Ferdinand Buisson
Ferdinand Édouard Buisson (December 20, 1841 – February 16, 1932) was a French academic, educational bureaucrat, Protestant pastor, pacifist and Socialist politician. He presided over the Human Rights League (LDH) from 1914 to 1926.
Buisson helped create France's system of universal, secular primary education in the 1880s.
He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1927.
Books
- Improve your French with Sommes-nous tous des libres croyants ?, Ferdinand Buisson & Charles Wagner
References
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Aristide Briand / Gustav Stresemann (1926) • Ferdinand Buisson / Ludwig Quidde (1927) • Frank B. Kellogg (1929) • Nathan Söderblom (1930) • Jane Addams / Nicholas Butler (1931) • Norman Angell (1933) • Arthur Henderson (1934) • Carl von Ossietzky (1935) • Carlos Saavedra Lamas (1936) • Robert Cecil (1937) • Nansen International Office for Refugees (1938) • International Red Cross and Red Crescent (1944) • Cordell Hull (1945) • Emily Balch / John Mott (1946) • Friends Service Council / American Friends Service Committee (1947) • John Boyd Orr (1949) • Ralph Bunche (1950) |