at the Gottlieb Duttweiler Awards Show, 2011 The Gottlieb Duttweiler Prize is awarded to extraordinary individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the well-being of the wider community and who are distinguished by courage, persistence, commitment and the successful initiation and implementation of sustainable changes. The Prize is endowed in the amount of 100,000 Swiss Francs. The award-winners include media entrepreneur
Roger Schawinski in 1998, German foreign minister
Joschka Fischer in 2004 and the former
United Nations Secretary-General and winner of the
Nobel Peace Prize,
Kofi Annan in 2008. The "
Switzerland – A Prison" speech that writer
Friedrich Dürrenmatt delivered on the occasion of the award of the prize to the then President of Czechoslovakia,
Václav Havel, in 1990 aroused great interest. In 2011, the Gottlieb Duttweiler Prize was presented to
Wikipedia co-founder
Jimmy Wales, and the 2015 award went to
World Wide Web inventor
Tim Berners-Lee.
Awardees • 1970: Fritz Bramstedt,
nutritionist, for his "fight" against
tooth decay • 1972: Egon Kodicek, Cambridge, nutritionist • 1975: Paul Fabri, nutritionist, for his "fight" against
obesity • 1988: Lisbeth and Robert Schläpfer (entrepreneurs), St. Gallen, entrepreneurship in the textile industry • 1990:
Václav Havel, president of the
Czech Republic • 1993: Esther Afua Ocloo,
Ghana, entrepreneur and nutritionist • 1998:
Roger Schawinski, Zurich, Journalist and pioneer in media • 2004:
Joschka Fischer, former foreign minister of Germany • 2008:
Kofi Annan, UN secretary-general, nobel peace prize recipient • 2013:
Ernst Fehr, Zurich; scientist • 2015:
Tim Berners-Lee, developer of the
world wide web • 2019:
Watson, the computing platform in the field of artificial intelligence developed by IBM ==References==