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US Peace Registry
The
US Peace Registry honors Americans who speak out against war and work
for peace. It recognizes and documents the activities of hundreds of U.S.
citizens, permanent residents, and organizations that have publicly
championed peaceful solutions to international conflicts involving the
U.S. and/or opposed U.S. war(s), militarism, and interventions including
invasion, occupation, production and distribution of weapons of mass
destruction, use of weapons, threats of war, or other hostile actions that
endanger peace.
The
specific examples of actions/behaviors listed under each
individual or organization are intended to provide ideas and guidance to
others so that peace/antiwar behaviors can be
replicated nationwide. It should stimulate new discussions, help people
feel more comfortable speaking out, and increase citizen involvement in antiwar
activities. This compilation of strategies will be a valuable resource for all
activists, students, and scholars who study peace, protest, and civil
disobedience; and practitioners engaged in research, teaching, action, and
organization building.
Individual
citizens who have written an antiwar letter to their representatives in
Congress or published a letter to the editor are included, along with Americans
who have devoted their adult lives to peace and opposing war, often through
civil disobedience. Groups such as the Quakers, who have opposed war for
centuries, and the hundreds of new organizations with peace-related websites
are included. What is most striking about the individuals and organizations
listed is the broad range of activities that they engage in. We have identified
well over nine hundred discrete antiwar actions.
CLICK
to see Individuals Honored, Organizations Honored, or 2024/2025 Additions.
As seen
by clicking on the above hyperlinks, a brief description of each registrant is
followed by specific antiwar/peace activities listed in chronological order
from oldest to most recent. A broad range of modern peace and antiwar actions
are documented and shown in bold the first time they are included in a
listing. This helps highlight the wide variety of activities that have occurred
throughout the years. These specific actions/activities are part of our content
analysis in Chapter 9 of ENDING
U.S. WARS by Honoring Americans Who Work for Peace, which offers
models and ideas for future peace actions by others.
The
current edition of the US Peace Registry is published here, and a
previous edition is contained in Chapters 6, 7, and 8 of the book ENDING
U.S. WARS by Honoring Americans Who Work for Peace. Eventually, it
will be displayed at the electronic recognition kiosks at the US Peace Memorial, a national
monument we will build in Washington, DC. The US Peace Registry is a
developing national database revised as new registrants are added and previous
entries are updated. To be included, registrants have provided antiwar/peace
activism-related biographical information, with supporting documentation, which
US Peace Registry editors reviewed. Vetted, verified, and edited
listings are approved by the Foundation’s Board of Directors for inclusion in
the US Peace Registry.
Registrants
and Founding Members are invited to
nominate other Americans and U.S. organizations for inclusion in the US
Peace Registry. The Foundation also directly approaches individuals and
organizations with well-known antiwar reputations to ask their permission to be
included and to submit biographical information.
To be considered for the US Peace Registry, please submit an Individual
Application.
To have your organization considered,
please submit an Organization
Application.
We do not
judge the entire life of those listed in the US Peace Registry, or the
consistency of their behavior. We accept and applaud the significant antiwar contributions
they have dared to make. For example, many registrants have participated in or
supported U.S. invasions but, at some point, decided to oppose a particular war
publicly war.
Many
citizens are reluctant to speak out against a U.S. war because those who do so
are often labeled “un-American,” “anti-military,” and “unpatriotic,” and can
suffer reprisals. Our goal is to demonstrate that advocating for peaceful
solutions to international problems, or taking action
against one or more wars, is an honorable and socially acceptable activity. If
we can change the culture in this small way, more people will feel comfortable
speaking out, and the government will be challenged more frequently when it
threatens, invades, or occupies other countries.
Although
we are anxious to honor consistent and significant peace leadership, the US
Peace Registry will help achieve the desired cultural change by honoring
the thousands of thoughtful and committed Americans who have taken a public
antiwar stand at some point in their lives. We are identifying a broad range of
peace and antiwar activities in a continuum from participating in a single
action to devoting one’s entire adult life to peace and opposing war. We
recognize a person who, for example, held a sign at a small local protest
opposing the invasion of Panama, even if they didn’t speak out against the
other 29 U.S. invasions since the end of World War II.
The
Foundation’s work provides positive reinforcement to those with the courage to
stand for peace. Any public antiwar act is important enough to recognize
because it demonstrates some level of courage and establishes that citizens can
attempt to stop the bloodshed. We will be successful if we increase the number
of citizens willing to engage in such behavior and increase the frequency of
actions for those already involved in antiwar work.
We intend
to write a living history, document human behavior, and identify role models
and behavioral examples for U.S. peace activities and leadership. The US
Peace Registry will help Americans understand some options for action
against war. We try to be nonjudgmental about who belongs in the US Peace
Registry, as long as the person or organization
has engaged in significant antiwar activities that are nonviolent. Even if they
break laws, the Foundation will recognize their actions. We know that many
Americans who actively oppose war have multiple detractors. Indeed, each of the
US Peace Prize winners have been
condemned by others. We do not evaluate the effectiveness, legality, political
correctness, motivation, or appropriateness of nonviolent antiwar actions.
Role
models are listed to inspire other Americans to work for peace. We are
documenting specific actions that Americans have used to oppose war. We suspect
that in the final analysis we will have identified more than one thousand
antiwar behaviors. The people and organizations included in the US Peace
Registry are not braggarts or self-promoters, but role models for other
Americans. Their activities are behaviors that others can use as models for
action, now and in the future.
The US Peace Memorial will make it
clear to Americans that opposing war is praiseworthy, and that our nation has a
long history of courageous citizens who have opposed wars. A national monument
to peacemakers can change our cultural attitude so that it will no longer be
common or even tolerable to label those who speak out against war as
un-American, anti-military, traitorous, or unpatriotic. We hope the memorial
will decrease the barriers citizens must overcome before speaking out against a
war.
The
military honors its heroes and reinforces warrior behavior with medals,
promotions, ceremonies, and monuments. This has resulted in a country that
recognizes contributions to war and the sacrifices of the military. People who
make valiant efforts to maintain global peace should also be honored. The US
Peace Memorial Foundation is attempting to balance the picture so that more
Americans will know that peacemaking is an honorable undertaking.
Because
the wars we are waging right now will not be our last, future generations need
to know how thoughtful individuals have promoted peace. If those in the peace
movement are concerned that speaking about their actions to promote peace will
be seen as bragging, they may be missing an opportunity to document their
contributions. We at the Foundation think it is important to catalog these
activities in order to educate people, stimulate
conversations, and lead to positive interventions for peace. Please help us to
get that message across.
At its
core, the US Peace Memorial Foundation is all about giving people the
encouragement and opportunity to share their activities for peace and against
war. We post examples of what you and your organizations are doing in order to educate, instruct, and inspire other Americans
to demand an end to war. Antiwar talk among friends is cheap; actually working for peace is something that we recognize
and celebrate. Your work will motivate others and more
Americans will feel comfortable confronting our government, just like they did
to help end the wars against the people of Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
It is
hoped that being listed in the US Peace Registry will reinforce antiwar
behavior and that honorees will want to do more to expand the number and
variety of actions cataloged under their names. Perhaps they will look at what
others have done and try new behaviors themselves. The organizations honored will also learn from
each other and may increase the activities that they engage in or refer their
members to other organizations doing dissimilar, but complementary, work.
We are
looking for Americans whose antiwar behavior, example, or success can be
emulated by others. If you have taken public actions to oppose U.S. war, please
submit your own application. To see ideas of what is possible, click on the
hyperlinks at the bottom of this page. Activities listed for each
individual and organization are examples and should not be considered a
comprehensive listing of their peace and antiwar actions. You can find a
specific registrant and behaviors by searching the online document (Command F
for Mac users and Ctrl F for Windows users).
The US
Peace Registry has been developed over the last twenty years. Some of the
honorees have kept in touch with the Foundation and updated their entries
periodically. Over the course of these many years we
have had many volunteer editors who bring their own skills and perspective to
preparing an entry. Our standards manual, formatting, and how we list antiwar
actions have evolved over time. We have tried to edit for general consistency
but know that you will find some areas that seem less detailed or specific.
Please understand the enormity of this project and forgive us for any
inconsistencies or oversights that may have occurred.
Because ENDING
U.S. WARS by Honoring Americans Who Work for Peace will be published
periodically, new Americans and organizations will be honored with each
edition. Those listed will have an opportunity to correct any errors they find
and to add new antiwar actions they have engaged in. If there are revisions, go
to your entry in the US Peace Registry and copy the current version.
Paste it into a new Word document and use track changes or otherwise highlight
the words or URLs that have been added or deleted. Because of the verification
and Board approval process, we don’t have the volunteer resources to compare a
current online version with a revised version to determine what exactly has
been amended. We welcome additions and corrections and ask that they be sent to
Registry@USPeaceMemorial.org. A volunteer
assistant editor will make it consistent with our style. We’ll let you know
when the revised listing is ready for your review online.
For the
most up-to-date listings, and the ability to drill down on actions by clicking
on the hundreds of URLs, please consult the US Peace Registry online.
Succeeding book editions will use the most current text from this site.
US Peace Memorial Foundation, Inc. is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) public
charity.
Donations to the
Foundation are tax-deductible to the extent provided by law.
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Copyright 2005-2025, US Peace Memorial Foundation, Inc.