| Nomination for Nobel Peace Prize |
| Year: | 1902 |
| Number: | 23 - 9 |
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Nominee 1:
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| Name: | The Permanent International Peace Bureau |
| Profession: | Central office through which peace activities could be coordinated |
| City: | Bern |
| Country: | SWITZERLAND (CH) |
| Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 1910 |
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Nominee 2:
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| Name: | The Institute of International Law (Institut de Droit International) |
| Profession: | Scientific society aimed at developing international law as a codified science. |
| City: | Ghent |
| Country: | BELGIUM (BE) |
| Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 1904 |
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| Motivation: | The Peace Bureau organized peace conferences, and it collected and published peace literature. It was the heart of the European peace movement, and it co-ordinated the activities of the various national and non-governmental peace organizations. The Institute of International Law was nominated for its work to draft the first international arbitration regulations, and for its efforts to establish a codification of the laws of war.
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Nominator 1:
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| Name: | d´Aguanno |
| Profession: | Professors of Law (Jurisprudence) |
| University: | University of Parma |
| City: | Parma |
| Country: | ITALY (IT) |
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Nominator 2:
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| Name: | Tommasini |
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| Comments: |
The nominators suggested a divided prize between the two nominees.
The Institute of International Law was included on the short list, but no new evaluation was requested. |
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