International
Committee of the Red Cross –
History of OrganizationSince the Red Cross has figured four times in the award of the Nobel Peace Prize (1917, 1944, and 1963), as well as in the award to Henri Dunant (1901), and has therefore been made the subject of various presentation speeches and Nobel lectures which give details of its inception, history, and activities, the following brief summary of its origins and present organization is intended as a frame of reference for all four of these awards rather than as the typical history ordinarily included for each award to an organization.
Origins
In February of 1863 in Geneva, Switzerland, the Société genevoise
d'utilité publique [Geneva Public Welfare Society] set up a committee
of five Swiss citizens to look into the ideas offered by Henri Dunant in his
book Un Souvenir de Solferino 1 - ideas dealing with
protection of the sick and wounded during combat. The committee had as its members:
Guillaume Henri Dufour (1787-1875), a general of the Swiss army and a writer
of military tracts who became the committee's president for its first year and
its honorary president thereafter; Gustave Moynier (1826-1910), a young lawyer
and president of the sponsoring Public Welfare Society, who from this time on
devoted his life to Red Cross work; Louis Appia (1818-1898) and Théodore
Maunoir (1806-1869), both medical doctors; and Henri Dunant himself.
Guided by Moynier's talent for organization, the committee called an international
conference for October of 1863 which, with sixteen nations represented, adopted
various pertinent resolutions and principles, along with an international emblem,
and appealed to all nations to form voluntary units to help wartime sick and
wounded. These units eventually became the National Red Cross Societies, and
the Committee of Five itself eventually became the International Committee of
the Red Cross, with Gustave Moynier as its president (1864-1910) both before
and after it took this name.
As a result of the 1863 Conference, which hoped to see its Red Cross principles
become a part of international law, an international diplomatic meeting was
held at Geneva the following year at the invitation of the Swiss government.
The assembly formulated the Geneva Convention of 1864. This international «Convention
for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces
in the Field» included provisions
guaranteeing neutrality for medical
personnel and equipment and officially adopting the red cross on a field of
white as the identifying emblem. It was signed on August 22, 1864, by twelve
states and was later accepted by virtually all.
The work of the Red Cross had been inaugurated.
Three other conventions were later added to the first, extending protection
to victims of naval warfare, to prisoners of war, and to civilians. Revisions
of these conventions have been made from time to time, the most extensive being
that of 1949.
Although the Red Cross has always given major service and often accomplished
herculean tasks during time of war, it has achieved even greater service in
its gradual development and operation of humanitarian programs that serve continuously
in both peace and war.
Organization
The Red Cross, a strictly neutral and impartial worldwide organization
dedicated to humanitarian interests in general and to alleviating human suffering
in particular, is composed of three basic elements.
1. The self-governing National Red Goss Societies, including the Red Crescent
(in Muslim countries) and the Red Lion and Sun (in Iran), operate on the national
level through their volunteer members, although they also participate in international
work. Each must be recognized by the International Committee. Today numbering
114, these societies all have Junior Red Cross Societies as well. Virtually
all have disaster relief programs, and many carry on welfare programs, with
community health and safety instruction, and so on. Since World War II, many
of the European and Asian societies have also established refugee services.
2. The League of Red Cross Societies, a coordinating world federation of these
societies, was established in 1919 as the result of proposals made by Henry
P. Davison (1867-1922) of the American Red Cross. The League maintains contacts
between the societies; acts as a clearinghouse for information; assists the
societies in setting up new programs and in improving or expanding old ones;
coordinates international disaster operations. It functions under an executive
committee and a board of governors on which every national society has representation.
3. The International Committee of the Red Cross [ICRC], a private, independent
group of Swiss citizens chosen by co-optation (limited to twenty-five in number),
acts during war or conflict whenever intervention by a neutral body is necessary,
such action constituting its special field of activity. As guardian of the Geneva
Conventions and of Red Cross principles, it promotes their acceptance by governments,
suggests their revision, works for further development of international humanitarian
law, and recognizes new Red Cross Societies; it sends its Swiss delegates into
prisoner-of-war camps, supervises repatriation, operates the Central Tracing
Agency, supplies material relief, and the like.
The International Red Cross Conference, which met for the first time in 1867,
is the highest legislative body. It is composed of representatives of the National
Societies, the League, the International Committee, and the governments that
have signed the Geneva Conventions. Meeting every four to six years, it reviews
Red Cross activities and the operation of the Conventions in practice, taking
under consideration, whenever necessary, any suggested revision of the Conventions
or the adoption of new ones. (Actual revision and adoption are matters for a
diplomatic conference convened by the Swiss government in its role as the custodian
of the Conventions; texts submitted to such a diplomatic conference would be
prepared by the ICRC with expert
assistance and previously approved by an International
Conference of the Red Cross.) Between Conferences, coordination of the work
of the League with that of the Committee is ensured by the Standing Commission
of the International Red Cross.
 
Selected Bibliography
This bibliography, like the preceding «history», is intended for
reference in connection with all awards to the Red Cross: to the International
Committee of the Red Cross (1917, 1944, and 1963) and to the League of Red Cross
Societies (1963).
Boissier, Pierre, Histoire du Comité international de la Croix-Rouge
de Solférino à Tsoushima. Paris, Plon, 1963.
Buckingham, Clyde E., For Humanity's Sake: The Story of the Early Development
of the League of Red Cross Societies. Washington, D.C., Public Affairs Press,
1964.
Cousier, Henri, The International Red Cross, transl. by M.C.S. Phipps.
Geneva, ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross], 1961.
Draper, G.I.A.D., The Red Cross Conventions. New York, Praeger, 1958.
Dunant, Jean Henry, A sex the International picture woman of donky Committee of phone Committee sex the International rape of International man underwear Committee the International sexy dress forced the free of Committee International of Насос Committee the Салон 11113 Диски Тюнинг ВАЗ the Акустика Волга разное ОКА of International Committee ГАЗ 3110 Memory woman Committee International the picture sex donky of of Solferino, English translation of Un
Souvenir de Solférino. Washington, D.C., American National Red Cross,
1939.
Huber, Max, Principles and Foundations of the Work of the International Committee
of the Red Cross, 1939-1946. Geneva, ICRC, 1947.
International Review of the Red Cross. English edition (since 1961) of
the Revue internationale de la Croix-Rouge, monthly publication of the
ICRC, Geneva (since 1919).
Joyce, James Avery, Red Cross
International and the Strategy of Peace.
London, Hodder & Stoughton, 1959. New York, Oceana Publications, 1959.
Junod, Marcel, Warrior without Weapons, with a Preface by Max Huber.
Transl. by Edward Fitzgerald of Le Troisième Combattant. New York,
Macmillan, 1951.
Liste des publications du Comité international de la Croix-Rouge de
1863 à 1944, compiled by Élie Moray, G. Vuagnat, and Daniel
Clouzot. Genève, 1945.
Manuel de la Croix-Rouge internationale. Genève, Comité
international de la Croix-Rouge et Ligue des sociétés de la Croix-Rouge,
1951.
Patrnogic, Jovica, «The Red Cross as a Factor of Peace», in International
Review of the Red Cross, 87 (June, 1968) 283-294.
Pictet, Jean S., ed., Commentary: The Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949.
4 vols. Geneva, ICRC, 1952, 1958, 1960.
Pictet, Jean S., Red Cross Principles. Geneva, ICRC, 1956.
Red Cross World. Publication of the League of Red Cross Societies, Geneva
(since 1919). [Title varies prior to 1952.]
Report of the International Committee of the Red Cross on Its Activities
during the Second World War, Sept. 1, 1939-June 30, 1947. Geneva, ICRC,
1948.
Siordet, Frédéric, «A Hundred Years in the Service of Humanity»,
in International Review of the Red Cross, 29 (August, 1963) 393-428.
1. See Dunant's biography.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1901-1925, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
This text was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.