Thursday, December 08, 2005

Hitler nominated for Nobel Prize

Well, it happened a long time ago, but it did occur, according to UCLA Law Professor Eugene Volokh.

From the LA Times, free registration required:

Many advocates of clemency for Stanley Tookie Williams note that he has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and the Nobel Prize in literature for his anti-gang work, which includes writing children's books. How could a convicted murderer and co-founder of the Crips be nominated for such prizes?

According to Nobel Prize nominating rules, any "professor of social sciences, history, philosophy, law and theology" and any judge or national legislator in any country, among others, can nominate anyone for a Nobel Peace Prize. Past nominees include Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, Benito Mussolini and Fidel Castro. Any "professor of literature [or] of linguistics," among others, can nominate anyone for a Nobel Prize in literature.

Naturally, many nominees have real merit. But being nominated by one or a few of the hundreds of thousands of eligible nominators is little evidence of such merit. This is especially so when the nominee is a source of controversy, and when it may seem that nominating him may prevent his execution.

Professor Volokh left out one other controversial Nobel nominee, former Illinois Governor George H. Ryan, currently on trial on various corruption charges in Chicago. Here is CBS 2 Chicago's George Ryan Trial Blog.

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