| Nomination for Nobel Peace Prize | 
| Year: | 1931 | 
| Number: | 9 - 1 | 
|  | 
 
| Nominee 1: 
 | 
| Name: | Nicholas Murray  Butler | 
| Gender: | M | 
| Year, Birth: | 1862 | 
| Year, Death: | 1947 | 
| Profession: | Professor of Philosophy. President of Columbia University. President of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. | 
| University: | Columbia University | 
| City: | New York | 
| State: | NY | 
| Country: | UNITED STATES (US) | 
| Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 1931 | 
|  | 
 
| Nominee 2: 
 | 
| Name: | Erich Maria  Remarque | 
| Gender: | M | 
| Year, Birth: | 1898 | 
| Year, Death: | 1970 | 
| Profession: | Author | 
| Country: | GERMANY (DE) | 
|  | 
 
| Motivation: | Butler advocated peace, international cooperation and arbitration. He supported the Briand-Kellogg Pact, and he promoted international understanding. Butler also assisted in the establishment of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, of which he was a trustee and later president (1925-45).
Remarque was nominated for his novel "Im Westen nicht Neues" (All Quiet on the Western Front) 1929, in which he depicted a realistic picture of the German army and the horrors of war. | 
|  | 
 
| Nominator: 
 | 
| Name: | Sigismond  Cybichowski | 
| Gender: | M | 
| Profession: | Professor of Law (Jurisprudence) | 
| University: | Warsaw | 
| City: | Warsaw | 
| Country: | POLAND (PL) | 
|  | 
 
| Comments: | Butler was also on the short list, but no new evaluation was requested.
The German Officer Association (Deutscher Officier-Bund) protested against Remarque's candidacy, claiming that his book was a gross offence against the German army and the German soldier. | 
|  |