Historian and writer Michael Ignatieff has won Spain’s Princess of Asturias Award for Social Sciences for his “critical reflections on the major conflicts of our time,” prize organizers said Wednesday.
With more than 20 books that range from human rights, foreign policy, economics and nationalism, among other topics, 77-year-old Ignatieff has become, in the jury’s words, “an essential reference to navigate our current times of war, political polarization and threats to freedom.”
His titles include The Needs of Strangers (1984), Isaiah Berlin: A Life (1998) and Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry (2001). He also has published numerous articles and opinion columns.
Ignatieff has taught and researched at many of the world’s leading universities, including Harvard, Cambridge and Oxford, and was rector of the Central European University.
He was also heavily involved in Canadian politics, rising to its Liberal Party’s presidency in 2009 and leading the opposition in parliament.
The €50,000 ($79,897) Princess of Asturias Award is one of eight prizes covering areas including the arts, communication, science and sports that are handed out annually by the foundation.
French historian Helene Carrere d’Encausse won last year’s prize for the social sciences.
The awards ceremony presided over by Spain’s Princess Leonor takes place each fall in the northern Spanish city of Oviedo.