The Nobel Organizations are a number of institutions in Sweden and Norway.
The Nobel Foundation was created in 1900 as a private institution to administer Alfred Nobel’s estate and award the Prizes for physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and peace. It represents all the Nobel institutions and administers information activities and events connected with the Prizes.
When Alfred Nobel died in 1896 he specified in his Will which institutions should award the prizes in his name. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awards the prizes for physics and chemistry, the Karolinska Institute for medicine, the Swedish Academy for literature, and the Norwegian Parliament appoints a five-person committee to award the prize for peace.
In 1968, the Swedish central bank established the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economics in Memory of Alfred Nobel. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences was given the task of awarding the economics prize in 1969.
The Peace Prize is awarded by the Norwegian Nobel Committee, which is appointed by the Norwegian Parliament. The committee’s membership reflects the number of seats held by the various political parties. The Norwegian Nobel Institute was created in 1904 to assist the committee in its efforts to decide who should receive the Peace Prize.
The Nobel Museum in Stockholm promotes interest in, knowledge of and debate about science and the arts through creative educational methods, technology and elegant design.
Nobel Media was created in 2004 when the Nobel Foundation decided to take control of the copyright issues surrounding the Nobel Prizes. Nobel Media has three objectives: to develop the Nobel programmes and find new formats, distribute the Nobel programmes internationally and protect the Nobel Foundation’s brands and copyrights.
Nobelweb runs nobelprize.org. This is the official website where you can find out about all the prize winners down through the years. You will find information about all the Nobel laureates in all the categories in the form of lectures, interviews, speeches, articles, games and much more.
The Nobel Peace Center is the latest addition to the Nobel network. We opened on 11 June 2005 in a stylishly converted late 19th century railway station in the centre of Oslo. Our objective is to promote familiarity with the lives and work of the Nobel Peace Prize laureates and Alfred Nobel, and encourage reflection and debate on issues relating to war, peace and conflict resolution.
Join us. Please visit Mimi today, where you will find a list of those of us participating in the 2008 Peace Globes Movement.
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