As co-founder of the Landmine Survivors Network, he was a renowned leader in the Nobel Peace Prize-winning coalition that spearheaded the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, Nobel Peace Prize (1997) 2013-2014 Human Security Award (Center for Unconventional Security Affairs) Leadership in International Rehabilitation Award (Center for International Rehabilitation, 1999) Survivors' Assistance Award (Marshall Legacy Institute, 2005) Everyday Hero Award (United Airlines, 2002) Adopt-A-Minefield Humanitarian Award (2002)
He returned to the US to earn his MBA at the University of Colorado, then in 1993 went to work for the International Rescue Committee in Kenya and Somalia, where he was injured by a landmine.[citation needed]
On December 16, 1993, while working for the International Rescue Committee in Somalia, Rutherford's vehicle struck a landmine, injuring him severely. After a medical evacuation during which he nearly bled to death, one leg was amputated to save his life and the second one amputated several years later. He has since spoken to the United States Congress against landmines.[4] "It was an experience that fundamentally altered my life for the good," Rutherford said. "It crystallized my vision of what I believe I was put on this Earth to do."[5]
Following this incident, Rutherford focused his advocacy efforts to draft and enact prohibitions on anti-personnel landmines (1997 Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Treaty) and cluster munitions (2008 Cluster Munitions Convention), and promoted the rights and dignity of people with disabilities, resulting in the 2006 Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities.
Together with Jerry White he co-founded Survivor Corps in 1995 which pioneered improvements in war victim assistance, providing amputees with peer mentors, artificial limbs, and job training. White and Rutherford's leadership in the International Campaign to Ban Landmines helped secure the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty and the Cluster Munitions Ban Treaty.
America's Buried History: Landmines in the Civil War, (Savas Beatie Press, April 2020) endorsed by His Royal Highness Prince Mired Raad Al-Hussein, United Nations Special Envoy for Landmine Prohibition Treaty; U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy; and Jody Williams, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate (1997) and Chair, Nobel Women's Initiative.
Disarming States: The Global Movement to Ban Landmines, (Praeger Press, December 2010) endorsed by Ambassador Lincoln P. Bloomfield, Jr, Chairman, Henry L. Stimson Center and former Assistant Secretary of State for Political Military Affairs; U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy; Jody Williams, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate (1997); and, Ambassador Karl F. Inderfurth, former U.S. Special Representative for Global Humanitarian Demining.
Humanitarianism Under Fire: The US and UN Intervention in Somalia, (Kumarian Press,2008) endorsed by George E. Shambaugh, Chairman of the Department of Government, Georgetown University; Richard Mathew, Director, Center for Unconventional Security Affairs, University of California, Irvine; U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy; Jody Williams, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate (1997)
Human Security and Landmines: International Politics and War's Hidden Legacy, eds. with Richard Matthew and Bryan McDonald (State University of New York Press, 2004, paperback 2006)
Reframing the Agenda: The Impact of NGO and Middle Power Cooperation on International Security Policy, with Stefan Brem and Richard Mathew (Greenwood Press, 2003); Forwards by Her Majesty Queen Noor, The Honorable Lloyd Axworthy, Lady Heather Mills McCartney and Sir Paul McCartney, and U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy.
Book chapters and contributions
Rutherford has contributed chapters to Negotiating Sovereignty and Human Rights,[22]Global Society in Transition: An International Politics Reader,[23]Civil Society in the Information Age,[24]The Landmine Action Smart Book,[25]Primary Care of Landmine Injuries in Africa: A Basic Text for Health Workers,[26]Landmine Monitor Report 2000,[27] and To Walk Without Fear: The Global Movement to Ban Landmines.[28] Rethinking Sovereignty and Human Rights after the Cold War; Routledge Handbook of Environmental Security; Co-operating Without America: Theories and Case-Studies of Non-Hegemonic Regimes; Encyclopedia of Human Rights; Arms Control History, Theory, and Policy.
Rutherford also contributed to the chapter on Bosnia-Herzegovina in the 1998 Report for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict Office.[29] One the 20th anniversary of the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, Rutherford co-authored (with Firoz Alizada, Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention Implementation Support Unit "Victim assistance: There is a face and name behind each casualty," in The Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention: Twenty Years of Saving Lives and Preventing Indiscriminate Harm published by the United Nations Office of Disarmament Affairs.
In June 2013, he was included among the "one hundred most influential people in armed violence reduction" by the London-based organization Action on Armed Violence][33][34][better source needed]
^Ken Rutherford, "A Theoretical Examination of Disarming States: NGOs and Anti-Personnel Landmines," Journal of International Politics, Vol. 37, Number 4, (December 2000) pp.457-477.
^Ken Rutherford and Richard Matthew, "Banning Landmines in the American Century," International Journal of World Peace, Volume XVI Number Two (June 1999) pp. 23-36.
^Ken Rutherford and Richard Matthew, "The Evolutionary Dynamics of the Mine Ban Movement," Alternatives: Global and Local Politics. Volume 28, Number 1 (January–February 2003) pp. 29-56.
^Ken Rutherford, "Military-Civilian Interactions: Intervening in Humanitarian Crises by Thomas G. Weiss," Armed Forces and Society, Spring 2002 (volume 28, number 3), pp. 521-522.
^Ken Rutherford, "Losing Mogadishu: Testing U.S. Policy in Somalia by Jonathan Stevenson," National Security Studies Journal, Volume II, Issue 3 (Summer 1996) pp. 133-134.
^Chapter 11, "The Transnational Effort for Disability Rights: The Marriage of Disability Rights to Human Rights," in Negotiating sovereignty and human rights: actors and issues in contemporary human rights politics, Noha Shawki, Michaelene Cox eds., Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2009, ISBN0-7546-7719-2
^"A Theoretical Examination of Disarming States: NGOs and Anti-Personnel Landmines," in Global Society in Transition: An International Politics Reader, Dan Nelson and Laura Neack, eds., New York and The Hague: Kluwer, 2002, pp. 271-294.
^"Essential Partners: Landmines-Related NGOs and Information Technologies," in Civil Society in the Information Age, Peter Hajnal, ed., Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Press, 2002, pp. 95-107.
^"Survivor Assistance," in The Landmine Action Smart Book, Mine Action Information Center at James Madison University, 2002, pp. 20-31.
^Total p. 72, Primary Care of Landmine Injuries in Africa: A Basic Text for Health Workers, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (2000).
^"State Legal Responsibilities Toward Landmine Survivors," Landmine Monitor Report 2000, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (August 2000) pp. 1078-1080.
^Ken Rutherford and Jerry White, "The Role of the Landmine Survivors Network," To Walk Without Fear: The Global Movement to Ban Landmines, Maxwell A. Cameron, Robert J. Lawson and Brian W. Tomlin, eds., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998 pp. 99-117;
^Ken Rutherford and Sue Eitel, "Landmine Awareness in Bosnia: General Overview," in Report for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict Office, U.S. Dept. of Defense, April 1998.
"Panel: U.S. Still Reviewing Ban on Landmines." Ken Rutherford took part in a panel discussion sponsored by the Georgetown School of Continuing Studies and co-sponsored by the United States Campaign to Ban Landmines, Georgetown University Department of Government, Lecture Fund of Georgetown University, Georgetown University Mortara Center for International Studies and the Georgetown Public Policy Institute on March 3, 2011.