And the Brokenhearted Shall be Healers (forthcoming) and "Healing the Racial Divide? Personal Reflections on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission"; Former Expert Witness Consultant for human rights, Supreme Court of South Africa; Fellow, Center for the Study of Values in Public Life, Harvard Divinity School.

For your courage in confronting the legacies and traumas of racial hatred and ethnic violence, for your sensitivity that has helped heal both individual and societal wounds, and for your commitment to a multiracial society


Richard J. Goldstone
Justice, Constitutional Court, South Africa; Chair, International Independent Inquiry on Kosovo; Board Chair, Human Rights Institute of South Africa; National President, National Institute of Crime Prevention and the Rehabilitation of Offenders; Former Chief Prosecutor, International Tribunal for Rwanda and the Former Yugoslavia; Former Chair, Goldstone Commission of Inquiry Regarding the prevention of Public Violence and Intimidation in South Africa, Author, For Humanity: Reflections of a War Crimes Investigator; Recipient, International Human Rights Award, American Bar Association.

For your extraordinary courage, sensitivity and striking independence as a global political insider and judicial trailblazer who has investigated and prosecuted racial and ethnic violence and international war crimes and for your invaluable contributions to South Africa's transition from repression to democracy

 

 

John Wallach
John Wallach was an award-winning author and journalist. He founded Seeds of Peace in March 1993 to provide an opportunity for the children of war to plant the seeds for a more secure future. From 1968 to 1994, John Wallach was the Foreign Editor of the Hearst Newspapers, which syndicated his articles through The New York Times News Service. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, he was seen regularly on PBS' Washington Week in Review, on many CNN programs, on NBC's Meet the Press and other network news shows. From 1997-1998, John was a Senior Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace, which published his book The Enemy Has A Face: The Seeds of Peace Experience. He was also a teaching fellow of the Woodrow Wilson National Foundation. His awards include honorary doctorate degrees from Middlebury College and the University of Southern Maine, his selection as Washingtonian of the Year by Washingtonian Magazine, a UNESCO Peace Prize awarded in November 2000, and the Legion of Honor presented by His Late Majesty King Hussein of Jordan.