Jakob von Uexkull Speaks on Humanity's Future
by David Krieger, February 23, 2007
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Jakob von Uexkull, a former
member of the European Parliament, recently delivered the
6th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future
in Santa Barbara, California. The lecture series, a project
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, honors Frank K. Kelly,
a founder and Senior Vice President of the Foundation.
The lecture series was created
in the belief that humanity’s
future deserves our consideration and best thinking. Our
future today is imperiled by the power of human-created
technologies that threaten civilization and even human
survival on the planet. Those who will inhabit the future
deserve our advocacy and our stewardship of the planet.
Those alive today have no right to threaten the future
of humanity by depleting or seriously diminishing the resources
of the planet or by destroying the environment of those
who will follow. Rather, we have a moral responsibility
to preserve the planet and to pass it on intact to future
generations.
Jakob von Uexkull was born
in Sweden and currently resides in London. He is one of
the world’s leading
visionaries, and is a man who has acted upon his vision
to create a better world. Understanding the power of the
Nobel Prizes, he went to the Nobel Foundation over 25 years
ago with a proposal to add two new categories to their
award prizes: one for protecting the environment and one
for alleviating poverty. He even offered to raise the funds
to support these awards.
After consideration, the Nobel
Foundation, which had added only one new award to the initial
awards, said no to his request. Von Uexkull then decided
to move forward on his own with these new awards, which
he named the Right Livelihood Awards (www.rightlivelihood.org).
He funded the first awards with the sale of his stamp collection.
The first awards were presented in Stockholm on December
9, 1980, the day before the presentation of the Nobel Prizes.
At
first, the Swedish press questioned whether von Uexkull
was working for the CIA or the KGB in seeking to undermine
the Nobel Prizes. The next year the press ridiculed the
awards. But within five years, the awards were being presented
in the Swedish Parliament and soon became known as the “Alternative
Nobel Prizes.”
The Right Livelihood Awards
have now been presented for more than 25 years, and each
year three or four recipients of the Award split a prize
of approximately $250,000. Awards have been made to more
than 100 leaders throughout the world who are working in
the areas of environmental protection and sustainability,
development and poverty alleviation, peace and human rights.
The overwhelming majority of
Nobel Prizes go to American and European men, with countries
in the southern hemisphere having received only 11 percent
of the Nobel Prizes. By contrast, 44 percent of the Right
Livelihood Awards have been made to groups and individuals
in the Global South. Women have received only five percent
of the Nobel Prizes, whereas women, including women-led
organizations, have received 34 percent of the Right Livelihood
Awards.
Von Uexkull’s latest
innovative project is the World Future Council (www.worldfuturecouncil.org)
. The purpose of the Council is to bring together wise
elders, pioneers and youth leaders to be a voice for shared
human values and for fulfilling our responsibilities to
future generations. The Council will recommend best practices
to ensure a positive future for humanity. The first meeting
of the Council will take place in Hamburg, Germany in May
2007.
The title of von Uexkull’s Kelly Lecture is “Globalization:
Values, Responsibility and Global Justice.” It will
be posted on the Foundation’s www.wagingpeace.org website. A DVD of the talk will also be available from
the Foundation. Previous Kelly Lectures on Humanity’s
Future by Frank K. Kelly, Richard Falk, Anita Roddick,
Robert Jay Lifton and Mairead Maguire can also be found
at the www.wagingpeace.org website.
David Krieger is president of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org).
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