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Atlanta, GA | Posted: December 10, 2010
One of the nation’s most respected and visionary leaders
on defense and national security – former United States Senator Sam Nunn – has
been named the inaugural recipient of the Ivan Allen Jr. Prize for Social
Courage, Georgia Institute of Technology President G.P. “Bud” Peterson
announced today. Nunn will be honored at the Ivan Allen College’s Founder’s Day
luncheon on March 15, an
event that coincides with Allen’s birthday.
“While some individuals talk about achieving world peace, Sam Nunn has actively
pursued this vision and created a legacy that continues to reap results long
after his exit from public office,” said Peterson. “The
Ivan Allen Prize for Social Courage stands as the preeminent award offered by
Georgia Tech and underscores the mission we have in Georgia, the nation and the
world.”
During his 24-year tenure as a United States Senator from Georgia, Nunn served as chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. In this capacity, he was the guiding force in reshaping American policy toward the former Soviet Union in the wake of the break-up of the Soviet Empire. The Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, which provides assistance to Russia and the former Soviet republics for securing and destroying their excess nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, has been hailed as “the most significant congressional achievement in nuclear affairs since the dawn of the nuclear age.”
Announced earlier
this year, the new Ivan Allen Jr. Prize for Social
Courage was established to recognize individuals like Nunn, who, by
standing up for clear moral principles in the social arena, have positively
affected public discourse at the risk of their own careers, livelihoods and
even their lives. The Ivan Allen Jr. Prize for Social
Courage will be accompanied by a $100,000 award to be funded by the income from
a $2 million commitment made in 2008 by the Wilbur and Hilda Glenn Family
Foundation.
“Sam Nunn embodies the moral and ethical principles of
Atlanta’s former mayor and it is certainly fitting that he will be the first
recipient of this distinguished award,” said Jacqueline Jones Royster, dean of Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of
Liberal Arts.
Although Nunn
retired from the U.S. Senate in 1996, he has continued to provide leadership
against the dangers of terrorism and nuclear weapons. Together with fellow
Georgian and CNN founder Ted Turner, he established the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (NTI), a non-profit, nonpartisan organization that focuses on
reducing global threats from weapons of mass destruction. Next year, NTI will be celebrating its 10th anniversary,
having made significant achievements with a lasting legacy to make the world a
safer place.
NTI
triggered significant
U.S. and global funding for securing loose nuclear bomb-making material through its bold
initiative to remove vulnerable materials from Yugoslavia. The organization also
conceived of and helped create the first international organization focused on
nuclear security, the World Institute for Nuclear Security. Most recently, NTI,
through the generosity of Warren Buffett, supported the development of an
international nuclear fuel bank, which gives countries an alternative to producing their own nuclear fuel
and avoiding the introduction of technology that can be used either for
peaceful reactors or for creating bombs.
In an effort
to galvanize global support for and action on the vision of a world free of
nuclear weapons and the urgent steps needed to reach that goal, Nunn joined former
Secretary of State George P. Shultz, former Defense Secretary William J. Perry and
former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Their Wall Street Journal op-ed in 2007 reframed the terms of the global
debate on nuclear issues.
Nunn serves as
chairman of the board of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,
D.C. In addition to his work with NTI and CSIS, Nunn is also co-chair of the
Euro-Atlantic Security Initiative (EASI), an international commission sponsored
by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, aimed at identifying the
challenges and opportunities for strengthening cooperation in Euro-Atlantic
security.
In addition, Nunn serves as a distinguished professor in Georgia Tech’s Sam Nunn School of International Affairs. He received an honorary Doctor of Philosophy from Georgia Tech in 2008 and was the recipient of the Ivan Allen Jr. Prize for Progress and Service in 2004.