While the media focuses intently on the blockbuster nomination of Donald Trump, the Nobel Peace Prize Committee is simultaneously considering hundreds of other nominees, many of whom are unseen by the public but whose life’s work is far more aligned with the prize’s spirit. It is among these less famous but arguably more worthy candidates that the winner will likely be found.
Each year, the nominee list is filled with human rights defenders toiling in obscurity, journalists risking their lives to expose war crimes, grassroots organizations healing community trauma, and scientists working on disarmament and environmental security. These are the typical Nobel heroes—individuals and groups with a deep, long-term, and often selfless commitment to a cause.
Compare Trump’s profile to these archetypes. His nomination is for a single diplomatic achievement conducted from a position of immense global power. Many other nominees have dedicated their entire lives to the cause of peace, often at great personal risk and with few resources. The committee is known to be moved by such stories of moral courage and perseverance.
Furthermore, the work of these unseen nominees often addresses the “root causes” that experts say the committee prioritizes. An organization promoting women’s education in a conflict zone, for example, is doing the kind of foundational peacebuilding work that the Nobel was created to honor.
So while the spotlight is on Trump, the committee’s gaze is likely elsewhere. They are reading detailed reports on candidates the public has never heard of. It is in this pool of quiet courage and lifelong dedication that they will find their next laureate, a choice that will inevitably serve as a stark contrast to the noisy spectacle of the Trump candidacy.