Reebok Human Rights Award
The Reebok Human Rights Award honoured activists under the age of thirty who fought for human rights through non-violent means. Each year, the award was given to four or five individuals. Each received a grant of US $50,000 that was to be used to support their human rights work. The awards were underwritten by the Reebok Foundation.
Reebok Human Rights Award | |
---|---|
Awarded for | given to activists under the age of thirty who fight for human rights through non-violent means |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Reebok Foundation |
First awarded | 1988 |
Last awarded | 2007 |
Website | reebok.com |
Youth from close to 40 countries received the award since it was established in 1988. No new awards have been given out since 2007.
Laureates
- 2007
- Laura McCargar, United States
- Anderson Sa, Brazil
- Iryna Toustsik, Belarus
- Ou Virak, Cambodia
- 2006
- Li Dan, China
- Rachel Lloyd, United States
- Khurram Parvez, India
- Otto Saki, Zimbabwe
- 2005
- Zarema Mukusheva, Chechnya/Russia
- Carlos Rojas, Mexico
- Aloysius Toe, Liberia
- Charm Tong, Burma/Thailand
- 2004
- Yinka Jegede-Ekpe, Nigeria[1]
- Vanita Gupta, United States[1]
- Joênia Batista de Carvalho, Brazil[1]
- Ahmad Nader Nadery, Afghanistan[1]
- 2003
- Pedro Anaya, United States
- Anusuya (Oona) Chatterjee, United States
- Mohamed Pa-Momo Fofanah, Sierra Leone
- Ernest Guevara, Philippines
- Christian Mukosa, Democratic Republic of Congo
- 2002
- Kavwumbu Hakachima, Zambia
- Maili Lama, Nepal
- Malika Asha Sanders, United States
- 2001
- Ndungi Githuku, Kenya
- Heather Barr, United States
- Kodjo Djissenou, Togo
- Will Coley, United States
- 1999
- Juliana Dogbadzi, Ghana[2]
- Tanya Greene, United States
- Suba Meshack, Kenya
- Ka Hsaw Wa, Burma
- 1998
- Abraham Grebreyesus, Eritrea
- Rana Husseini, Jordan
- Van Jones, United States
- Dydier Kamundu, Democratic Republic of Congo
- 1996
- Innocent Chukwuma, Nigeria
- Jesús Tecú Osorio, Guatemala
- Julie Su, United States
- Ma Thida, Burma
- Craig Kielburger, Canada
- 1995
- Angela Elizabeth Brown, United States
- Miguel Angel de los Santos Cruz, Mexico
- Richard Nsanzabaganwa, Rwanda
- Ven. Phuntsog Nyidron, Tibet
- Broad Meadows Middle School, United States
- 1994
- Adauto Alves, Brazil
- Rose-Anne Auguste, Haiti
- Dilli Bahadur Chaudhary (Backward Society Education), Nepal
- Iqbal Masih, Pakistan
- Samuel Kofi Woods, Liberia
- 1993
- Marie-France Botte, Belgium
- Sia Runikui Kashinawa, Brazil
- Hisham Mubarak, Egypt
- Reverend Carl Washington, United States
- 1992
- Floribert Chebeya Bahizire, Zaire
- Fernando de Araujo, East Timor
- Stacy Kabat, United States
- Martin O'Brien, Northern Ireland
- 1991
- Mirtala Lopez, El Salvador
- Sauveur Pierre, United States
- Abubacar Sultan, Mozambique
- Carlos Toledo, Guatemala
- Ashley Black, United States
- 1990
- Jeffrey Bradley and Martin Dunn, United States
- Shawan Jabarin, West Bank[3][4]
- Tracye Matthews, United States
- Akram Mayi, Iraq
- David Moya, Cuba
- 1989
- Louise Benally-Crittenden, United States
- Michael Brown and Alan Khazei, United States
- Li Lu, Wang Dan, Chai Ling and Wu'erkaixi, China
- Mercedes Doretti and Luis Fondebrider, Argentina
- Dawat Lupung, Malaysia
- Bryan Stevenson, United States
- 1988
- David Bruce, South Africa
- Joaquin Antonio Caceres, El Salvador
- Janet Cherry, South Africa
- Arn Chorn-Pond, United States
- Tanya Coke, United States
- Lobsang Jinpa, Tibet
- Salim Abdool Karim, South Africa
- Winona LaDuke, United States
- Juan Pablo Letelier, Chile
- Maria Paz Rodriguez, United States
- Dalee Sambo, United States
gollark: Since anecdotes obviously prove ideas:
gollark: People are perfectly capable of learning maths and treating it as abstract nonsense they refuse to apply anywhere.
gollark: What? How would that help people?
gollark: You should use OpenPOWER.
gollark: RISC-V isn't open enough, actually.
References
- Staff, W. W. D. (7 May 2004). "Reebok's Human Rights Stars". WWD. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- "'Wife of the Gods' Stirs Up Ghana". Los Angeles Times. 24 June 1999. Retrieved 2019-10-03.
- "Honors for the Unsung Heroes of Human Rights". Los Angeles Times. 21 December 1990. Retrieved 2019-10-03.
- "The Interview - Israeli and Palestinian NGOs receive controversial human rights award". France 24. 14 December 2018. Retrieved 2019-10-03.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.