Norman Cousins Global Governance Award
The Norman Cousins Global Governance Award honors individuals whose work expands public understanding of world law, global governance, and the case for world federation. It is presented periodically rather than on a fixed schedule, reserved for figures whose contributions have meaningfully shifted how a wider audience thinks about these questions.
Who the award is named for
Norman Cousins was the longtime editor of the Saturday Review, a citizen diplomat in the postwar era, and one of the most prominent American advocates for nuclear disarmament and a federated world community. He served as president of the World Federalist Association, a predecessor of Citizens for Global Solutions, and he spent decades arguing in print and in person that the rule of law had to extend beyond borders if humanity hoped to outlast the weapons it had built. The award carries his name because it asks the question he never stopped asking: who is making the case for global governance to people who have not yet heard it?
2026 Recipient: Professor Leila Nadya Sadat
Professor Leila Nadya Sadat receives the 2026 Norman Cousins Global Governance Award in recognition of her exceptional leadership in advancing the proposed Crimes Against Humanity Treaty.
For decades, Professor Sadat’s scholarship, advocacy, and international collaboration have built the global coalition behind a treaty designed to prevent and punish the gravest offenses against civilian populations, including murder, torture, sexual violence, and deportation when committed as part of widespread or systematic attacks. Her work has rallied governments, legal scholars, and civil society to close a critical gap in international law, one that has left these crimes without a dedicated treaty framework of their own.
The moral courage, global vision, and commitment to human dignity behind that effort are precisely what the Norman Cousins Global Governance Award was created to recognize. CGS is honored to formally recognize Professor Sadat and to draw broader attention to the international significance of her work.
Past Recipients
- 2026: Professor Leila Nadya Sadat
- 2020: William R. Pace
- 2018: Benjamin B. Ferencz
- 1999: Walter Cronkite
- 1995: Sir Peter Ustinov
- 1994: Lloyd Bridges
Other CGS Awards
The Norman Cousins Global Governance Award is one of four honors presented by Citizens for Global Solutions. Each recognizes a distinct kind of contribution to the work of building a more just and federated world.
- The CGS Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes individuals who have given twenty or more years of service to CGS at the national or local level, often presented to those nearing the close of their active work with the organization.
- The CGS Distinguished Service Award honors volunteers whose contributions have measurably strengthened CGS, whether by improving internal operations and communications, generating significant savings, or supporting the organization in other meaningful ways.
- The CGS Global Citizen Award is given to public figures who have come to be recognized as global citizens for their commitment to ending war and violence in international disputes, eliminating nuclear weapons, advancing democratic global governance, protecting universal human rights, caring for the global environment, or embracing loyalty to the world alongside loyalty to nation. Past recipients include Martin Sheen (2021) and Pope Francis (2022).
























