Organizaciones Y Asociaciones Prospector National Endowment for the Arts The nobel Foundation Sources of IAEA) Theinternational Court of Justice international labour organization (ILO) The http://www.udesa.edu.ar/biblioteca/serviref/organiza.html
Bibliotekets Länksidor O Juridiskt Forum, nobel emuseum, Rättsnätet Svensk lagsamling, Sveriges ledandejuridikportal. SCB, ILO international labour organization, Kommunförbundet, http://194.103.202.200/lankar/lankar_o.htm
Extractions: sociala frågor, internationella frågor, politik, lagar, arbetsmarknad Allmänt, lagar mm Massmedia Arbetsmarknad Organisationer ... Sociala frågor Allmänt , lagar mm CMF-Centrum för Miljövetenskaplig forskning Inet media Svenska sidor online Juridiskt Forum Nobel e-museum Rättsnätet Svensk lagsamling, Sveriges ledande juridikportal SCB SYO-guiden Arbet smarknad Länkskafferier Arbetarrörelsens arkiv och bibliotek Arbete och näringsliv Sunets länksida Arbetsförmedlingen Information Arbetsmarknad Svenskt arbetsliv Arbetsmiljö Arbetslivsinstitutet Arbetsmiljösinspektionen Arbetsmiljöregler Arbetsmiljöverket ... Skolans arbetsmiljö - Prevent Organisationer Företagarnas riksorganisation ILO International Labour Organization Kommunförbundet Landstingsförbundet ... TCO Internat ionellt FN med underorgan Svenska FN-förbundet UN m fl språk UN - Environment Programme UNESCO UN- Food and Agriculture Organization Unicef ... World food programme Folkrätt International Court of Justice Freds- och nedrustningsfrågor The hunger site ISN - International Relations and Security Network Nobel Peace Prize Winners from 1996 Nobels Fredspris Det norske Nobelinstitutt ODIHR - Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights PeaceNet Sipri - Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Svenska freds- och skiljedomsföreningen Övrigt internationellt FBI International Governmental Organizations Interpol Kooperation ... Landguiden - Länder i fickformat
Nobel Peace Prizes 1968. ReneSamuel Cassin, 1969. international labour organization, 1970. NormanBorlaug, Led research at the international Maize and Wheat Improvement Center. http://www.philately.com/philately/peace.htm
Extractions: Select the individual for biographical information Jean Henri Dunant and Frederic Passy Elie Ducommon and Charles Albert Gobat William Randal Cremer Institute of International Law Bertha Sophie Felicita von Suttner Theodore Roosevelt For the peace treaty between Japan and Russia Ernesto Teodoro Moneta and Louis Renault Klas Pontus Arnoldson and Fredrik Bajer Auguste Marie Francois Beernaert and Paul Henribenjamin Balluet D'Estournelles de Constant Permanent International Peace Bureau Tobias Michael Carel Asser and Alfred Hermann Fried Elihu Root Initiator of several arbitration agreements. Henri La Fontaine International Committee of the Red Cross Thomas Woodrow Wilson Leon Victor Auguste Bourgeois Karl Hjalmar Branting and Christian Lous Lange Fridtjof Nansen Originator of the Nansen passports. Austen Chamberlain and Charles Gates Dawes Aristide Briand and Gustav Stresemann Negotiators of the Locarno Treaty Ferdinand Buisson and Ludwig Quidde Frank Billings Kellogg Lars Olaf Nathan Soderblom Leader of the ecumenical movement Jane Addams and Nicholas Murray Butler Ralph Norman Angell Arthur Henderson Carl von Ossietzky Pacifist Carlos Saavedra Lamas Mediator in a conflict between Paraguay and Bolivia Edgar Algernon Robert Gascoyne Cecil Nansen International Office for Refugees International Committee of the Red Cross
International Kids Club World Peace World Love Peace Prize Winners 19012000 The following people or organizations are recipientsof the nobel PEACE PRIZE 1969 international labour organization (ILO) Geneva http://www.planetpals.com/IKC/peaceprize.html
Extractions: Nobel prizes were created by the will of Alfred Nobel, a notable Swedish chemist. He was the inventor of dynomite. The prize is awarded by the Norwegian NOBEL Committee to the person or persons who bestowed the "greatest benefit on mankind" each year. Six Nobel prizes are awarded in 6 different subjects Peace, Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Economics and Literature. They have been awarded to a variety of people for a variety of reasons since 1901. See the list that follows! This year (2001) marks the centennial for the PEACE prize! 100 years of PEACE: Nobel Peace Prize Winners 1901-2000
Union Network International: International Relationships, ILO in 1969 it was awarded the nobel Peace Prize. and social problems and sets minimuminternational labour standards and broad policies of the organization. http://www.union-network.org/UNIsite/In_Depth/Interna_Relations/ILO.html
Extractions: NEWS W orld War I transformed the world's social and economic map. The ILO emerged together with the League of Nations from the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. It gave expression to the concern for social reform that grew with the industrial revolution, and the conviction that realistic reform had to be conducted on an inter-national plane.
52nd Annual DPI/NGO Conference the United States Treasury Mr. Amartya Sen, nobel Laureate, Professor Nations Mr.Juan Somavia, Director General, international labour organization Ms. Martha http://www.ngos.net/conf52.html
Extractions: 1999 - 52nd Annual DPI/NGO Conference " Challenges of a Globalized World: Finding New Directions " 15 - 17 September 1999 . UN Headquarters, New York To register and attend this Conference This year's Conference, Challenges of a Globalized World: Finding New Directions, will provide a forum for representatives of the United Nations system, Governments, and civil society to examine the ways in which globalization is impacting people around the world. The c onference will identify policies and partnerships that can be promoted through the United Nations system to channel the process of globalization in directions that will help eliminate poverty, preserve cultural diversity, and promote human rights, good governance and a healthy environment, while pursuing economic opportunities for all. Globalization is a long standing process that has dramatically accelerated in recent years, driven by many forces, including new technologies and the increasingly free flow of capital. There is no doubt that the dynamics of globalization are benefiting many people, generating unprecedented wealth, and creating new opportunities. But, it is also having adverse consequences for many others, affecting human security, exacerbating economic and social Marginalization and raising concerns regarding the persistence of extreme poverty. Moving beyond the debate over what is globalization and the ways that it affects our lives, the conference will seek to find answers to questions relating to the course of globalization in years to come. Can the process of globalization be mitigated? Can global free markets meet the needs of pluralistic, democratic societies? What should be the role of the United Nations in this process? Of international financial organizations? Of non-governmental organizations? What roles will sovereign States, the private sector, labour, consumers, and others play in the emerging partnerships? How does one ensure that concern for Hunan rights shapes a global ethic that will guide policy-makers so that globalization will benefit all?
Nobel For Peace: All Laureates Norman E. Borlaug 1969 international labour organization (ILO) 1968 de droit international(Institute of international Law) 1903 The nobel Prize A History of http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/peace-list.html
Nobel Peace Laureats Speak Out With Deepest Respect The nobel Peace Prize Laureates Signed by Nations High Commissionerfor Refugees international labour organization Amnesty international http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2000/msg00186.html
Extractions: The following is an archived copy of a message sent to a Discussion List run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Views expressed in this archived message are those of the author, not of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq. Main archive index/search List information Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage Date Prev ... Thread Index [NOTE ADDED BY CASI: THE CONTENT OF THE MESSAGE BELOW WAS FOUND TO BE INACCURATE AFTER IT WAS POSTED TO THE LIST. (see following messages)] FOUNDATION APPEAL OF THE NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES FOR THE CHILDREN OF THE WORLD Email : info@nobelweb.org Fax : +33 (0)3 44 86 39 07 Web : http://www.nobelweb.org/ http://www.afsc.org/iraqhome.htm - This is a discussion list run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq For removal from list, email soc-casi-discuss-request@lists.cam.ac.uk Full archive and list instructions are available from the CASI website: http://welcome.to/casi
Re: Nobel Peace Laureats Speak Out With Deepest Respect The nobel Peace Prize the United Nations High Commissionerfor Refugees international labour organization Amnesty international http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2000/msg00189.html
Extractions: The following is an archived copy of a message sent to a Discussion List run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Views expressed in this archived message are those of the author, not of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq. Main archive index/search List information Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage Date Prev ... Thread Index http://www.nobelweb.org/ http://www.afsc.org/iraqhome.htm http://welcome.to/casi http://iraqaction.org - Also see: http://rightofreturn.org/ http://saveageneration.org/ http://www.nowarcollective.com/ http://miftah.org - This is a discussion list run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq For removal from list, email soc-casi-discuss-request@lists.cam.ac.uk Full archive and list instructions are available from the CASI website: http://welcome.to/casi Follow-Ups Re: Nobel Peace Laureats Speak Out From: Hathal Alqassab References Nobel Peace Laureats Speak Out From: Hathal Alqassab Prev by Date: Next by Date: An Editorial of Daily Dawn, Karachi -Pakistan
Nobel Barýþ Ödülü Alan Ýsimler nobel Barýþ Ödülü Alan Ýsimler. ÖDÜLÜ ALAN, YIL. Addams, Jane, 1931. internationalCommittee Of The Red Cross, 1963. international labour organization, 1969. http://www.maximumbilgi.com/tarih/nobelodulu.htm
Extractions: Nobel Barýþ Ödülü Alan Ýsimler ÖDÜLÜ ALAN YIL Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Angell, Sir Norman Arafat, Yasser Arnoldson, Klas Pontus Asser, Tobias Michael Carel Bajer, Fredrik Balch, Emily Greene Beernaert, Auguste Marie Francois Begin, Menachem Belo, Carlos Felipe Ximenes Borlaug, Norman Bourgeois, Leon Victor Auguste Brandt, Willy Branting, Karl Hjalmar Boyd-Orr Of Brechin, Lord John Briand, Aristide Bride, Sean Mac Buisson, Ferdinand Bunche, Ralph Butler, Nicholas Murray Cassin, Rene Cecil, Lord Edgar Algernon Robert Gascoyne Chamberlain, Sir Austen Constant, Paul Henribenjamin Balluet D'estournelles De Corrigan, Mairead Cremer, Sir William Randal Dalai Lama Dawes, Charles Gates De Klerk, Fredrik Willem Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières) Ducommun, Elie
International Labour Organisation The ILO was awarded the nobel Prize for Peace the ILO meet at the annual InternationalLabour Conference. The executive authority of the organization is vested http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/292_59.html
Extractions: (ILO), specialized agency of the United Nations whose aim is to facilitate the improvement of conditions of labour and living standards throughout the world. The ILO was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1969 in recognition of its activities. The ILO was created after World War I in 1919 by the Treaty of Versailles as an affiliated agency of the League of Nations. After the United Nations was established during World War II, the ILO became the first specialized agency to be affiliated with it, in 1946. The functions of the ILO include the development and promotion of standards for national legislation to protect and improve conditions of work and standards of living. It provides technical assistance in social policy and administration and in workforce training and fosters cooperative organizations and rural industries. It compiles labour statistics and conducts research on the social problems of international competition, unemployment and underemployment, labour and industrial relations, and technological change (including automation). It is concerned with the protection of international migrants and the safeguarding of trade-union rights.
United Nations The United Nations system has been awarded the nobel Peace Prize Children's Fund(UNICEF) in 1965; = and the international labour organization (ILO) received http://afa.at/globalview/122001/uno1.html
Extractions: Palais des Nations in Geneva Note to Correspondents Note No. 162, 12. October 2001 Nobel Peace Prize 2001 Awarded to the United Nations and to its Secretary-General, Kofi Annan Vienna, 12 October (UN Information Service) Note to Correspondents Note No 163 12 October 2001 The United Nations and the Nobel Peace Prize Awards VIENNA, 12 October (UN Information Service)
Burma Centrum Nederlands nobel Peace Laureates and advocates of democracy and human rights in the UN SpecialRapporteur on Myanmar; and the international labour organization (ILO) High http://www.xs4all.nl/~bcn/release_mei_02.html
Extractions: Monday May 6th Ang San Suu Kyi was released after being on house arrest for 19 months. BCN is very happy with the news of her release, BCN likes to stress the following article from the Nobel Peace Laureate Campaign for Aung San Suu Kyi and the People of Burma and the press releases from Amnesty International and the BBC The Nobel Peace Laureate Campaign for Aung San Suu Kyi and the People of Burmaare urging supportive NGOs, political parties, elected officials and other leaders of this movement to take action immediately to so that the release of Aung San Suu Kyibecomes an important step forward - and not a detour - on the road to democracy and the human rights for all of the people of Burma 1. The unconditional release of Aung San Suu Kyi is a welcome step forward (if her release is unconditional). This is a direct result of the tireless efforts of human rights and democracy advocates from throughout the world who have been working for years to pressure the military government of Burma to release this champion of democracy and the people of Burma.
Peace Project: Biographies Of Peace Prize Winners The international labour organization (ILO) was established in 1919. entries mentions,'Conditions of labour exist involving ILO received the nobel Peace Prize http://www.edu.pe.ca/birchwood/peace/ilo.htm
Extractions: ILO: International Labour Organization The International Labour Organization (ILO) was established in 1919. After having been put up to the test within the Intl. Association for Labour Legislation in Basel, their ideas were recorded into the Constitution of the ILO. The constitution is about labour existing in their period of time. One of the entries mentions, 'Conditions of labour exist involving...justice, hardship and privation to large numbers of people.' In 1948, an American, David Morse was named to head the ILO, where he remained to work until 1970. While celebrating their 50th anniversary, the ILO received the Nobel Peace Prize for their effort in helping third world countries become a minority among developing countries. International Labour Organization Joins UNAID
±è´ëÁß ´ëÅë·É ³ëº§ÆòÈ»ó ¼ö»ó nobel Peace Prize Laureates / Number of nobel Laureates by Nation nobel Peace PrizeLaureates 1969, The international labour organization (ILO), founded in 1919. http://www.koreascope.org/english/sub/novel/main7.htm
Nobel Prize In Peace Since 1901 nobel Prize in Peace since 1901 Year, Winners. 1901, Dunant, Jean Henri; Passy,Frederic. 1969, international labour organization. 1970, Borlaug, Norman. http://www.planet101.com/nobel_peace_hist.htm
ALFRED NOBEL AND THE NOBEL PRIZES The award ceremony always takes place on December 10, the anniversary of nobel'sdeath, and ceremonies are held on that international labour organization 1969. http://www.mssc.edu/international/mccaleb/chapter3.htm
Extractions: III. Alfred Nobel And The Nobel Prizes Alfred Nobel is the man who invented dynamite. He is better known today, however, as the man who established some of the most prestigious prizes in the world. Born in 1833 in Stockholm, Sweden, Nobel from his youth had a dream of inventing an explosive so devastating it would deter humans from making war. Instead, his invention made war easier. Though he was a Swede by birth, he was very much an international man, being educated in St. Petersburg, Russia, where his family moved when he was a child. In St. Petersburg, he studied with private tutors, particularly showing interest in chemistry and languages. He mastered Swedish, Russian, English, French, and German. At the age of 17 he began two years of educational travel throughout Germany, France, Italy and to the United States. Then at the age of 19 he became a chemist, working with his father in St. Petersburg. The family returned to Sweden and in 1863 he was a chemist in his father's explosives factory at Heleneborg near Stockholm. In 1864 Nobel received a patent covering detonating charges and percussion caps. Called "The Nobel Igniter," it was to be called at a later time "the greatest discovery ever made in both the principle and practice of explosives." His 1866 invention of dynamite revolutionized mining, road building and tunnel blasting. In 1875 a later improvement was patented as blasting gelatine. In 1887 he patented ballistite, the first of the nitroglycerine smokeless powders. This was to serve as the basis for cordite which was eventually to change the use of firearms.
TVE's LIFE You can read more about economist Amartya Sen on the nobel Prize Internet Archivewebsite. The international labour organization (ILO) has produced a report on http://www.tve.org/life/archive/life1main.htm
Extractions: Also interviewed in the film is Robert Reich, of Brandeis University. Read his recently published article on the inequalities in the United States. But Francis Fukuyama of George Mason University believes that globalization must be seen as a positive force. Read his recent interview with the Merrill Lynch Forum on "Economic Globalization and Culture" The International Labour Organization (ILO) has produced a report on The social and labour impact of globalization in the manufacture of transport equipment for a meeting held in April 2000 in Geneva. You can read the biography of the Chilean Director-General of ILO, Juan Somavía , who is interviewed in the film, and of Carol Bellamy , the Executive Director of UNICEF.
TNI Asia Europe Relations Since informal confidence building talks between nobel Peace Laureate Daw Aung ofAung San Suu Kyi and after the international labour organization issued an http://www.tni.org/asem/copenhagen/docs/ribbon.htm
Extractions: Copenhagen, Denmark The International Burma Summit has been organized to focus attention not only on the truth of what is happening today in Burma but what we, as an international community, must do in response. We are deeply disturbed with the testimony that we have heard today. It is crucial that the international community respond firmly and immediately. The findings presented by expert witnesses have included the following: 1. There is compelling evidence of brutal and systematic sexual violence against women by the military throughout Burma. The Shan Women's Action Network and the Shan Human Rights Foundation have documented the rape of 625 girls and women in the Shan state in their report "License to Rape". There are also credible allegations of systematic rape by the military throughout Burma, including evidence documented by Amnesty International and other human rights monitoring organizations. 2. We were pleased that an International Labour Organization representative will be present in Burma on an ongoing basis as of October. Despite the condemnation and actions of the ILO, the systematic use of forced labour continues unabated in Burma. We were horrified to witness, through a video tape that was made just weeks ago in Burma and smuggled out of the country for presentation today, the brutalisation of citizens of Burma seeking to escape forced labor.